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Organum



 
 
Organum (though the stress is now sometimes incorrectly put on the second syllable, from Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek is the historical stage in the development of the Greek language spanning across the Archaic Greece , Classical Greece , and Hellenistic civilization periods of ancient Greece and the classical antiquity....
 ???a??? - organon "organ, instrument, tool" ) in general is a plainchant melody with at least one added voice to enhance the harmony, developed in the Middle Ages
Middle Ages

File:Karl 1 mit papst gelasius gregor1 sacramentar v karl d kahlen.jpgThe Middle Ages of European history are a period in history which lasted for roughly a millennium, commonly dated from the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th century to the beginning of the Early Modern Period in the 16th century, marked by the division of Western Christi...
. Depending on the mode and form of the chant, a supporting bourdon
Bourdon

Bourdon, bordun, or bordone normally denotes a stopped flute/flue type of pipe in an pipe organ characterized by a very dark, heavy tone, strong in fundamental, with a quint transient but relativly little overtone development....
 may be sung on the same text, or the melody is followed in parallel motion (parallel organum) or a combination thereof.






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Organum (though the stress is now sometimes incorrectly put on the second syllable, from Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek

Ancient Greek is the historical stage in the development of the Greek language spanning across the Archaic Greece , Classical Greece , and Hellenistic civilization periods of ancient Greece and the classical antiquity....
 ???a??? - organon "organ, instrument, tool" ) in general is a plainchant melody with at least one added voice to enhance the harmony, developed in the Middle Ages
Middle Ages

File:Karl 1 mit papst gelasius gregor1 sacramentar v karl d kahlen.jpgThe Middle Ages of European history are a period in history which lasted for roughly a millennium, commonly dated from the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th century to the beginning of the Early Modern Period in the 16th century, marked by the division of Western Christi...
. Depending on the mode and form of the chant, a supporting bourdon
Bourdon

Bourdon, bordun, or bordone normally denotes a stopped flute/flue type of pipe in an pipe organ characterized by a very dark, heavy tone, strong in fundamental, with a quint transient but relativly little overtone development....
 may be sung on the same text, or the melody is followed in parallel motion (parallel organum) or a combination thereof. As no real independent second voice exists this is a form of heterophony
Heterophony

Heterophony is a type of texture that refers to the practice of two or more musicians simultaneously performing slightly different versions of the same melody....
. In its earliest stages, organum involved two musical voices: a Gregorian chant
Gregorian chant

Gregorian chant is the central tradition of Western plainsong, a form of monophony liturgy chant in Western Christianity that accompanied the celebration of Mass and other ritual services....
 melody
Melody

In music, a melody , also tune, voice, or line, is a linear succession of musical tones which is perceived as a single entity....
, and the same melody transposed
Transposition (music)

In music transposition refers to the process of moving a collection of notes up or down in pitch by a constant interval . For example, one might transpose an entire piece of music into another Key ....
 by a consonant interval
Interval (music)

In music theory, the term interval describes the relationship between the pitch of two notes.Intervals may be described as:*vertical if the two notes sound simultaneously...
, usually a perfect fifth
Perfect fifth

The perfect fifth is the musical interval between a note and the note seven semitones above it on the musical scale. For example, the note G lies a perfect fifth above C; D is a perfect fifth above G, C is a perfect fifth above F, and so on....
 or fourth
Perfect fourth

The perfect fourth is a musical interval which spans four diatonic scale scale degree. It consists of the note and the note five semitones above it on the musical scale....
. In these cases often the composition began and ended on a unison
UNISON

UNISON ? the Public Service Union is the second largest trade union in the United Kingdom, with over 1.3 million members.It was formed in 1993 when three previous public sector trade unions, the National Association of Local Government Officers , the National Union of Public Employees and the Confederation of Health Service Employees merg...
, the added voice keeping to the initial tone until the first part has reached a fifth or fourth, from where both voices proceed in parallel harmony, with the reverse process at the end. Organum was originally improvised
Improvisation

Improvisation is the practice of acting, singing, talking and reacting, of making and creating, in the moment and in response to the stimulus of one's immediate environment and inner feelings....
; while one singer performed a notated
Musical notation

Music notation or musical notation is any system which represents aurally perceived music, through the use of written Modern musical symbols....
 melody (the vox principalis), another singer—singing "by ear"—provided the unnotated second melody (the vox organalis). Over time, composers began to write added parts that were not just simple transpositions, thus creating true polyphony
Polyphony

In music, polyphony is a texture consisting of two or more independent melodic voice , as opposed to music with just one voice or music with one dominant melodic voice accompanied by chord s ....
.

