Ez Work

Discussion:

  • Begin a discussion of the article, “Multiple Intelligences”, by Howard Gardner.
  • Please post an idea or question for the class based on your annotations, free-writing and notes on the reading,
  • Develop posts that will encourage discussion of Gardner’s ideas.

Instructions:

Print and Read: Multiple Intelligences, Gardner. Pay special attention to the introductory material before Gardner’s essay—the section on Rhetoric will be important later.

1. Using some of the techniques described in How to Mark a Book, annotate Gardner’s essay, Multiple Intelligences.

2. In your Journal/Reading Log: Make a list of key terms from the reading (Key terms are words that are essential to the main ideas of the reading.) Make another list of unfamiliar words from the readings.

3. Take notes. Free-write your initial responses to Gardner’s ideas.

4. Post your ideas about the reading on the discussion forum.

Over the next few days, respond to your classmates’ posts as you continue to re-read and take notes on the article.

Process notes:

It is important to open any discussion on a reading by re-framing the main ideas of the writer. Place any questions you raise in the context of the author’s ideas. In other words, how do your ideas deepen our understanding or make us re-consider the author’s ideas?

Enjoy!

History Of California-5

1-Theodore Judah did all of the following, EXCEPT A-made unrealistic cost estimates of railroad construction B-died in New York on a trip to raise funds from eastern tycoons. C-approved the giving contracts to Crocker’s construction company. D-helped get passage of the Pacific Railway Act of 1862. 2-The Pacific Railway Act of 1862 was insufficient to ensure the creation of a transcontinental railway primarily because A-it did not provide adequate funds. B-it did not have the support of southern states C-it applied to any company that wanted to build a railroad. D-it did not provide adequate protection from Indian raids. 3-This was the greatest impact of the Civil War on California: A-shortage of supplies and disruption of commerce. B-political upheaval between Republicans and Democrats. C-the potential for violence between pro-South and pro-North factions. D-the loss of men who went to fight the war. 4-The Pacific Railway Act of 1864 A-doubled the land grant given to the railroad companies. B-forbade the use of Chinese labor in railroad construction. C-had little impact on the completion of the transcontinental railroad. D-was not a significant improvement from the 1862 law. 5-In 1863, ______________ used his connections in the east to get loans for the Central Pacific Railroad. A-Mark Hopkins B-Leland Stanford C-Charles Crocker D-Collis P. Huntington 6-Who constructed the first railroad in California? A-Leland Stanford B-Charles Crocker C-Theodore Judah D-Mark Hopkins

 

 

7-Which political party dominated California politics in the 1860s? A-Republican Party B-Whig Party C-Progressive Party D-Democratic Party 8-The Big Four created the Southern Pacific Company A-as a way to avoid the debts of the Central Pacific Railroad. B-in order to make it easier to manage their many different holdings. C-to oversee their various philanthropic activities D-because they were forced to by government regulators. 9-By 1860, what new situation provided more impetus for creating a railroad across the Sierra? A-The success of the Comstock Lode in Nevada B-The near unanimous backing of California business interests C-Federal subsidies for railroads D-New technology for building railroads over mountains 10-Which of the following was NOT one of the “Big Four” of the Central Pacific Railroad? A-Leland Stanford B-Theodore Judah C-Charles Crocker D-Mark Hopkins 11-In 1861, ___________ was elected governor of California. A-William Gwin B-Mark Hopkins C-John C. Frémont D-Leland Stanford 12-The first rail line in California started at A-Sacramento. B-Stockton. C-San Jose. D-San Francisco.

