2. What you should know?
• Medieval period is also
called Middle Ages
• Referring between the fall of
Roman empire and the age
reawakening and discovery.
• Music is based upon
religious subject.
3. • Choirs expressed faith
through beautiful melodies.
• By the 13th century,
magnificent works of
architecture, sculpture,
painting, music and poetry
appeared.
4. • Many kinds of music were
created during this Middle
Ages
–Music for the knights
–For the nobles in the
castles
–Chants for the priests
5. • Only the church music were
preserved.
• Later on, they devised a
system to notate and copy
music.
• Church music spread and
taught to succeeding
generations.
7. Gregorian Chant
• Official music of the Roman
Catholic Church
• Named after Pope Gregory I
• It is also named as plainsong
or plainchant
8. • Set to sacred Latin text
• It is monophonic
• It does not have harmony
nor counterpoint.
• Sung without any
accompaniment
• Male voices sing in unison.
9. • Originally it was a chant
passed along by oral tradition
but later on, they were
notated.
• They used the neume
notation.
• The Gregorian neume is
written on a four-line staff
11. Syllabic
• There is one assigned note
for each syllable of text.
Neumatic
• A group of neumes is assigned
to one syllable of text.
12. Melismatic
• There is are many notes
assigned to one syllable of text,
usually combining different
groups of neumes.
Psalmodic
• A are many syllables to one
note or text.
13. Church Modes
• Scale used in both secular and
sacred music.
• They composed of 7 different tones
and an eighth note that duplicates
the first note an octave higher.
• There are 8 church modes:
–Authentic
–Plagal
16. Development of Melody
• Monophonic in Texture
• But transformed into one or
more parts accompanying
the original chant.
17. Guillame de Machaut
• French poet and composer
• 1st to write a polyphonic
setting of the mass ordinary.
• He used the arts nova
technique of isorhythm
18. Organum
• An early church polyphony
• Consists of a Gregorian chant
and one or more musical lines
above the chant
• The soloist sings the original
chant melody while the choir
sings the other parts in parallel
motion
19. Motet
• One new voice above the
plainchant, making 3 or 4 voice
compositions.
• Most important form of
polyphonic music.
• Derives from the French word
mot, referring to the words that
were added to the vocal lines.
20. Mass
• Roman Catholic church’s
central and leading worship
service.
–Kyrie
–Gloria
–Credo
–Sanctus
–Agnus Dei
22. Troubadours
• Came from the word trobar
meaning “to compose”, “to
discuss” or “to find”
• They performed chivalry and
courtly romantic music.
• They play for both commoners
and nobility.
23. Trouveree
• They are composer-performers
• Their counterparts in Germany
were called minnesingers.
• Their songs are about love,
crusades, dance songs,
spinning songs
24. • The notation of their songs
does not show rhythm
• There were also minstrels and
jongleurs who were the
acrobat performers and
considered the lowest social
level.
25. Adam de la Halle
• He was a French trouvere, poet and
composer.
• He is an accomplished composer of
–Rondeux (two-part refrains)
–Chansons
–Motets ( polyphonic choral
compositions)
–Jeux-partis (dialogues between 2
parties)
37. Fiddle
• This is a bowed
or lucked string
instrument
placed under
the chin of the
player.
38. Lute
• This is a pear-shaped pluck string
instrument with a bent neck and a
fretted finger board.
39. Positive Organ
• This is the principal
musical instrument
in monasteries and
cathedrals during
the late medieval
period.
• The only
instrument allowed
by the church
authorities.