Many people, including me, love medieval music. It is evocative and powerful, most commonly
religious but sometimes concerned with love or with just having a good time,
but always different from later forms of music (baroque, classical, modern,
popular) which it nonetheless heavily influenced.
Music in the Middle Ages was considered one of the “seven
liberal arts,” the foundation of a good education, along with grammar,
rhetoric, logic, arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy. Medieval people invented the musical staff we
now take for granted (the five lines on which notes are arranged). They were an inventive lot.
Medieval music today is commonly discussed as though it consisted
primarily of Gregorian chant, and indeed such chant was an important component
but certainly not all. Monasteries had
monks routinely sing (or “chant”) the Book of Psalms, all of which were clearly
written as songs and were believed to have been composed by King David of Old
Testament fame. There were also hymns to
be sung as part of the Mass, for liturgical events (like a requiem), and for
the celebration of various saints’ days.
It used to be thought that Pope Gregory I (d. 604) had
written the music (“chants”) for all of these, though it has also been argued
that Pope Gregory II, over a century later, was responsible for organizing and
stipulating the music for certain purposes.
At any rate, once Charlemagne became Roman emperor in 800, his court
adopted the Roman form of liturgical music rather than the form that had been
previously used in the churches of Gaul.
Churches that could afford it started installing pipe organs, apparently
invented in Byzantium.
Gregorian chant was sung in unison. Ninth-century manuscripts might show the
texts with little marks (called neumes) above them to show the overall rhythm and where one sang
higher or lower, but essentially those singing learned the music from
others. But in the early eleventh
century the musical staff first appears (as noted above). Its invention was attributed to Guido of
Arezzo. Now one could look at written
music and figure out the tune without having to hear it first.
At around the same time, medieval musicians started adopting
polyphony, where different singers would sing different notes at the same time,
creating harmony. By the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries different singers might be singing different
(complementary) texts as well as different notes. (Think about pop music where one singer has
the melody and the backup singers croon out “doo-wap” or whatever.) Especially if more than one melodic line was
being sung at the same time, and the medieval singers were supposed to end at
the same time, you can see why better notation would be required.
Medieval music could be played as well as sung. String instruments included the harp, the lute (strummed, like a banjo or guitar), and the vielle, the ancestor of the violin, as seen in the image below. Wind instruments included the sackbut (ancestor of our brass winds) and the bagpipe.
An enormous amount of medieval music was composed. We know the names of some of the most revered
medieval composers. In the twelfth
century the abbess Hildegard von Bingen wrote lovely music for her nuns to
sing. (She also had visions and wrote
chiding letters to popes. She has been
taken up by New Age folks and had some of her music recorded with a drum
machine line. She rolls in her
grave.) Starting in the twelfth century, troubadours composed and sang all sorts of songs, of love and glory. In the fourteenth century
Guillaume de Machaut wrote love songs that were widely admired both then and
now.
Those who study the history of music are called
musicologists. A number of them put
together a book in the “Men and Music” series, edited by James McKinnon, called
Antiquity and the Middle Ages
(Macmillan, 1990). It has a lot of good, technical detail on the development of medieval music.
© C. Dale Brittain 2019
For more on medieval culture and other aspects of medieval history, see my ebook Positively Medieval, available on Amazon and other ebook platforms.
For more on medieval culture and other aspects of medieval history, see my ebook Positively Medieval, available on Amazon and other ebook platforms.
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