 

 

13-Which of the following regions saw the MOST construction of local rail lines through 1866? A-San Joaquin Valley B-San Francisco Bay Area C-Southern Sierra Nevada D-Northern Sacramento Valley 14-Why was the plan presented by Theodore Judah for a transcontinental railroad rejected by Congress in 1860? A-It provided no details about how the railroad would be constructed. B-It had no significant backing in California. C-It was opposed by many Southerners. D-It did not advocate public subsidies. 15-Which of the Big Four were most well-known for opposition to racial prejudice and discrimination? A-Hopkins and Crocker B-Crocker and Huntington C-Stanford and Crocker D-Hopkins and Stanford 16-Completion of the Dutch Flat Toll Road A-created a major competitor for the Central Pacific Railroad. B-occurred after the completion of the railroad across the Sierra Nevada. C-allowed the Big Four to dominate commerce with the Comstock Lode. D-was done under the supervision of Theodore Judah. 17-Which of the following reasons BEST accounts for sluggish population growth in California in the latter half of the 1850s? A-Immigrants dislike of the climate B-No government incentives for having children C-Insufficient food to feed everyone D-Declining profits from gold mining 18-The Central Pacific Railroad relied primarily on ______ laborers to lay the tracks over the Sierra Nevada. A-Indian B-Irish

 

 

C-Chinese D-black 19-Once the tracks over the Sierra Nevada were completed, building the remaining track to Promontory Point, Utah A-was excruciatingly slow. B-could not take place. C-was very rapid. D-proceeded at a leisurely pace. 20-After 1870, most new railways in California A-went bankrupt. B-consolidated with each other to counterbalance the Big Four. C-were successful. D-were acquired by the Big Four. 21-In 1870, the western terminus of the Central Pacific Railroad was in A-Oakland. B-Sacramento C-San Francisco. D-Benicia. 22-Which of the Big Four was most responsible for getting supplies and credit for the Central Pacific Railroad? A-Hopkins B-Crocker C-Stanford D-Huntington 23-The Big Four of the Central Pacific Railroad were strong supporters of the _______ Party. A-Whig B-Free Soil C-Republican D-Democratic 24-The MOST important reason why Congress didn’t pass a transcontinental railroad bill in the 1850s was

 

 

A-no support for it in California. B-lack of support from the Republican Party. C-political wrangling. D-no suggestions on how to pay for it

Book Summary

SUGGESTED OUTLINE: Front Matter (cover page, table of contents) Introduction, to include a brief summary and a hint as to your key observations Description of the Fire, to include item 2 above Influence of the Built Environment, to include item 4 above Influence on the Built Environment, to include item 5 above Conclusions, to include your thoughts on, for example, any particularly interesting thoughts or observations you have on the fire and its relationship to cultural or functional design decisions or systems. Back matter (a reference list with complete bibliographic records for any sources including the book you read and auxiliary sources (items 1 and 3), your review (item 6), and other relevant information you wish to include).

ANTICIPATED RUBRIC: 0 – The report is turned in later than the assigned due date/time.

F (59 and below) – The report is not turned in, is turned in after the due date/time, or is turned in before the due date/time without answering the guiding questions in a way that they can be found. There is little evidence that the writer read the assignment. The report is written in an unprofessional tone and/or with so many errors in English spelling and grammar, and/or in fact, that it cannot be understood. The writer makes no effort to help the reader find things with things such as an accurate table of contents, section headings, etc.

D (60-69) – The report is turned in before the due date/time. Of the guiding questions, only 1 is answered clearly and well, in a way that it can be found. The report is mostly written in a professional tone, with many errors in English spelling and grammar. Some concepts introduced or reviewed in the class are correctly used, but there are several errors in fact or areas left incomplete. In spite of these problems, the report can still be generally followed. Some efforts to guide the reader are provided. The report is shorter than the minimum length or violates format to expand a shorter work, or the report is much longer than the maximum length.

C (70-79) – The report is turned in before the due date/time. Of the guiding questions, only 2 are answered clearly and well, in a way that they can be found. The report is written in a professional tone, with few errors in English spelling and grammar. There are minor errors in fact or areas left incomplete, but for the most part the concepts introduced or reviewed in the class are correctly used. The report addresses the questions asked, but evidences little beyond the minimum effort required, and the report, while complete, is boring and/or overlong. It is possible to find things easily via guidance provided to the reader.

B (80-89) – The report is turned in before the due date/time. Of the guiding questions, all are answered clearly and well, in a way that they can be found. The report is written in a professional tone, with rare errors in English spelling and grammar. There are no errors in fact or areas left incomplete. The report addresses the questions asked, with some evidence of effort to understand the subject and convey it to the reader. It is possible to find things easily via guidance provided to the reader. Ideas presented in the book are related to corresponding ideas from the classroom.

