Music 326/526
á Early Christians apparently rejected the cultivation of music as an art for the sake of sensory pleasure, and rejected many of the past associations of music, e.g.
á Music associated pagan rituals was discarded to distance people from paganism
á They had no music festivals or contests
á Music strictly for enjoyment was considered unsuitable for church
á But they probably preserved the old system of scales and modes, rhythmic patterns.
á Worship: Early Christians were Jews (converted); parallels exist between Christian worship and Jewish worship (singing psalms, holy readings, liturgical calendar); there is argument among scholars about whether Jews influenced Christians or not
á Ancient melodies were improvised by stringing motives together; motives were characteristic of the mode. Some associations between modes and rituals may have been preserved
á Early Christians added celebration of Eucharist
á
Early Christian practices were necessarily
secret, no central church authority.
This led to lots of variation in worship. Church spread through Asia
Minor, Africa, and
á
á Byzantine Music: best-known examples are hymns
á Origins of the Byzantine hymn:
á Began with psalm singing
á Interjections added (troparia) between verses of psalms
á Tropes became longer, more profound in sentiment, eventually emerged as separate structures called hymns
Early Middle Ages
á Church Reforms: some things done right away when church came out of hiding:
á Official language of church changed from Greek to Latin; in 4th Century, everything had to be translated (liturgy); a few things were kept in Greek
á Places of worship: church gained more converts, therefore more wealth, churches became more and more elaborate
á Efforts to standardize liturgy, mostly in Western church.
á To communicate liturgy and music consistently, they borrowed position of Cantor (chief soloist) from Hebrew system.
á Established boy choirs for training of singers
á
Chant dialects evolved during days of
secrecy, continued to evolve after edict of
á
Gallican(
á
Old Roman (used in
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Mozarabic(
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Ambrosian(
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Sarum Rite(
á There were many differences between these localized chant dialects, including different or modified melodies, provisions for ritual processions, special prayers, adaptations for local interests
á Revision and codification of liturgy and music were traditionally credited to Pope Gregory I ÒThe Great,Ó pope from 590-604), hence name Gregorian Chant. Legend is an angel sang chants to Gregory while a scribe wrote them down. Gregory I probably didnÕt compose any chants we call Gregorian; some believe that Gregory II (pope 715-31)was really responsible for revisions. We do think that Gregory I did a few things:
á
Established Schola
Cantorum (singing school in
á From Gregory IÕs time, there were efforts to codify liturgy: standardize texts and put them into standard order. Canonical Hours were established before Gregory I (by 520); Mass took longer, but many pieces in place by time of Gregory I
á Around Gregory IÕs time, the notion is established of a single melody that would be used every time for a certain text (fixed composition). Some of this music was in use during Gregory I lifetime (or even before), and some did remain in use in Catholic church up to Second Vatican Council (ÒVatican II,Ó 1962-65)