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Musical styles Historical periods

Musical styles Historical periods

 

 

Musical styles Historical periods

Historical periods, musical styles, and principal genres in western music
Students are encouraged to listen to several examples of each style at online sources available through Classical Music.net, Naxos, or other online sites and to listen for the characteristics given below.

Middle Ages (also referred to as medieval music): 800-1400.
Generally called the Middle Ages, this long historical era can be broken into several distinct developmental periods and falls between Classical Antiquity and the Renaissance.

Early medieval music to 1000: mainly plainsongs (chants) written in Latin for the church
sacred: worship music for the church, always in Latin
texture: monophonic
motion: conjunct melodies
text settings: syllabic and melismatic
rhythm: free rhythms based on the syllables of the text
scales: modal, based on the pitches D (dorian), E (phrygian), F (lydian), G (mixolydian)
ranges: narrow, usually less than an octave
notation: neumes --groups of notes in symbols, showing the direction of the melodic patterns.
musical staff: ranging from one to four lines, c-clefs, no bar lines or meters
accidentals: B-flat only
sources: manuscripts are hand copied on parchment
genres: numerous types of chants (songs in Latin for the church services)
composers: mostly anonymous

Development of polyphony: 900-1300
textures: polyphonic
scales: modal
harmony: perfect consonances (perfect fourths, fifths and octaves) harmonic motion: parallel, then in contrary and oblique motion melodic motion: conjunct in each voice part
text settings: syllabic and melismatic

languages: mostly Latin, some French
rhythm: repetitive rhythmic patterns in compound time called rhythmic modes
notation: modal; signs (neumes) show the groups of notes that form each rhythmic unit
musical staff: four to five lines, c-clefs, no bar lines or meters, no dynamics or expression marks, voice designations: tenor, duplum, triplum, quadruplum
sources: manuscripts are hand copied on parchment
genres: organum (chant combined with polyphony),
motet (polyphonic settings with new and separate texts added to each voice chants
composers: Leonin and Perotin (Notre Dame, Paris)

Development of secular music: 1100-1300
secular: worldly music not written for religious services
texts: vernacular languages - French, German, Spanish, English
texture: mostly monophonic
motion: conjunct melodies
text settings: syllabic and melismatic
rhythm: mostly unmetered rhythms until 1250, metered for dances
scales: modal
ranges: narrow, usually less than an octave
traditions: troubadours (South French), trouvères (North French), Minnesingers (German) instrumental dances
instruments: organs, recorders, sackbuts (trombone), shawm (double reed), vielles (string)
composers: Bernart of Ventadorn, Beatrice of Dia, Adam de la Halle, and hundreds of others

Late medieval music: 1300-1400 —the New Art (Ars nova)
textures: polyphonic
texts: vernacular languages and Latin
rhythm: complex rhythmic patterns, simple and compound metrical groups, often syncopated
melodic motion: conjunct lines
harmony: consonances: (P=perfect) P4, P5, P8, some thirds
ranges: often an octave in each voice

cantus firmus: a pre-existent melody (chant, for example) used in the lower voice (tenor)
musical notation: mensural; early time signatures (mensuration signs), but still no bar lines
5-line staff with c and f clefs, flats and sharps used on individual notes, and flats at the beginning of a line apply throughout the line, but not as “tonal” key signatures.
voice designations: tenor, contratenor, triplum, cantus
sources: manuscripts are hand copied on parchment
genres: isorhythmic motets, masses, dance songs (ballade, virelai, rondeau)
composers: Philippe de Vitry, Guillaume de Machaut, Francesco Landini