A (90 and above) – The report is turned in before the due date/time. Of the guiding questions, all are answered clearly and well, in a way that they can be found. The report is written in a professional tone, with only one or two errors in English spelling and grammar. There are no errors in fact or areas left incomplete. The report addresses the questions asked, and goes beyond by evidencing interest in the subject, additional research into the event, and is interesting and engaging to read. Very specific concepts from the class are applied to the reading in new ways, and/or original examples are used to illustrate concepts from the reading. The report is well organized and clear.

The Renaissance ca. 1425–1600

Listen to This

Fourth Edition

Part 2

The Renaissance ca. 1425–1600

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The Renaissance

Recovery of knowledge lost during the Middle Ages

Humanism: movement that explored human interests and values through science, philosophy, and the arts

Renaissance composers united words and music more than ever before

 

 

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Music for Catholics and Protestants

Martin Luther began Reformation in Wittenberg, 1517

Monarchs determined faith and politics of their realm

Protestant composers wrote liturgical music in languages other than Latin

Catholic composers wrote music to inspire the faithful

 

 

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Music for Growing Markets

First contact with “New World” in fifteenth century

Demand for music and the arts grew

Ideal “Renaissance man” cultivated knowledge in full range of arts and sciences

Castiglione’s The Book of the Courtier recommends learning to sing and play an instrument

 

 

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A New Sense of Individuality

Growing confidence in human reason and distinctiveness of individuals

Medieval drama tended toward allegory

Renaissance drama emphasized lifelike characters

Renaissance composers captured human emotions

 

 

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Information Technology 2.0

Invention of moveable metal type around 1450 changed the way information was transmitted

Print allowed information to spread quickly and cheaply

Some composers achieved international renown, even as publishers

By 1500, printing was a major enterprise throughout Europe

 

 

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Closer Look: A Renaissance Printing Press

Printing press made it possible to create thousands of copies of a text in a single process.

Individuals could now buy music for their own use at a reasonable price.

By 1500, printing became a major enterprise, and presses emerged across Europe.

 

 

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Chapter 7

Josquin des Prez

“The Cricket”

 

 

 

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Chapter 7 Learning Objectives

7.1 Discuss the whimsical nature of the text of ”The Cricket” and how Josquin’s setting reflects this nature.

7.2 Listen for the four equal voices characteristic of Renaissance style.

7.3 Recognize how Josquin’s music depicts specific words in the text of “The Cricket.”

7.4 Listen for the contrasting sections of the ABA structure.

7.5 Describe various performance options for “The Cricket.”

7.6 Discuss highlights of Josquin’s life.

 

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Listen to This First, “The Cricket”

Texture Listen for four distinct voices (polyphonic). Listen for passages in which voices sing in the same or different rhythms.
Word-Music Relationships Listen for examples of word painting, in which the sound of a cricket is imitated.
Form Listen for the return of the opening section. Listen for the contrast between the middle and outer sections.

 

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“The Cricket”

Composed: ca. 1500

Words and music enhance one another

Josquin wrote music as humorous as the text

Written to be played by any combination of voices and instruments

Renaissance songs seem more contemporary than music from the Middle Ages

 

 

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Texture: Polyphony in Four Voices

Four equal parts: soprano (highest), alto, tenor, bass (lowest)

Polyphony (equal-voice texture) is the norm for Renaissance music

Counterpoint governed how multiple melodies sound good when played together

Technique learned by writing new melodies against an existing one

 

 

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Word Painting: Music Imitates Text

In word painting, music “illustrates” the meaning of a word or phrase

Examples in “The Cricket”:

Long notes for cricket’s ability to “hold a long line”

Chirping, hiccupping sounds for “drinking”

Passionate, intense melisma for “love”

 

 

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Ternary Form

Form of text shapes the form of the music

Two broad sections in “The Cricket”

Cricket can hold a long note and sing of drinking

Cricket is different from birds, who also sing

Each section receives distinctive music

Opening section is repeated at end

 

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Word Painting

Find a piece that uses word painting.

