Friday, 12 July 2013
History Of Music | History Of Classic Music |http://free9news.blogspot.in/
This is the first period where we can begin to be fairly certain as
to how a great deal of the music which has survived actually sounded.
The earliest written secular music dates from the 12th century
troubadours (in the form of virelais, estampies, ballades, etc.), but
most notated manuscripts emanate from places of learning usually
connected with the church, and therefore inevitably have a religious
basis.
Gregorian chant and plainsong which are monodic (i.e.
written as one musical line) gradually developed during the 11th to 13th
centuries into organum (i.e. two or three lines moving simultaneously
but independently, therefore almost inadvertently representing the
beginnings of harmony). Organum was, however, initially rather stifled
by rigid rules governing melody and rhythm, which led ultimately to the
so-called Ars Nova period of the 14th century, principally represented
by the composers de Vitry, Machaut, and Landini.
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