History


Early organum

The first document to describe organum specifically, and give rules for its performance, was the Musica enchiriadis
Musica enchiriadis

Musica enchiriadis is an Anonymity musical treatise from the 9th century. It is the first surviving attempt to establish a system of rules for polyphony in western music....
 (c. 895
895

Births* Athelstan of England* King Eric I of Norway* Gaozu of Later Han* Liu MinDeaths...
), a treatise traditionally (and probably incorrectly) attributed to Hucbald of St. Amand. The oldest methods of teaching organum can be found in the Scolica and the Bamberg Dialogues, along with the Musica enchiriadis. It should be noted that the societies that have develpoed polyphony usually have several types of it found in their culture. In its original conception, organum was never intended as polyphony in the modern sense; the added voice was intended as a reinforcement or harmonic enhancement of the plainchant at occasions of High Feasts of importance to further the splendour of the liturgy
Liturgy

A liturgy is the customary public worship done by a specific religious group, according to their particular traditions. The word may refer to an elaborate formal ritual such as the Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgy and Mass , or a daily activity such as the Muslim salat and Jewish Jewish services....
. The analogue evolution of sacred architecture and music is evident: during previous centuries monophonic Mass was celebrated in Abbatial churches, in the course of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the newly consecrated cathedrals resounded with ever more complex forms of polyphony. Exactly what developments took place where and when in the evolution of polyphony is not always clear, though some landmarks remain visible in the treatises. As in these instances, it is hard to evaluate the relative importance of treatises, whether they describe the 'actual' practice or a deviation of it. As key-concept behind the creative outburst that manifested in the eleventh and twelfth century is the vertical and harmonic expansion of dimension, as the strongly resonant harmony of organum magnified the splendour of the celebration and heightened its solemnity.

One of the most astounding features of Organum (meaning "to sing in Symphoniae") is the similarity of the repertory in different manuscripts. The earliest European sources of information concerning organum regard it as a well known practice (Oxford History, pp. 487). Organum is also known to have been performed in several different rites, bu the main wells of information concerning its history come from Gregorian Chant. Considering that the trained singers were imbibed in an oral tradition that was several centuries old, singing a small part of the chant repertory in straightforward heterophony of parallel harmony or other ways of 'singing by the ear' would come naturally. It is made clear in the Musica enchiriadis that octave doubling was acceptable, since such doubling was inevitable when men and boys sang together. The 9th-century treatise Scolica enchiriadis
Scolica enchiriadis

Scolica enchiriadis is an Anonymous work ninth-century music theory treatise and commentary on its companion work, the Musica enchiriadis....
 treats the subject in greater detail. For parallel singing, the original chant would be the upper voice, vox principalis; the vox organalis was at a parallel perfect interval below, usually a fourth. Thus the melody would be heard as the principal voice, the vox organalis as an accompaniment or harmonic reinforcement. This kind of organum is now usually called parallel organum, although terms such as sinfonia or diaphonia were used in early treatises.

The history of Organum would not be complete without two of its greatest innovators, Leonin and Perotin. These two theorists were "the first international composers of polyphonic music. The innovations of Leonin and Perotin mark the development of the rhythmic modes. These innovations are grounded in the forms of Gregorian Chant, and adhere to the theoretical rhythmic systems of St. Augustine. It is the composers' love for cantus firmus that caused the notation of the tenor line to stay the same, even when the methods of penning music were changing. It was the use of modal rhythm, however, that would make these two men great. Modal rhythm is defined clearly as a succession of unequal notes arranged in a definite pattern. The Notre Dame composers' development of musical rhythm allowed music to be free from its ties to text. While it is a well known fact that Leonin composed a great deal of organum, it should be noted that it was the innovations of Perotin, who spent much of his time revising the organum purum of Leonin, that caused generations of organum and motet composers to exploit the principles of the rhythmic modes.