Example: Taylor Swift, “Blank Space” (2014)

 

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Profile: Josquin des Prez (ca. 1450-1521)

An international celebrity in his time

So popular that publishers falsely attributed many pieces to him

Demanded higher salaries and freedom to work independently

Life shrouded in mystery

Born near border of France and Belgium, but worked mainly in Italy, including in Rome

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Josquin des Prez

Missa Pange Lingua

Missa La Sol Fa Re Mi

“Hail Mary…Serene Virgin”

“Virgin Nurse of God, Undefiled”

 

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Performance: Playing and Singing

Similar to songwriters today, Josquin wrote his music so that it could be performed in a variety of ways

With words

Without words

Arranged for all kinds of instruments and instrumental ensembles

Renaissance musicians were resourceful – used whatever combination of voices or instruments available

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: The Music of Sounds (1/2)

Are all sounds music? Consider the following:

Birds

Clément Janequin’s “The Song of the Birds” (“Le chant des oiseaux,” early 16c)

Music of the Kalui of Papua New Guinea

Olivier Messiaen, “Awakening of the Birds” (“Réveil des oiseaux,” 1953)

Monkeys

Cecak or Ketjak (“Ramayana Monkey Chant”) from Bali (Indonesia)

 

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Expand Your Playlist: The Music of Sounds (2/2)

Trains

Arthur Honegger, Pacific 213 (1923)

Billy Strayhorn’s Take the “A” Train (1941)

Battle

Clément Janequin’s La Bataille (early 16c)

Ludwig van Beethoven’s Wellington’s Victory (1813)

Pyotr IIich Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture (1882)

 

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Chapter 8

Thomas Weelkes

“Since Robin Hood”

 

 

 

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Chapter 8 Learning Objectives

8.1 Define madrigal.

8.2 Situate the Morris dance and its music in Renaissance culture.

8.3 Listen for the relationship between the shifting meters of the poetry and the shifting meters of the music.

8.4 Listen for the instances of word painting in Thomas Weelkes’s “Since Robin Hood.”

8.5 Discuss the social role of musicians in private households in Elizabethan England.

8.6 Discuss Thomas Weelkes as a Shakespearean composer.

 

 

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Listen to This First, “Since Robin Hood”

Texture Listen for the three distinct voices (polyphonic).
Rhythm Listen for the shift from duple to triple meter in the middle of the piece.
Word-Music Relationships Listen to the descriptive nature of the music with words such as “to skip” and “trip it.”

 

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“Since Robin Hood”

Composed: 1608

Madrigal: musical setting of a text in a single strophe (stanza)

About an actual event in 1599

William Kemp danced from London to Norwich (140 miles) in nine days

Features stock characters: Robin Hood, Maid Marian, Little John, hobby horse

 

 

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Texture: Polyphony in Three Voices

Polyphony typical of Renaissance madrigal

All three voices move in same rhythm

Declamatory style makes text easier to hear

Uppermost voice uses a melody familiar to Shakespeare’s contemporaries

 

 

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Poetic Rhythm in Music

Rhythm of music matches the poetry

Iambic pattern: short-LONG

Trochaic pattern: LONG-short

Syncopation illustrates “to skip” in third section

1st section, iambic, duple meter

2nd section, trochaic, triple meter

3rd section, trochaic, duple meter

 

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Songs about Dancing

Find a piece that deals with the subject of dancing.