Renaissance ("rebirth"): 1400-1600
scales: modal
texture: polyphonic, often organized by imitation and canons, or homorhythmic
motion: conjunct lines with some wider skips
rhythm: regular pulses, but often without a metrical pulse in vocal music; metrical rhythms and strong downbeats in dances and instrumental music
harmony: triadic, cadences on perfect fifths and octaves (some Picardy thirds at cadences – the name Picardy comes from north French region where many of these composers originated)
ranges: expand to utilize the full SATB registers genres: growth of numerous sacred and secular genres vocal: predominant in sacred and secular music sacred music: sung a cappella
secular music: can be sung with instruments
notation: mensural; early time signatures (mensuration signs), but still no bar lines.
5-line staff with c and f clefs, parts written on individual sections of the page, no dynamic markings voice designations: tenor, contratenor, cantus, later changing to cantus, altus, tenor, bassus.
sources: music printing develops in 1501 in Italy. Manuscripts also continue to be hand copied.
genres: single-movement compositions, except for the Mass cycle and dance pairs
mass cycle: sacred choral, a capella composition with specific Ordinary sections of the Catholic service composed as a group, often with the same cantus firmus in the tenor part
motet: sacred choral, a capella composition with words in Latin
chorale: sacred hymn with words in German
chanson: secular polyphonic composition with words in French

madrigal: secular polyphonic composition with words in Italian Lied: secular polyphonic composition with words in German ayre: secular polyphonic composition with words in English canzona: instrumental composition in the style of a chanson dances: usually in pairs, like the slow pavan and the fast galliard

musical instruments: harpsichord (also called the virginal), clavichord, lute, viola da gamba family (also called viols), recorders, cornetto, shawm, sackbut. The violin is developed, but is mostly used outdoors. Instruments are not usually specified for compositions.
ensembles: called “consorts.” A whole consort is an ensemble of the same family (e.g., all recorders, SATB) and a broken consort is a mixed ensemble.
composers: Du Fay, Dunstable, Binchois, Ockeghem, Josquin des Prez, Palestrina, Byrd, Morley, Dowland, Marenzio, Monteverdi, and hundreds or others

Baroque Era: 1600-1750
textures: homophonic, polyphonic, and contrapuntal
rhythms: metrical rhythms, strong and weak beat pulses
motives: short ideas become the basis for continuous pitch and register manipulation, often presented without regular pauses in the music
scales: major and minor scales develop
harmonic rhythm: changes often occur on every beat or every two beats
basso continuo: bass line played by the harpsichord and cello or other solo bass instrument
figured bass: develops c. 1600; number notations that inform the continuo player of the intervals and accidentals in relation to the bass notes; the realization of the harmonies is improvised.
terraced dynamics: contrasting piano and forte in abrupt dynamic shifts
ornamentation: melodic decorations, often improvised or added from symbols given in scores
affections: music expresses specific emotions
concertato style: contrast is emphasized through alternating groups of voices and/or instruments
polychoral: a composition for multiple choirs or voices and/or instruments
ritornello: instrumental refrain that frequently returns, as in a concerto or between verses of a song
notation: modern symbols, time signatures, key signatures, dynamics, bar lines,

instruments: the violin family, horns and trumpets (without valves) are not new instruments, but begin to appear and gain importance in specific ensembles. Harpsichords, and especially organs, become more fully developed as solo instruments. The oboe and bassoon replace the shawm and the dulcian as the principal double reeds.

ensembles: string orchestras are expanded with individual instruments that contrast in timbre
genres: numerous multi-movement compositions
opera seria: Italian opera, serious in nature, in which the narrative (recitative) and reflective (aria) numbers are all sung, and including staging, costumes, scenery and dramatic acting.
oratorio: work for soloists, chorus and orchestra, based on a sacred story; with no acting costumes or scenery.
cantata: a composition for one or more voices and accompaniment
chorale cantata: soloists, chorus and orchestra, incorporating hymns into the composition trio sonata: two solo instruments, keyboard and continuous bass instrument fantasia/prelude/toccata: improvisatory compositions, often paired with a fugue
fugue: paired with an improvisatory composition (fantasia, toccata or prelude)
suite: a collection of dances (allemande, courant, saraband, gigue)
solo concerto: a solo instrument and a chamber orchestra
concerto grosso: a small group of solo instruments contrasted with a chamber orchestra. A multi- movement composition
overture: instrumental movement used at the beginning of an opera or oratorio
composers: Monteverdi, Schütz, Corelli, Couperin, Handel, Vivaldi, J. S. Bach