Debate about origins


The Musica enchiriadis documented a practice which obviously had been in use for some time, although it has not been possible to establish even an approximate dating for the commencement of the practice, which may go back hundreds of years. Both of the Enchiriadis
Enchiriadis

Enchiriadis may refer to:*Musica enchiriadis , a 9th-century music theory treatise*Scolica enchiriadis , an extension of the above treatise...
 treatises are primarily works on the concept of a mathematical derivation of the gamut
Hexachord

In music, a hexachord is a six-note segment of a scale or tone row. The term was adopted in the Middle Ages and adapted in the twentieth-century in Milton Babbitt serialism....
 and the modes based on theories of conjunct and disjunct tetrachords (series of four pitches involving fixed tone and semitone relationships within them). To some extent it is probable that the treatment given to organum was a treatment designed to explain it in the terms of the evolving theory of the gamut (not least by the observation that parallel fourths outline tetrachords), and was not a descriptive or prescriptive manual of practical organum. For that, we can turn to Ad Organum faciendum, (Anonymous, c 1100) which is just such a manual: how to make organum. In letter-notation two organa are given as examples: Alleluia V.Iustus ut palma and Kyrie trope Cunctipotens, in two voices, predominantly puncta contra punctam, "note against note". The Kyrie chant is the lower part, the new part finds a different harmony for every note of the chant and the same applies to the Alleluia. It is also worth noting that strict parallel organum does not generally occur in either of these early treatises as an end in itself. The treatises begin from a premise of parallelism and then move on to suggest better ways of making the organum, involving boundary tones, and the vast majority of musical examples in the treatises in fact use intervals of 2nds, 3rds, 4ths, 5ths, and 6ths (by inversion/octave doubling), to create a more artistic result. The aesthetic underpinning the use of these other intervals (usually to do with the concept of a "boundary tone" to preserve the modal integrity, or in order to avoid harmonic tritones or accidentals foreign to the mode) was explored in more detail by Guido d'Arezzo in his Micrologus
Micrologus

The Micrologus is a treatise on Medieval music written by Guido of Arezzo, dating to approximately 1026. It was dedicated to Tedald, Bishop of Arezzo....
 of around AD 1020. Scholars have tended to describe this more varied organum as "free organum" (see below).

Scholarship has not yet established whether this early organum was chronologically derived from a more primitive strict parallelism, or from a kind of modally-constrained heterophony. The most pervasive examples of strict "parallel organum" in fact occur only in insular Germanic repertories of the 13th century onwards, and not in the very much earlier Enchiriadis
Enchiriadis

Enchiriadis may refer to:*Musica enchiriadis , a 9th-century music theory treatise*Scolica enchiriadis , an extension of the above treatise...
 treatises, the works of Guido, or in the various interpretations of the Winchester Troper
Winchester troper

The Winchester Troper includes perhaps the oldest large collections of two-part music in Europe, along with the Chartres Manuscript which is approximately contemporaneous or a little later....
 (in which can be found passages which appear to be notated heterophony at the unison, although transcription problems confound absolute certainty in this).