Example: Chubby Checker, “The Twist” (1960)

 

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Word Painting in the Renaissance Madrigal

Certain words are set graphically

Examples: “to skip” and “did trip it”

Different rhythms in each voice make these jump out of the texture

Word painting common in Renaissance madrigals

Enhances meaning and pleasure of poetry

 

 

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Profile: Thomas Weelkes (ca. 1575-1623)

Lived during age of Shakespeare, Elizabeth I, and James I

Fascinated by Italian poetry and music

Imitated Italian models, used English poets (Shakespeare, Jonson, Marlowe)

Professional musician: educated at Oxford, wrote sacred and secular music

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: The English Madrigal

William Byrd, “This Sweet and Merry Month of May”

John Farmer, “Fair Phyllis I Saw Sitting All Alone”

Orlando Gibbons, “The Silver Swan”

Thomas Morley, “Now Is the Month of Maying”

Thomas Weelkes, “As Vesta Was from Latmos Hill Descending”; “Hark, All Ye Lovely Saints”

John Wilbye, “Weep, Weep, Mine Eyes”

 

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Historical Context: Musicians as Spies

Sixteenth-century England went back and forth between Protestant monarchs and Catholic monarchs

Rumors and plots to overthrow the monarchy and invade the country

Playing an instruments provided perfect cover for gathering intelligence

 

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Expand Your Playlist: The Italian Madrigal

Italian madrigals of the early 16th century influenced the emergence of the English madrigal at the end of 16th century

Earliest examples of English-language madrigals were direct translations from the Italian.

Examples of composers of the English madrigal:

Jacob Arcadelt (ca. 1505-1568)

Cipriano de Rore (1516-1565)

Luzzaascho Luzzaschi (1545-1607)

Lucca Marenzio (1553 or 1554-1599)

Claudio Monteverdi (1567-1643)

 

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Chapter 9

William Byrd

“Sing Joyfully”

 

 

 

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Chapter 9 Learning Objectives (1/2)

9.1 Discuss the challenges of setting sacred music polyphonically.

9.2 Define the genres of anthem and motet.

9.3 Listen for the imitative counterpoint in six voices in William Byrd’s “Sing Joyfully.”

9.4 Listen for and describe the relationship between the structure of the text and sectional form of the music in “Sing Joyfully.”

 

 

 

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Chapter 9 Learning Objectives (2/2)

9.5 Describe the options for performance of Renaissance choral music.

9.6 Discuss Byrd’s work as a Catholic composer and publisher in Protestant England.

 

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Listen to This First, “Sing Joyfully”

Texture Listen for the six distinct voices. Listen for passages in which musical ideas are imitated in quick succession.
Form Notice how each new section receives its own new musical idea.
Word-Music Relationships Listen for the feeling of the text’s key words such as “joyfully” and “sing loud.” Listen for word painting on phrases such as “blow the trumpet.”

 

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“Sing Joyfully”

Composed: 1590

Sacred text, from Book of Psalms

For six voices

Choral Music (more than one singer to a part)

A cappella (sung without instrumental accompaniment)

Anthem was English equivalent of the motet

Large choirs and cathedrals challenged ability of text to be heard

Originally performed by all-male choir, a sound still common in English churches

 

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Texture: Polyphony in Six Voices

Imitative counterpoint: one voice introduces a new theme and is imitated by other voices in succession

Imitation important since the Renaissance

Challenging to hear the text

Registral separation and text repetition help clarify the text

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Polyphonic Texture

Find a piece of music that contains at least one passage with polyphonic texture.

The Beach Boys, “Good Vibrations” (1964)

 

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Sectional Form

Form of music follows form of words

Each line of text receives a melodic idea, ending with a cadence

Elided cadence: new idea introduced as old one ends

 

 

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Word-Music Relationships: The Music Paints the Words

“Sing joyfully” set to lively musical motive

“Blow the trumpet” imitates trumpet fanfare

“For this is a statue of Israel” set in a fitting declamatory style

 

 

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Profile: William Byrd (1542-1623)

A Catholic working for the Protestant queen, Elizabeth I

Often harassed as a “papist”

His talent guarded against persecution

Briefly monopolized English music printing

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Byrd

Mass for Four Voices

O Lord, Make Thy Servant Elizabeth

Sadness and Anxiety (Tristitia et anxietas)

“This Sweet and Merry Month of May”

 

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Performance: The Sound of the All-Male Choir

With few exceptions, women were not permitted to sing in church choirs until 18th century

It was feared that women might cause distraction

Churches used their male pupils to sing the soprano line

Ideal sound of all-male choir (still sought after today)

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Music of the Reformation

Catholics and Protestants recognized the power of music to sway hearts and minds of the faithful.

