sacred repertory (plainchant) was created for ceremonial use and served as a principal element of public worship in the western Christian church, essentially a musical prayer
non-sacred songs (secular monody) were courtly and elite or popular and traditional, intended for entertainment and communicating feelings
all 3 repertories were primarily monophonic, originated in oral cultures, and were performed from memory
sacred music was monophonic to keep the focus on the text, even though polyphonic music existed at the time
repertory of chant became more fluid and varied and were classified into church modes as the western Christian church spread
music can't be separated from the verbal message or from its place in the worship service
the liturgy is made up of a body of texts and rites whose purpose is to glorify God and the saints, teach the gospels, and exhort the worshippers along the path of salvation
the divine office centers on the communal reading of the psalms
prayers every few hours - provides the ritual around which life in a monastery or convent is structured
series of eight services at specified times around the clock - needed a set schedule to work through 150 songs
prayers, recitations of scriptural passages, songs
the mass includes readings and prayers but is unique in its ritualistic commemoration of the last supper
culminates in a symbolic reenactment of the last supper
most important service of the Catholic church
structure of the mass:
introductory prayers
liturgy of the word
liturgy of the Eucharist
mass ordinary - unchanging text
kyrie, gloria, credo, sanctus, agnus dei
king george creates savvy armies, king george creates super armadillos
simple syllabic melodies replaced with ornate settings for choral performance
threefold repetition of each phrase of text
mass proper - variable special text for different events
introit, collects, epistle, gradual, alleluia, gospel, offertory, communion, and other
oral transmission
chants were learned by hearing others sing them and were transmitted without writing
melodies were subject to change and variation
notation of chant
invented to standardize the performance of chant melodies - late eighth and ninth centuries
worked with frankish leaders to promote a uniform liturgy and music in order to consolidate and increase influence on worshippers
legend of st. gregory - dove whispered the chants in his ear, charlemagne propaganda
problems - notation hadn't been invented yet
diffusion of chant
5th-9th centuries - people in western and northern europe converted to Christianity and adopted the doctrines and rites of the roman church
gregorian chant was established and all important developments in european music took place north of the alps because the southern Christian regions were either occupied or under threat of attack
missionaries from irish and scottish monasteries established schools
development of important musical centers, including saint gall monastery
melodic lines have more leaps, especially thirds, and introduction of new melodies and new forms of chant
chant classification
texts
biblical/non-biblical
prose/poetry
manner of performance
antiphonal - alternating choirs
responsorial - choir responds to a soloist
direct - sung by one choir
musical style
syllabic - one note per syllable
melismatic - many notes per syllable
neumatic - two to seven notes per syllable
basic formulas
formulas are simple melodic outlines that can be used with many different texts
text setting
musical contours of a chant generally reflect the way the latin words were pronounced
florid chants prioritize the melodic curve rather than syllables
plainchant calls for word repetition only where it exists in the text of the prayer, melodies rarely use emotional or pictorial effects
melodic structure
melody divided into phrases and periods corresponding to the phrases and periods of the text
phrases follow an arch, starting low and going high
chant forms
two balanced phrases that correspond to halves of a typical psalm verse
same melody sung to several stanzas of text (ex. strophic)
free form can be entirely original or incorporate traditional melodic formulas into original composition
chants of the office:
psalm tones
oldest chants in liturgy, formulas for chanting the psalms - designed to fit the words of any psalm
one tone for each mode and an extra (tonus peregrinus/wandering tone)
sung to tone that matches the mode of the antiphon
five separate melodic elements
intonation rises to reciting tone
semicadence/mediant at the midpoint of the verse
continues on reciting tone
concludes by descending to a final cadence/termination
final verse leads into lesser doxology
words of doxology fitted to same psalm tone as verses
each psalm will have a new antiphon every week
antiphonal psalmody
half-verses alternate between two choirs
antiphon
more numerous than any other type of chant
most use the same melody with slight variations
intended to be sung by a group
syllabic or florid
chants of the mass proper:
introit and communion
introit was originally a complete psalm but was shortened to consist of the original antiphon, a single verse and a repetition of the antiphon
communion is a short chant consisting of one verse
gradual and alleluia
the most highly developed chants
occur at contemplative moments where no ritual action occurs
only one psalm verse sung to an elaborate melody
graduals came to the frankish churches highly evolved
responsorial performance
soloist sings the word alleluia
chorus repeats it and continues with the jubilus
soloist sings psalm verse
chorus joins in on last phrase
offertory
as melismatic as graduals but include the response only
later developments of chant:
chants of the ordinary
tropes
expanded an existing chant by adding new words and music before the chant and between phrases; melody only and extending/adding melismas; text only and set to existing melismas
used for creativity because you couldn't change the actual chants
flourished in monasteries but were eventually banned in the interest of simplifying and standardizing the liturgy
sequences
began as tropes but quickly became independent compositions
text syllables used to help remember long melismas
banned by council of trent
liturgical drama
type of play that grew out of ritual and was performed on holy days such as easter and christmas, originated in troping
music consists of a number of chants strung together with processions and actions that approach theatrical representation
hildegard of bingen
unique, non-liturgical but sacred music drama
ordo virtutum is a morality play with allegorical characters who all sing in plainchant except the devil, who can only speak
women could participate fully in singing the office and mass in convents, learned to read and write latin and music, and had access to an intellectual life
church modes
eight modes identified by number, defined by the sequences of whole tones and semitones in a diatonic octave built on a finalis/final (used as last note in melody)
modes paired, share same final
odd numbered modes (authentic) and even numbered modes (plagal)
no absolute pitches, just a way to distinguish interval patterns
each mode has a second characteristic note (tenor/reciting tone)
solmization
facilitated sight-singing
guido of arezzo proposed a set of syllables - ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la, together made a hexachord
helped locate semitones in chant
became modern solfege
guidonian hand
visual device
pupils were taught to sing intervals as the teacher pointed with the index finger of the right hand to the different joints of the open left hand
each joint stood for one of the twenty notes that made up the musical system
the staff
notes/neumes were originally placed above the text
one scribe oriented the neumes around a horizontal line
guido suggested an arrangement of lines and spaces from which evolved the modern staff