Free organum

After parallel organum the next development to arise in the practice of organum is postulated to be that of free organum. The earliest examples of this style dating from around 1020-1050 (the Micrologus of Guido d'Arezzo and the Winchester Troper
Winchester troper

The Winchester Troper includes perhaps the oldest large collections of two-part music in Europe, along with the Chartres Manuscript which is approximately contemporaneous or a little later....
) utilise parallel motion and oblique motion (upper voice moving while the tenor holds one note), but the introduction of contrary motion (voices moving in opposite directions) as well as similar motion (voices moving in the same direction, but to different intervals) led to progressively freer musical lines — a prerequisite element of counterpoint
Counterpoint

In music, counterpoint is the relationship between two or more Register that are independent in contour and rhythm, and interdependent in harmony....
. There exists a number of manuscript fragments of the later 11th century and into the 12th century which document the changing styles, from the works of Johannes Cotto
Johannes Cotto

Johannes Cotto was a music theory, possibly of England origin, most likely working in southern Germany or Switzerland. He wrote one of the most influential treatises on music of the Medieval music, one which included unusually precise directions for composing Gregorian chant and organum....
 (also referred to as John Cotton or Joannes of Liege) to the so-called Chartres fragments. Although free organum is mostly isochronous
Isochronous

Isochronous : From Greek iso, equal + chronos, time. It literally means to occur at the same time or at equal time intervals. The term is used in different technical contexts....
 meaning that the two voices move in the same pace, there are examples of more than one note of the organal voice against one note in the tenor; another precursor of contrapuntal techniques. Previous techniques may be said to harmonically enhance and reinforce a single melodic line which is why it is essentially heterophony; free organum is a definite break with 'harmonically shadowing' chant as it places a new line in contrasting harmony with the chant in the lower voice.

Florid organum, melismatic organum

Organum as a musical genre reached its peak in the twelfth century with the development of florid organum and two very different schools composition. The first was what is called "Aquitainian polyphony", for it originated with the Saint Martial school, centred around the Abbey of Saint Martial in Limoges
Limoges

Limoges is a city and Communes of France in France, the Prefectures in France of the Haute-Vienne Departments of France, and the administrative capital of the Limousin Regions of France....
. The later twelfth-century development was the Notre Dame school
Notre Dame school

The group of composers working at or near the Notre Dame de Paris in Paris from about 1160 to 1250, along with the music they produced, is referred to as the Notre Dame school, or the Notre Dame School of Polyphony....
 at Paris, which developed the rhythmic mode
Rhythmic mode

In medieval music, the rhythmic modes were patterns of long and short durations imposed on written musical notation which otherwise appeared to be identical....
. It hosted composers such as Léonin
Léonin

L?onin is the first known significant composer of polyphony organum. He was probably France, and he probably lived and worked in Paris at the Notre Dame de Paris, and was the earliest member of the Notre Dame school of polyphony who is known by name....
 and Pérotin
Pérotin

P?rotin , also called Perotin the Great, was a European composer, believed to be France, who lived around the end of the 12th century and beginning of the 13th century....
 which provided many new composition techniques. The motet
Motet

In Western music, motet is a word that is applied to a number of highly varied choir musical compositions.The name comes either from the Latin movere, or a Latinized version of Old French mot, "word" or "verbal utterance." The Medieval Latin for "motet" is "motectum", and the Italian mottetto was also used....
 that became the main 'object' of compositional creativity in the fourteenth century is rooted in the lifetime of Perotin and his works.

The basic principle of florid organum is that there are anywhere from two to six notes in the organal voice sung over a single sustained note in the tenor. Saint Martial organum and Paris organum duplum follow from the same principle, but in a different form.

During the course of the twelfth century, the age of the Cathedrals, melismatic (or "florid") organum developed in Aquitania, and is linked to Saint Martial de Limoges. This form of organum is based on a plainchant melody that is sung in extended note-values in the lower voice, the length of which are determined by the length of the phrase in the organal part. The chant thus transforms into a succession of long held notes according to the original melody and comes to be called "tenor" from the Latin tenere meaning "to hold". There are at least six consonant intervals that can be used in Organum. The upper organal voice moves in extensive melisms on long protracted vowels. This newer style became known as "organum", "organum duplum", or "organum purum" and the older note-against-note style became known as discant
Discant

Discant was a style of liturgy setting in the Middle Ages, associated with the development of the Notre Dame school of polyphony. It is a style of organum that includes a plainchant tenor part, with a "note against note" upper voice, moving in Counterpoint....
 (discant).