English:

Thomas Tallis (ca. 1505-1585)

German:

Martin Luther (1483-1546)

John Walter (1496-1570)

French:

Louis Bourgeois (ca. 1510-15-1559)

 

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Chapter 10

Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina

Pope Marcellus Mass, “Gloria”

 

 

 

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Chapter 10 Learning Objectives (1/2)

10.1 Discuss the sixteenth-century debate over sacred music within the Catholic Church and how Palestrina provided a model for polyphonic music of the Counter-Reformation.

10.2 Explain the ritual of the Catholic Mass and how music is used within it.

10.3 Recognize how Palestrina creates different textures in Pope Marcellus Mass by varying the number of voices from phrase to phrase.

 

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Chapter 10 Learning Objectives (2/2)

10.4 Listen for the steady, even flow of the rhythm and how Palestrina used elided cadences to keep the music moving forward.

10.5 Recognize passages where Palestrina has strategically introduced dissonance.

10.6 Discuss highlights of Palestrina’s life.

 

 

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Listen to This First, Pope Marcellus Mass, “Gloria”

Timbre Listen for the sound of unaccompanied voices.
Texture Try to hear the six different voices, high to low. Listen for the contrast between moments when only some voices are singing and those when all six voices are singing.
Rhythm Listen for the steady, even flow of the music and the occasional cadences that punctuate this flow at various points.
Harmony Listen for the contrast between consonance—a “sweet” sound—and the occasional dissonance—a ”harsh” sound.

 

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Pope Marcellus Mass

Composed: 1555

“Gloria” conveys sung text with clarity and richness of six-voice texture

Legend: Council of Trent was convinced after listening to this Mass that polyphony, in addition to plainchant, could be effective in projecting a text, along with having beautiful melodies and harmonies.

Most famous Palestrina Mass

“Palestrina Style”

 

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Historical Context: The Mass

Mass is ritual re-enactment of Christ’s Last Supper with the Disciples

Consists of a combination of texts that never change (Ordinary) and texts that are connected to specific seasons, weeks or days in the church calendar (Propers)

Ordinary: Kyrie eleison, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei

Until mid-1960s, texts sung in Latin

Composers of Masses: Machaut, Josquin des Prez, Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven.

 

 

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A capella Timbre

Unaccompanied voices

Choral music sung a capella (similar to William Byrd’s “Sing Joyfully”)

 

 

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Varied Polyphonic Textures

Four vocal lines (soprano, alto, tenor, bass) + extra tenor and bass line

Rarely uses all six voices at any given moment

Texture examples:

1. ”Deus Pater omnipotens” (3 voices)

2. “Domine Fili, unigenite…” (4 voices)

3. “Domine Fili” repeat (6 voices)

4. “unignite” (5 to 4 voices)

 

 

 

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Flowing Rhythm

Palestrina provides variety with passages of faster rhythmic motion

Never becomes monotonous

Each phrase of text receives its own particular melodic idea and slightly different rhythmic pattern

Cadences keep the music moving forward

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Dissonance and Consonance

Example: Imogen Heap, “Hide and Seek” (2005)

 

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Consonant and Dissonant Harmonies

Palestrina strategically uses dissonance (harsh sound created when two or more notes clash and so not seem to belong together)

His music is largely consonant

Example: Listen at 0:35 for the word “Adoramus”

 

 

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Profile: Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (1525 or 1526-1594)

Name from the town Palestrina, near Rome

Musician in churches and around Rome

Prolific composer with 104 settings of Mass, more than 270 motets, and both sacred and secular madrigals

His music continued to be performed long after his death

Later composers were influenced by Palestrina’s style

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Palestrina

Missa brevis / Mass

Tu es Petrus / Motet

Stabat mater / Motet

Vestiva I colli / Secular Madrigal

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Music of the Counter-Reformation

Counter-Reformation

Council of Trent (1545-1563) to close of Thirty Years’ War (1618-1648)

Examples of composers who maintained allegiance to Rome and continued to set texts in Latin:

