the ars nova musical developments in the fourteenth century

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The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

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Page 1: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

The Ars Nova

Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Page 2: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

• Ars novae musicae The Art of New Music)– Jehan des Murs (ca. 1290 – ca. 1350)

• Ars nova (The New Art)– Philippe de Vitry (1291–1361)

Page 3: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Music from Mathematics

• Perfection/ Imperfection• Modus, Tempus, Prolation

– Tempus perfectum, prolatio major

– Tempus perfectum, prolatio minor

– Tempus imperfectum, prolatio major

– Tempus imperfectum, prolatio minor

Page 4: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

The Roman de Fauvel

• Gervais du Bus• Tribum/Quoniam/MERITO

[Anthology 1-24]– Philippe de Vitry – Isorhythmic motet

Page 5: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Isorhythm

• Talea (repeating rhythmic values)• Color (recurring melodic pattern)

Page 6: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut(ca. 1300–1377)

• “Last of the trouvères”• “Greatest French poet of his age”

Page 7: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut

• Felix virgo/Inviolata/ADTE SUSPIRAMUS [Anthology 1-25]– Isorhythmic motet– Musica ficta• causa necessitatis (harmonically necessary

adjustments)• causa pulchritudinis (chromatic adjustments made “for

the sake of their beauty”)

Page 8: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut

• Chanson– “top-down style”

• Douce dame jolie [Anthology 1-26a]– Monophonic virelai

Page 9: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut

• En mon cuer [Anthology 1-26b]– Polyphonic virelai– Texted cantus– Cantilena style

Page 10: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut

• Tres bonne et belle [Anthology 1-26c]– virelai

• Rose, liz [Anthology 1-27]– rondeau

Page 11: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Guillaume de Machaut

• La Messe de Nostre Dame [Anthology 1-28]• Polyphonic setting of the mass ordinary– Cyclic mass ordinary• Kyrie• Gloria• Credo• Sanctus• Agnus Dei

Page 12: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Canons

• Literati • “connoisseur's art”• Machuat, Ma fin est mon conmencement (My

end is my beginning, and my beginning my end)

• Latin rota (“round”)• French chace; Italian caccia (“chase”)

Page 13: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Subtilitas

• Ars subtilior• Treatise by Philippus Caserta– “Subtiliorem modum” – composing with greater

subtlety– En remirant [Anthology 1-29]• Ballade• Lengthy passages of syncopation• Interplay of perfect and imperfect values• Superimposed and juxtaposed time signatures• Unusual note shapes

Page 14: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Subtilitas

• Chantilly Codex– Solage, Fumeux fume (Smoky Smoke)

[Anthology 1-30]• Rondeau

Page 15: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Trecento Vernacular Music

• Italian “1300s”• Madrigale– Vernacular poem– Two or more three-line stanzas and a ritornello

• Pomerium, Marchetto of Padua (1319)– Treatise on theory and notation

• Squarcialupi Codex (ca. 1415)– Compendium of Trecento compositions

Page 16: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Trecento Vernacular Music

• Jacopo da Bologna (1340 – ca. 1386)– Osellecto salvagio • Madrigal [Anthology 1-31a]• Caccia [Anthology 1-31b]

Page 17: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

Ballata

• AbbaA (similar to French virelai)• Francesco Landini (ca. 1325–1397)– Non avrà ma’ pietà [Anthology 1-32]• “Landini cadence”• Intabluation of Faenza Codex

Page 18: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

The Motet as Political Show

• Convergence of French and Italian styles• Northern European musicians employed in

Italian courts

Page 19: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

The Motet as Political Show

• Johannes Ciconia (ca. 1370–1412)– Born in Liège, employed in Padua– Doctorum principem super ethera/Melodia su

avissima cantemus [Anthology 1-33]

Page 20: The Ars Nova Musical Developments in the Fourteenth Century

The Motet as Political Show• Guillaume Du Fay (ca. 1397–1474)– Born near Brussels, employed in various Italian

courts and Pope Eugene IV– Nuper rosarum flores [Anthology 1-34]• Florence cathedral dedicated to the Virgin Mary• Symbolic durational proportions 6:4:2:3