The Saint Martial organum is rhapsodic in character as rhythms are not yet organized according to the six rhythmic modes, for the introduction of which Leonin seems to deserve to be credited.

Medieval Music - Richard H. Hoppin

Antiquity and the Middle Ages - Edited By James McKinnon

http://www.britannica.com/eb/topic-432244/organum-purum

http://www.grovemusic.com

Notre Dame school
Cultural and intellectual life flourished in Paris
Paris

Paris is the Capital of France and the country's largest city. It is situated on the river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of the ?le-de-France Regions of France ....
 during the 12th century with the University of the Sorbonne having become a reputed institution that attracted many students, not all of them French. The construction of Notre Dame Cathedral on the Île de la Cité
Île de la Cité

File:Image-Notre Dame de Paris on ?le de la Cit? Edit 1 - July 2006.jpgThe ?le de la Cit? is one of two natural islands in the Seine within the city of Paris ....
 took place between 1163 and 1238 and this period coincides with the birth of the Paris Organum. The Cathedral of Notre Dame and the University of Paris served as the center of musical composition and as a transmitter of musical theory in the 12th and 13th centuries. The presence of Leonin and Perotin at the Notre Dame School made Paris the center of the musical world in the 12th century. Magister Cantus of the Notre Dame, Leonin compiled the 'Magnus Liber Organi de Gradali et Antiphonario'. Leonin wrote organa dupla based on existing chants like the Alleluia and the Gradual of the Mass and Responsory and Benedicamus Domino of Vespers for the major liturgical ceremonies in the yearly cycle. In hindsight, this proved to have been a major event. This was the first large-scale project attributable to a single composer. Not only is it a compilation for practical use during Mass and Office compassing the ecclesiastic year, the first of its kind; it also introduces the use of the rhythmic modes as a creative principle. Thus, when in a discussion of organum of the Paris School the word 'modal' or 'mode' is used, it refers to the rhythmic modes and specifically not to the musical modes that rule over melody. In Leonin's organa dupla the Gregorian chant is allotted to the tenor in the lower voice, in which he keeps to the tradition. The way the text is set to music in the original chant defines how it is 'organized'. Where the Gregorian chant is syllabic (no ligatures and is therefore non-modal) the organum created is organum purum: the tenor sustains each single note of the chant over which the organal voice, the duplum, drapes a new florid line, written mostly in ligatures and compound neumes. Starting from a consonant (at the opening: mostly the octave) the duplum in a long, drawn-out line plays a variation of dissonances and consonances, building up to a change of harmony at the end of a melism where another syllable is produced at a different pitch. Where the Gregorian chant is no longer syllabic but uses ligatures both voices proceed in a rhythmic mode
Rhythmic mode

In medieval music, the rhythmic modes were patterns of long and short durations imposed on written musical notation which otherwise appeared to be identical....
. This section of discantus is concluded, if on the last syllable of a word or phrase, by a copula
Copula

In linguistics, a copula is a word used to link the subject of a sentence with a predicate . Although it might not itself express an action or condition, it serves to equate the subject with the predicate....
, in which the tenor sustains the last pitch and the duplum switches back to unmetered rhapsodic cadential lines, to conclude on a consonance. Thus in Organum duplum of Leonin these three compositional idioms alternate throughout the complete polyphonic setting , which is concluded in monophonic chant for the last phrase. Again, the way the text is set in the plainchant determines how often there will a section of organum purum, whether this will continue into discantus or whether a cadence is made before going on to the next word or phrase. Thus, recapitulating, three different styles in the organaliter section are alternated and linked according to the text, leaving the last part of the text to be sung choraliter in monophonic chant. The verse of the chant is worked out according to the same principles.