Tomás Luis de Victoria (ca. 1549-1611)

Cristonál de Morales (ca. 1500-1553)

Orlande de Lassus (1530 or 1532-1594)

Gregorio Allegri (1582-1652)

 

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Chapter 11

Rhyming Singers of the Bahamas

“My Lord Help Me to Pray”

 

 

 

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Chapter 11 Learning Objectives (1/2)

11.1 Recognize polyphonic singing as a global phenomenon.

11.2 Listen for call-and-response in the Rhyming Singers of the Bahamas’s performance of “My Lord Help Me to Pray.”

11.3 Listen for and describe the three parts of rhyme, treble, and bass in “My Lord Help Me to Pray”

 

 

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Chapter 11 Learning Objectives (2/2)

11.4 Listen for the contrasts among the different sections of “My Lord Help Me to Pray.”

11.5 Discuss Bob Marley and the beginning of reggae.

 

 

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Listen to This First, “My Lord Help Me to Pray”

Texture Listen for the contrasting register and timbre of the three voices.
Melody Listen for the distinctive melodic contour of each voice.
Word-Music Relationships Notice how the singers change or add words within the same basic textual framework.
Form Listen for the alternation between the call (lead vocalist) and response (chorus).

 

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“My Lord Help Me to Pray”

Recorded: 1965

Rhyme song developed in nineteenth century

For three vocalists

Each melodic line has its own words

Based on gospel texts

 

 

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Texture: Monophony versus Polyphony

Call-and-response alternation between monophony (lead singer) and polyphony (all three voices)

Syncretism: combines different forms of beliefs and practices

Mixes Christian spirituals and Bahamian religious beliefs

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Call-and-Response

Find a piece that contains a lead vocalist who states the melody (“call”) and a vocal group that responds to him or her (“response”).

Example: Whiskey Shivers, “Graves” (2014)

 

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Intoning the Melody (1/2)

Bahamians refer to singing as “intoning”

Bahamians refer to their songs as “rhymes”

Each line (call-and-response) has its own intonation model:

Rhyme line: Varied and often improvised; always descending in motion; each phrase ends on its lowest tone.

 

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Intoning the Melody (2/2)

Treble line: Two halves, a (ascends and pauses on the highest tone of the phrase) and b (descends and resolved on the lowest tone of the phrase).

Bass line: Varied slightly; two essential tones that provide the basic harmonic support; sometimes occurs under the rhyme line as additional support.

 

 

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Historical Context: Bob Marley and the Birth of Reggae

Caribbean music is rich and varied

Local styles influenced by American rock and roll heard on radios

Reggae associated with the Rastafarian religion

Emphasis on black liberation, culture, and artistic expression

Strong appeal in Jamaica

Bob Marley (1945-1981): reggae performer, composer, and political activist

 

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Word-Music Relationships

Uses repeated couplets (pairs of metered lines)

The response is always “My Lord, help me to pray”

Later on, the parts become intricate and complex

 

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Music of the Caribbean

Music of the Caribbean

Caribbean Party

Jamaica

Bongo, Backra & Coolie

Reggae

Bob Marley / Babylon by Bus

Bahamas

Joseph Spence

Calypso

Lord Invader

 

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Chapter 12

Tielman Susato Moorish Dance

 

 

 

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Chapter 12 Learning Objectives (1/2)

12.1 Explain the function of dance in Renaissance society

12.2 Describe the different timbres in Tielman Susato’s Moorish Dance.

12.3 Explain the relationship between meter and dancing.

12.4 Identify the binary form of Susato’s Moorish Dance.

 

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Chapter 12 Learning Objectives (2/2)

12.5 Discuss Susato’s role as a publisher

12.6 Describe why music publishing was difficult

12.7 Identify other examples of instrumental music from the Renaissance.

 

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Listen to This First, Moorish Dance

Timbre Listen for instruments from each of the three main families of instruments: winds, strings, and percussion.
Rhythm Listen for the underlying metrical regularity of the music, in duple meter.
Form Listen for the repetition and alternation of the dance’s two sections: the first is characterized by a higher, brighter sound, while the second is lower and somewhat darker.