Classical Era: 1750-1800
aesthetic: balance, symmetry and formality, reflecting the rational objectivity of the Enlightenment
melody: sometimes tuneful and folk-like; at other times motivically constructed; lyrical themes contrast with dramatic ones
phrasing: periodic, multiples of 4, usually separated by rests; balanced antecedent-consequent phrases
tonality: major and minor keys, with major more prevalent
texture: homophonic, with occasional counterpoint, especially in developmental sections harmony: triadic with 7th chords used for color and tension; primary chords (I –IV-V-I) predominate harmonic rhythm: slow, changing every two to four beats
modulations: to closely related keys (e.g., to IV or V in Major; to III in minor).

accompaniments: broken triadic patterns (Alberti bass); repetitive broken octaves (murky bass)
instrumentation: homogeneous sounds (orchestras with doubling of winds), musical material organized by families; standardized combinations of instruments within a genre; piano and clarinet (both invented in the Baroque) added to the repertory
forms: standardized sonata form, theme and variations, minuet & trio, rondo, concerto-sonata
dynamic gradations and expansions: crescendos, diminuendos, piano and forte dynamics (pp & ff very occasionally); occasional accents on off-beats, sforzandos

genres:
opera seria comic opera oratorio mass
Lied
sonata, especially keyboard sonatas string quartet
symphony solo concerto
composers: Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven

Romantic Era: 1800-1900, or nineteenth-century music
aesthetic: freedom from boundaries, including those that separate the arts: music becomes more programmatic, merging with literature, art, and philosophy; programmatic elements reflect this trend; interest in the subjective, including the emotions and the supernatural, in contrast with the more objective and rational Classic.
melody: long, emotional, and memorable, using wide leaps for expression phrases: of irregular lengths, with less symmetry than those of the Classic rhythm: displaced accents, shifting and overlapping of duple and triple patterns
texture: homophony predominates, highlighting the melody, but counterpoint appears at times
harmony: more extensive, with chord extensions and greater dissonance
tonality: tonal, but with distant chord progressions and modulations; chromaticism is used extensively; key areas often change freely within movements; minor mode predominates, in contrast with the

Classic accompaniment: complex, sometimes contrapuntal, with wide ranges and disjunct intervals
dynamics: dramatic, at extremes of the dynamic range; tempi use expressive terminology
meter and tempo: freer meters and tempi
forms: less clearly defined by sections and tonality
instrumentation: larger forces of the orchestra, with a greatly expanded range of timbres that demanded instrumental evolution (valves for brass instruments, more keys for winds, larger and stronger pianos, pedaled harps; new instruments, including the tuba, saxophone, and celeste); inclusion of voice and chorus in later symphonic works
scale: on one hand, short, intimate compositions for piano (character piece) or voice and piano (lied, chanson); on the other, expansion of proportions of the symphony, chamber music, concerto, sonata, mass; opera roles demand bigger voices to match more grandiose dramatic concepts
genres:
cyclic symphony
symphonic poem/tone poem symphonic suite
concert overture concerto
ballet
chamber music Lied and chanson song cycles music drama
nationalistic opera lyric opera
mass and oratorio piano sonata
single-movement character pieces and dances for piano
composers: Schubert, Robert and Clara Schumann, Verdi, Brahms,

Twentieth-century music: 1900-2000
wide range of tonal, modal, whole tone, atonal, serial, and approaches to composition wide range of harmonic structures: triadic, quartal, clusters
rhythms: polymeters, asymmetrical meters

melodies: disjunct, Sprechstimme (half sung/half spoken)
timbres: non-traditional uses of instruments, global instruments, electronic sounds
mixed media: music combined with film, art, theater
form: traditional and non-traditional structures
expression: ranges from subdued works (Impressionism) to excessive exaggeration (Expressionism) nationalism and folk elements
return to musical characteristics of earlier periods: Neo-Classicism (including Neo-Baroque elements) and Neo-Romanticism
minimalism
jazz and other African-American influences

composers: Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Debussy, Bartok, Ives, Barber, Copland, Cage, and Glass.

Source: https://www.potsdam.edu/sites/default/files/documents/academics/Crane/MusicTheory/Historical-periods.pdf

Web site to visit: https://www.potsdam.edu

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Musical styles Historical periods

 

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Musical styles Historical periods

 

 

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Musical styles Historical periods