The relevant authors that write about Organum of the Notre Dame School, Anonymous IV, Ioh. de Garlandia, the St. Emmeram Anonymous and Franco of Cologne to name a few, are not always as clear as could be desired, nevertheless, a lot of information can be distilled from the comparative research of their writings. Organum purum is one of three styles of organum, which is used in section where the chant is syllabic thus where the tenor can not be modal. As soon as the chant uses ligatures, the tenor becomes modal and it will have become discant, which is the second form. The third form is copula
Copula

In linguistics, a copula is a word used to link the subject of a sentence with a predicate . Although it might not itself express an action or condition, it serves to equate the subject with the predicate....
 (Lat. coming together) which in the words of Ioh. de Garlandia 'is between organum and discant' and according to Waite a bridge section between modal and non-modal sections. It seems that for most instances we can take Garlandia literally where he says 'between' organum and discant. In organa dupla the copula is very similar to a short, cadential organum purum section but in organa tripla or conducti it is seen that irregular notation is used. Either the last notes of ligatures are affixed with a plica
Plica

----Plica is a genus of lizards.Species in the genus Plica include:*Plica lumaria*Plica plica*''Plica umbra...
 which divides the notes in smaller values, or a series of disjunct rests is used in jolting succession in both parts, creating what is also called hocket
Hocket

In music, hocket is the rhythmic linear technique using the alternation of note , pitch , or chord s. In medieval practice of hocket, a single melody is shared between two voices such that alternately one voice sounds while the other rests....
. These features also can be frequently found in two-part discantus on special cadences or a preparation of a cadence, where they are also referred to as 'copulae'. De Garlandia states simply: 'a copula is where are any number of lines are found' referring to the plicae or rest-signs. Thus organum duplum can be schematized as follows:
  • beginning of text set to organum: organaliter:
  • organum purum >> copula >>
  • discantus >> copula >>
  • organum purum >> copula >>
  • discantus >> copula >>
  • finis choraliter
Perotin "is the best composer of Discantus", according to Anonymous IV
Anonymous IV

Anonymous IV is the designation given to the writer of an important treatise of Medieval music music theory. He was probably an England student working at Notre Dame de Paris in Paris, most likely in the 1270s or 1280s....
, an English student, writing ca.1275, who has provided at least a few morsels of factual information on Paris Organum and its composers. Perotin further developed discantus in three part Organum (Organum Triplum) where both organal voices are in discantus. Note that organum purum is not possible in three-part organa, the two upper voices need to both be organized according to the rhythmic modes. Perotin even went as far as composing two four-part organa (quadrupla), Viderunt omnes and Sederunt principes which were performed in Notre Dame in 1098 on New Year's Day and in 1099 on the feast of St. Stephen (a decree of Odon de Sully, Bishop of Paris, exists which stipulates the performance of 'organa tripla vel quadrupla') Apart from organa, Perotin extended the form of the Aquitanian Versus which was henceforth called conductus
Conductus

In medieval music, conductus is a type of sacred, but non-liturgical vocal composition for one or more voices. The word derives from Latin conducere , and the conductus was most likely sung while the lectionary was carried from its place of safekeeping to the place from which it was to be read....
. Any conductus is a new composition on new texts and is always composed in the rhythmic modes. Perotin set several texts by Philippe le Chancelier, while some texts refer to contemporary events. Two-part conductus form the larger part, though conductus exist for one to four voices. Two, three and four part conductus are composed throughout in discantus style. As in organa tripla, handling three voices (or four) precludes the kind of rhythmic freedom found in dupla. In conductus the distinction is made between 'cum littera' and ' sine litera', texted sections and melismatic sections. The texted parts can sometimes go beyond the modal measure and then fall back in to regular mode in the melismatic discantus section, which is called cauda
Cauda

The Cauda is a characteristic feature of songs in the Conductus style of a cappella music which flourished between the mid-12th and the mid-13th century....
. Again according to Anonymous IV, Perotin wrote a number of replacement clausula
Clausula