 

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Moorish Dance

Composed: ca. 1550

Dance was vital element of social life

Composers supplied much dance music

Various dance genres existed

Each had distinctive tempo, meter, rhythm, and dance step

Susato’s Moorish Dance was one of the most popular dance tunes of its day

 

 

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A Rich and Varied Timbre

Performance by very large ensemble

Winds: recorders, shawms, curtal, sackbuts, cornettos

Strings: violins, viols, guitars

Percussion: tabors, bells, tambourine, cymbals

Highest and loudest instruments predominate

Percussion provide steady beat for dancers

 

 

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Dancing to Rhythmic Units

Must be rhythmically clear and consistent

Smaller rhythmic units correspond to steps

Each “step” consists of eight beats

Even today, dance music uses repeated musical units played to a steady beat

 

 

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Binary Form

Divides into two large units (A and B)

Binary form—two repeated halves

Notated as ||: A :||: B :|| or AABB

Entire dance often repeated

Often ends on A

 

 

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Connect Your Playlist: Brass Instruments

Find a piece that makes prominent use of brass instruments.

Example: Shakira, “Hips Don’t Lie” (2006)

 

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Profile: Tielman Susato (ca. 1510-1570)

Remembered as composer and publisher

Lived in Antwerp

Worked first as calligrapher

Later established a music printing press

Promoted local composers

His talent guarded against persecution

Briefly monopolized English music printing

 

 

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Historical Context: The Business of Music Publishing

Printing and publishing was major business by early sixteenth century

Music publishing developed in Venice by Ottaviano Petrucci

Petrucci promoted the music of Josquin des Prez

Tielman Susato promoted dance music and popular songs

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Moorish Dance

Various versions of Moorish Dance by:

Piffaro

Ensemble Terpsichore

Rupert Gough

Philip Jones Brass Ensemble

Canadian Brass

 

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Expand Your Playlist: Instrumental Music of the Renaissance

Many musical Instruments from the Renaissance disappeared or evolved over time and only recently have they been recovered

The following albums help to recreate the Renaissance in sound:

Flautando Köln

His Majestys Sagbutts and Cornetts

Phantasm

 

 

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Part II Summary

Making Connections:

Music of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance

 

 

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Comparison of Eras (1/3)

Middle Ages Renaissance
Texture Monophonic and polyphonic Polyphonic, including imitative counterpoint
Melody Flowing, largely conjunct, divided into sections by cadences; melodies based on scales of the medieval modes Flowing, but with greater use of disjunct motion; divided into sections by cadences; melodies based on scales of the medieval modes

 

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Comparison of Eras (2/3)

Middle Ages Renaissance
Rhythm Free (plainchant) and metrically structured Relatively smooth and flowing rhythms within a metrically structured framework
Timbre No sharp distinction between instrumental and vocal music No sharp distinction between instrumental and vocal music; a growing number and variety of instruments
Harmony By-product of harmony By-product of harmony

 

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Comparison of Eras (3/3)

Middle Ages Renaissance
Form Based on repetition, variety, and contrast Based on repetition, variety, and contrast; primarily sectional; binary form for dance music
Word-Music Relationships Syllabic settings to project texts clearly; melismatic settings to emphasize key words Limited use of word painting

 

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In Review: Renaissance Style (1/2)

Polyphonic texture Although monophonic plainchant continued to be used in sacred services, new music is almost entirely polyphonic. Imitative counterpoint becomes increasingly important (Byrd). Four-voice texture is the norm at the beginning of the Renaissance (Josquin); six voice texture is the norm by the end (Byrd).
Melody Greater use of disjunct motion; melodies still based on medieval modes
Rhythm Metrical structure provides a framework for rhythms that are usually fluid (Josquin, Weelkes, Byrd), though in the case of dance music these rhythms are more repetitive (Susato)

 

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In Review: Renaissance Style (2/2)

Word painting Setting specific words to music that imitates the meaning of those words
Binary form The most common form for dance movement, consisting of two sections, each repeated in performance

 

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