MU3100: Medieval thru Baroque (4th-18th centuries)

  • 386

    Ambrose brings Byzantine chant to the West.

    Ambrose brings Byzantine chant to the West.
  • Period: 386 to 1100

    Early Middle Ages

    4th-12th Centuries
  • 750

    Gregorian Chant

    • Official codification of western plainchant
    • A synthesis of Roman and Gallican chants
  • 754

    Pepin the Short's decree

    Pepin the Short's decree
    Pepin the Short decrees the use of Gregorian chant throughout his empire
  • 757

    Byzantine Organum Arrives in the West

    Pepin receives an organum (previously known as a hydraulis) as a gift from the Byzantine empire
  • 800

    Charlemagne's Decree

    Pepin's son Charlemagne demands his empire use Gregorian chant in their mass rite--on pain of death.
  • 850

    Organum is Moved to Rome

    • The French court's organum/hydraulis is moved to Rome (a power move by the Church)
    • earliest evidence of neumes
  • 880

    Hexachord System

    symmetrical hexachords are used to organize music, based on the tuning of a 6-string lyre
  • 900

    Parallel Organum Appears

  • 1000

    Monasteries Spread Use of Organ

    The clergy at monasteries adopt the organ as a scientific tool, encouraging its spread throughout Europe
  • 1000

    Heightened Neumes Introduced

    Circa the end of the 900s.
  • 1025

    Guido d'Arezzo

    Guido d'Arezzo
    • Codifies the hexachord system and expands it using mutations, creating the gamut
    • Establishes the 8 "church modes"
    • Teaches Gregorian chant using syllabic singing and the Guidonian hand technique
    • Advocates for the use of the musical staff
  • 1100

    Florid Organum appears (Sacred)

    • The 6 Rhythmic Modes are used to communicate new rhythmic ideas
    • NO instruments are used in sacred music
    • Thirds and triads start to accidentally appear and be heard regularly
    • First appearance of the 5-line music staff
    • Regular use of clefs
    • Gregorian chant has fully overtaken all other plainchant customs.
  • 1100

    Evidence of Written Secular Music

    • Use of instruments
    • NO written parts for instruments--all improvised
    • Monophonic texture overall
  • Period: 1100 to 1300

    Ars Antiqua

    • Scribal Culture: pecia system/handwritten manuscripts
    • Available instruments: organ, bowed/plucked strings, woodwinds, percussion
  • 1200

    Sometime in the 1200s...

    • Hurdy-gurdy appears (only second machine in Europe to use a crank)
    • Square notation introduced
  • Period: 1250 to 1400

    Isorhythm

    The beginning of time signatures
  • 1265

    The Motet Appears

    Uses Franconian notation:
    - new rhythmic communication to address new rhythmic ideas
    - the musical "rest" is introduced and notated
    - abandonment of the 6 Rhythmic Modes
  • 1300

    Clavichord appears

    During the 1300s
  • Period: 1300 to 1400

    Ars Nova

    • Thirds are officially consonant
    • Mensural notation appears
    • Secular music becomes more sophisticated (experimentation from the sacred world is brought into the secular world)
    • Still NO written music for instrumentalists!
    • Scribal work is revived in handwritten manuscripts, for the remission of sins
  • Period: 1330 to 1390

    Italian Trecento

    • text-painting
    • triads
    • chromaticism
    • faster, shorter rhythms
  • 1380

    Ars subtillior

    An early version of "graphic notation"
  • Period: 1397 to 1474

    Dufay

    melody in highest voice
  • Period: 1400 to

    Renaissance

    • Harpsichord first appears
    • Instrumental consorts (fully established by 1500): groups of loud vs. soft instruments, or same instruments of different ranges
    • Instrumental virtuosity begins in the 1500s
  • Period: 1410 to 1497

    Ockegham

    Groovy bass lines
  • 1450

    Printing Press is perfected

  • Period: 1450 to 1521

    Josquin des Prez

    • simple melodies
    • champions musical borrowing
  • 1473

    First printed music

    ...using 2-impression technique + woodcut
  • 1501

    Petrucci's Monopoly

    Monopoly is first purchased in 1498, and Petrucci uses it to publish the first (printed) polyphonic music collection in 1501
  • Period: 1505 to

    Tallis/Byrd Monopolies

  • 1520

    Single-Impression type is invented

    by John Rastell in England
  • 1540

    "Musica Nova"

    The first instrumental music collection is published
  • 1551

    Ballard family monopoly begins

  • 1560

    Modern violin-family instruments are established

  • Period: 1567 to

    Monteverdi

    • Promotes monody
    • Creates the first successful opera
  • Period: to

    Baroque period

    Opera and Monody:
    - Figured bass/basso continuo
    - Beginning of the orchestra (1607)
    - Clear text and freedom of expression
    - Focus on the soloist and the bass line
  • Period: to

    Brass and Flutes

    • Flute becomes its own instrument, apart from the recorder
    • Natural trumpets (without valves) and horns with crooks are used in orchestras
  • Oboe debuts in orchestras

  • Lully purchases his royal monopoly

  • First specified use of the bassoon in orchestras

  • Piano and Printing...

    • The first piano is invented
    • Metal-plate engraving is introduced: helpful for printing more complex instrumental music!
  • Clarinet is invented

    c. 1715