A clausula is a polyphonic composition performed as a musical alternative to the original plainchant passage that it is intended to replace.Clausulae came into being as a result of the composition practice of musicians in the Notre Dame school period, during the 1200's or Ars Antiqua....
e from organa dupla by Leonin. As the tenor in Leonin's organa dupla in discant sections proceeds always in the 5th mode (all longs in a rhythmic group ordine), Perotin, who was a generation removed from Leonin, saw fit to improve them by introducing different modes for the tenor and new melodic lines for the dupla, increasing the rhythmic organization and diversity of the section. However, in the largest compilation of Notre Dame repertoir (F) no less than 462 clausulae exist, many recurrences of the same clausulae in variant settings, according to Waite 'written in a variety of styles and with varying competence' A further innovation was the motellus, in which the upper part of a discant section is supplied with a new text, so that when the lower voice utters a single syllable, the upper part will pronounce several. This would have been the first instance of two different texts being sung in harmony. In turn, the motellus gave birth to the motet
Motet

In Western music, motet is a word that is applied to a number of highly varied choir musical compositions.The name comes either from the Latin movere, or a Latinized version of Old French mot, "word" or "verbal utterance." The Medieval Latin for "motet" is "motectum", and the Italian mottetto was also used....
 which is a poly-textual piece in discant, which obviously sparked a lot a creativity as it soon became a prolific form of composition.

The Organa that were created in Paris were disseminated throughout Europe. The three main sources are W1, St. Andrews, Wolfenbuttel 677,olim Helmstadt 628; the large and illuminated copy made in Florence, owned by Piero de Medici, the Pluteo 29.1
Pluteo 29.1

Pluteo 29.1, also known as Pluteus 29.1, or simply the Florence Manuscript, is an illuminated manuscript in the Laurentian Library of Florence....
 of the Bibliotheca Mediceo-Laurenziana (F), which is by far the most extensive copy of the repertory. Finally W2, Wolfenbuttel 1206, olim Helmstadt 1099, which was compiled the latest (and contains the greatest amount of motets).

There are arguments that support a relative freedom of rhythm in Organa dupla but others refute this, saying that the interpretation of the music should always be according to modal or Franconian principles. Two researchers, Apel and Waite, insisted upon a rigorously modal interpretation. Though Waite in his dissertation, notably in chapter 4: The notation of organum duplum' acknowledged that in in organum duplum and monophonic conducts are relative freedom may have been taken, he transcribed a selection of the Magnus Liber Organi of Leonin into strict modal rhythm. Apel argued that the rhythms in the piece, due to the rules of consonance is clearly non-modal. To this day, as behooves scientists, debates on interpretation proceed as usual. However, Waite published 54 years ago and his point of view has been superseded by ongoing research. "..but his (Waite) view that the entire corpus (of the Magnus Liber Organi) should be transcribed according to the rhythmic modes is no longer accepted" (Peter Jeffery in the Notation Course Medieval Music 1100-1450 (music205), Princeton)

In the range of forms of compositions found in the later two manuscripts that contain the Notre Dame-repertory (F and W2) one class of distinction can be made: that which is (strictly) modal and that which is not. Organum duplum in its organum purum sections of syllabic setting, the cum littera sections in two-part conductus, copulae in general and monophonic conductus would be that part of the repertory which is not strictly modal. In monophonic song, be it chant or a conductus simplex by Perotin, there is no need to vary from the classical standards for declamation that were a rooted tradition at the time, going back to St. Augustine, De Musica. It has been firmly established by extensive research in chant traditions (Gregorian Semiology) that there is a fluency and varyancy in the rhythm of declamatory speech that should also govern chant performance. These principles extend to the not strictly modal sections or compositions, as a contrasting quality with musica mensurabilis.

As Parisian Organum is based on Gregorian chant, it is categorized under Ars Antiqua
Ars antiqua

Ars antiqua, also called ars veterum or ars vetus, refers to the music of Europe of the late Middle Ages between approximately 1170 and 1310, covering the period of the Notre Dame school of polyphony and the subsequent years which saw the early development of the motet....
 which is thus called in contrast to the Ars Nova
Ars nova

Ars nova was a stylistic period in music of the Late Middle Ages, centered in France, which encompassed the period roughly from the preparation of the Roman de Fauvel until the death of Guillaume de Machaut ....
 which embarked on new forms that were in every sense original and no longer based on Gregorian chant and as such consisted a breach with the musical practice of the ancients.

