polyphony through the 13th Flashcards

1
Q

Polyphony

A
  • music in which voices sing together in independent parts
  • types of polyphony: motet and organum
  • at first was a style of performance
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2
Q

Counterpoint

A
  • singers improvising plain chant departed from simple parallel motion to give their parts independence,
  • they set the stage for counterpoint.
  • combination of multiple lines
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3
Q

Harmony

A

The need to regulate the different independent sounds of each line (countepoint) harmony was created.

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4
Q

Organum

A
  • A form of troping the chant
  • But now it is added with a horizontal extension across the whole chant
  • Reached its sophistication in Notre dame
    *new layers of music
    Now you dont have to add a trope before or after chants
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5
Q

Parallel and oblique Organum

A

When a plainchant melody in the principle voice is duplicated fifths below the organol voice.

Sometimes, it produces a harsh sound so to prevent this Oblique motion was invented,

which the organ voice (added part) was melodically different with:
wider intervals including dissonances.

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6
Q

Free organum or discant

A

Singing a melismatic passage against a single note of the chant

In this style:
the organal or added voice has rhythmic and melodic independence

later called discant

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7
Q

Leoninus (1163-90)

A
  • A notre dame composer
  • being called the great singer or composer
  • perotinus is his collegue as the beset discant maker
  • wrote great book of polyphony “magnus liber”
  • which contains two voice settings for the solo sections of respnsorial chants,
  • diferent settings for the same passage of chants
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8
Q

Organum Duplum or Aquitaine organum

A

Lower voice (an existing chant) holding long notes while upper voice (added) singing melismatic.

this was called organum Duplum

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9
Q

rhytmic modes

A

singer in france devised a system of rhytmic notation involving patterns of long and short notes (rhytmic modes)

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10
Q

Clausula

A

A section in Discant style was called Clausula

> Characteristically more consonant,
Short phrases
Lively pacing because both voices >move in modal rhythm

Modal rhythm is long and short notes

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11
Q

early Motet (13th)

A
  • > Use of borrowed chant material in the tenor, the tenor is called Cantus Firmus
  • > originated when the Notre dame composers troped the Clausula repertory from the Magnus Liber
    • Cantus Firmus (borrowed material from chant)
  • soon regarded as a secular genre so this opened up possibilities
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12
Q

Protinus (1200-38)

A

student of Leoninus

> Created a clausula repertory
Added voices to organum, 3 to 4

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13
Q

Franconian

A

> The Triplum bears a longer text and a faster moving melody with short notes
rather than written in one melodic line and rhythm

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