1 / 41

Hildegard of Bingen

Hildegard of Bingen. Women were excluded from religious musicmaking everywhere but in convents. Hildegard of Bingen. Hildegard (1098–1179) was a prioress and abbess of her own convent. She achieved great success as a writer and composer. Her visions became famous.

ella-paul
Télécharger la présentation

Hildegard of Bingen

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hildegard of Bingen • Women were excluded from religious musicmaking everywhere but in convents.

  2. Hildegard of Bingen • Hildegard (1098–1179) was a prioress and abbess of her own convent. • She achieved great success as a writer and composer. • Her visions became famous. • Her music was known locally and was rediscovered only in the late twentieth century.

  3. Hildegard of Bingen • Ordo virtutum (The Virtues, ca. 1151) • Hildegard’s most extended musical work • A sacred music drama comprising eightytwo songs • Hildegard wrote both the melodies and the poetic verse. • A morality play with allegorical characters • All sing plainchant except the Devil, who can only speak.

  4. Chapter 3 Polyphony Through the Thirteenth Century

  5. prelude

  6. Europe enjoyed a cultural revival • Scholars translated Greek and Arabic works into Latin. • Places of learning, including universities, were established. • Several outstanding scholars sought to reconcile classical (Greek) philosophy with Christian doctrine in their work. • Saint Anselm • Saint Thomas Aquinas

  7. Large church buildings were erected • Romanesque style in the eleventh and early twelfth centuries. • Round arches in the style of the Roman basilica • Frescoes and sculptures decorated the buildings.

  8. Large church buildings were erected • Gothic style in the mid-twelfth century onward • Tall, spacious buildings with soaring vaults • Slender columns • Large stained-glass windows

  9. Polyphony • Polyphony occurs when voices sing together on independent parts. • Polyphony was initially a decoration of chant, similar to the decorations on manuscripts and cathedrals. • Purposes • Added grandeur • Functioned as commentary on a chant

  10. Polyphony • Since early polyphony was improvised, many believe that it was used well before the first record of it in the ninth century. • Advances in notation made more elaborate genres possible.

  11. Polyphony • Precepts of Western music were established with medieval polyphony. • Counterpoint, the combination of multiple independent lines • Harmony, the regulation of simultaneous sounds • Notation • Composition as distinct from performance

  12. Polyphony • These changes came about slowly from the eleventh to the thirteenth centuries. • Monophonic chant was still dominant during this time; some chants were composed as late as the sixteenth century. • Two types of polyphonic music are discussed in this chapter. • Organum • Motet

  13. Early organum

  14. Ninth-century organum • Described in Musica enchiriadis • Parallel organum • Duplication of a chant melody (principal voice) in parallel motion at the fifth below by the organal voice • Fifths were considered perfect and beautiful consonances. • Either voice could be doubled at the octave.

  15. Ninth-century organum

  16. Ninth-century organum • Oblique organum • Adjustments were necessary to avoid tritones. • The organal voice remains on one note while the chant voice moves (oblique motion). • Cadences converge on the unison. • These adjustments to parallelism opened the door for more independent polyphony.

  17. Eleventh-century polyphony • Placement of polyphony • Troped sections of the Mass Ordinary, such as the Kyrie and Gloria • Certain parts of the Proper, such as tracts and sequences • Responsories of the Office and Mass, including Graduals and Alleluias • Polyphony is found in passages for soloists only.

  18. Eleventh-century polyphony

  19. Notre dame polyphony

  20. Notre Dame Polyphony • Musicians at the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris developed a more ornate style of organum in the late twelfth and early thirteenth centuries. • Leoninus (fl. 1150s–ca. 1201), a priest and poet-musician • Perotinus (fl. 1200–1230), probably trained as a singer under Leoninus • Both may have studied at the University of Paris.

  21. Leoninus • Compiled Magnus Liber Organi (big book of organum) • First extensive repertory of composed polyphony • Contains two-voice settings for the major feasts of the church year • Leoninus set the solo portions of the responsorial chants: Graduals, Alleluias, and Office responsories.

  22. Leoninus • Viderunt Omnes, written for the Gradual on Christmas Day, has three distinct musical styles. • Chorus sections of the original chant: sung in unison without alteration • Solo passages with syllabic text setting: extended melismas over long sustained pitches that sound as drones • Solo passages with melismas: discant style

  23. Leoninus

  24. Leoninus

  25. Leoninus

  26. Clausulae • A clausula is a passage in discant style. • By speeding the movement in the tenor, clausulae avoid monotony. • Clausulae are generally more consonant than organa. • They have short phrases and are livelier. • Hundreds of independent clausulae, referred to as substitute clausulae, were composed.

  27. Clausulae

  28. Perotinus • Along with his contemporaries, Perotinus expanded organa by increasing the number of voice parts to three and four. • The voices above the tenor were denoted duplum, triplum, and quadruplum. • Hence a three-voice organum was called an organum triplum (or simply triplum) and a four-voice organum a quadruplum.

  29. Perotinus • Viderunt omnes • A quadruplum • Upper voices move with patterned clusters of notes in modal rhythms. • The tenor has lengthy, unmeasured notes. • These passages alternate with discant sections.

  30. Perotinus

  31. Perotinus

  32. The motet

  33. Motets • Motets are polyphonic works with one or more texted voices added to a preexisting tenor.

  34. Motets • Motets originally consisted of newly-written Latin words added to the upper voices of discant clausulae. • The French word mot (“word”) inspired the name for the genre. • The earliest texts were often a textual trope of the clausula. • The second voice, formally the duplum, is called a motetus. • The third and fourth voices are still called triplum and quadruplum. • The tenor, with its borrowed melody from Gregorian chant, is known as the cantus firmus.

  35. Factum est salutare/Dominus

  36. Motets • Later texts were written in French on secular topics. • Motets are identified by a compound title comprising the first words of each voice from highest to lowest. • The upper voice(s) were sung, but it is unclear whether the tenor was sung or played on an instrument.

  37. The motet as an independent genre • Existing motets were reworked. • Adding new texts for the duplum, in Latin or French, that were not necessarily linked to the chant text • Adding a third voice to those already present • Giving the additional parts words of their own; a motet with two texts above the tenor is known as a double motet

  38. Factum est salutare/Dominus

  39. Motets in the late thirteenth century • A new motet style emerged called Franconian, after the theorist and composer Franco of Cologne. • More rhythmic freedom and variety • The triplum has a longer text and faster-moving melody than the motetus.

  40. Motets in the late thirteenth century • Adam de la Halle’s De ma dame vient/Dieus, comment porroie/Omnes uses rhythmic differences to reinforce contrasting text. • The triplum part is from a man’s point of view. • The duplum part voices the woman’s point of view. • The tenor part repeats the “omnes” melisma from Viderunt omnes twelve times.

  41. Motets in the late thirteenth century

More Related