Media


See also

  • Medieval music
    Medieval music

    The term medieval music encompasses European music written during the Middle Ages. This era begins with the fall of the Roman Empire and ends in approximately the middle of the fifteenth century....
  • Gregorian chant
    Gregorian chant

    Gregorian chant is the central tradition of Western plainsong, a form of monophony liturgy chant in Western Christianity that accompanied the celebration of Mass and other ritual services....
  • Musica enchiriadis
    Musica enchiriadis

    Musica enchiriadis is an Anonymity musical treatise from the 9th century. It is the first surviving attempt to establish a system of rules for polyphony in western music....
  • Johannes Cotto
    Johannes Cotto

    Johannes Cotto was a music theory, possibly of England origin, most likely working in southern Germany or Switzerland. He wrote one of the most influential treatises on music of the Medieval music, one which included unusually precise directions for composing Gregorian chant and organum....
  • St. Martial School
    St. Martial School

    The St. Martial School was a medieval school of composition centered in the Abbey of St. Martial, Limoges, France. It is known for the composition of Trope s, sequence s, and early organum....
  • Notre Dame school
    Notre Dame school

    The group of composers working at or near the Notre Dame de Paris in Paris from about 1160 to 1250, along with the music they produced, is referred to as the Notre Dame school, or the Notre Dame School of Polyphony....
  • Motet
    Motet

    In Western music, motet is a word that is applied to a number of highly varied choir musical compositions.The name comes either from the Latin movere, or a Latinized version of Old French mot, "word" or "verbal utterance." The Medieval Latin for "motet" is "motectum", and the Italian mottetto was also used....


Further reading

  • Various articles, including "Organum," "Musica enchiriadis", "Hucbald", "St Martial" in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, ed. Stanley Sadie. 20 vol. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980. ISBN 1-56159-174-2
  • 'Ad organum faciendum' (ca. 1100) Jay A. Huff, ed. and trans., Ad organum faciendum et Item de organo, Musical Theorists in Translation, vol. 8 Institute of Mediaeval Music, Brooklyn,NY [1963])
  • An Old St. Andrews Music Book (W1, the earlier ms. of Notre Dame Polyphony) J.H.Baxter, 1931
  • Magnus Liber Organi, (F) Pluteo 29.1, Bibliotheca Mediceo-Laurenziana, Firenze, facsimilé by Institute of Medieval Music, Brooklyn, NY, Medieval Manuscripts in Reproduction, vols. X and XI, ed. Luther Dittmer
  • Richard H. Hoppin, Medieval Music. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1978. ISBN 0-393-09090-6
  • William G. Waite, the rhythm of twelfth century polyphony, Yale UP 1954/1976, which apart from a selective transcription of the organa dupla by Leonin contains many quotations from the contemporary theorists in his dissertation preceding the transcription. Of particular interest is ' The notation of Organum Duplum, p. 106-127, from which quotes are taken.
  • 'Magnus Liber Organi, Parisian Liturgical Polyphony from the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries', 7 Vols. Les Editions de L'Oiseau-Lyre, Monaco, 1988-1993, general editor: Edward H. Roesner
  • -- The Organa of the Winchester Troper: consonance, rhythm and the origins of organum (good bibliography here too)
  • -- Appendix to 'The Organa of the Winchester Troper': Musical transcriptions
  • Gustave Reese, "Music in the Middle Aages" W.W. Norton & Co., ISBN 0-393-09750-1
  • Donald J Grout & Claude V. Palisca "A History of Western Music" W.W. Norton & Co., ISBN 0-393-97527-4
  • Oliver Strunk "Source Readings In Music History W.W. Norton & Co., ISBN 0-393-09742-0
  • Claude V. Palisca, ed. Musica enchiridas and Scolica enchiridas (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995).
  • Waite, William G. The Rhythm of Twelfth Century Polyphony (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1954).
  • Richard Crocker and David Hiley, eds., The New Oxford History of Music: The Early Middle Ages to 1300(New York: Oxford University Press, 1990).