How Music Developed / A Critical and Explanatory Account of the Growth of Modern Music
Transcriber's Note: To enhance the audio listener's enjoyment, midi files have been added to music illustrations. The spelling has been harmonized. Obvious printer errors have been repaired. Arianna was first performed in 1608.
NEW YORK FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS
Copyright, 1898 By Frederick A. Stokes Co. Printed in the United States of America.
TO CHARLES BAMBURGH
Descent of the Roman Chant from the kithara songs of the Romans and thence from those of the Greeks—First appearance of modern melody—Steps toward the formation of a musical system—Ambrosian and Gregorian chants—Their character—Nokter Balbulus and sequences—Spread of the Roman chant—Nature of music at this period.
IN reading any history of the development of music as an art one must ever bear in mind the fact that music was also developing at the same time as a popular mode of expression, and that the two processes were separate. The cultivation of modern music as an art was begun by the medieval priests of the Roman Catholic Church, who were endeavoring to arrange a liturgy for their service, and it is due to this fact that for several centuries the only artistic music was that of the Church, and that it was controlled by influences which barely touched the popular songs of the times. In the course of years the two kinds of music came together, and important changes were made. But any account of the development of modern music as an art is compelled to begin with the story of the medieval chant.
In the beginning the chants of the Christian Church, from which the medieval chant was developed, were without system. They were a heterogeneous mass of music derived wholly from sources which chanced to be near at hand. The early Christians in Judea must naturally have borrowed their music from the worship of their forefathers, who were mostly Jews. The Christians in Greece naturally adapted Greek music to their requirements, while those in Rome made use of the Roman kithara (lyre) songs, which in their turn were borrowed from the Greeks. Christ and the apostles at the Last Supper chanted one of the old Hebrew psalms. Saint Paul speaks also of hymns and spiritual songs, by one of which designations he certainly means the hymns of the early Christians founded on Roman lyre songs. It is also on record that the Christian communities of Alexandria as early as 180 A. D. were in the habit of repeating the chant of the Last Supper with an accompaniment of flutes, and Pliny, the Younger (62-110 A. D.), describes the custom of singing hymns to the glory of Christ.
W. J. Henderson
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The Beginning of Modern Music
Harmony, Notation, and Measure
The Birth of Counterpoint
The Golden Age of Church Counterpoint
Progress of Popular Music
The Simplification of Music
The Evolution of the Piano
The Evolution of Piano Playing
Climax of the Polyphonic Piano Style
Monophonic Style and the Sonata
Evolution of the Orchestra
The Classic Orchestral Composers
The Romantic Orchestral Composers
The Development of Chamber Music
The Birth of Oratorio
Work of Handel and Bach
Haydn and Mendelssohn
The Birth of Opera
Italian Opera to Handel's Time
Italian Opera to Verdi
Beginnings of French Opera
The Reforms of Gluck
Meyerbeer and his Influence
German Opera to Mozart
Weber and Beethoven
Wagner and the Music Drama
The Lessons of Musical History