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Ancient Greece and Music
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Page 1: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Ancient Greece and Music

Page 2: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

When: 800 BC to 400 AD

Page 3: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Where: Athens

Page 4: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Main IdeasOrder

BeautyReason

Page 5: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Logic• Ancient Greeks believed

everything could be explained logically through the ideas of beauty, order and reason.

Page 6: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Pythagoras was a philosopher or lover of wisdom. He was also a mathematician

and he believed mathematical law governed all of life’s activities

Page 7: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

What did Pythagoras do?

• Musical Scale- a system of tones based on the distance between 2 pitches, interval, that sounds pleasing to the ear.

• Pythagorean Theory –

Page 8: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Ancient Greek Musical Instruments

Page 9: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

LyraThe lyre: a strummed and occasionally plucked string instrument, essentially a hand-held instrument built on a tortoise-shell frame, generally with seven or more strings. The lyre was used to accompany others or even oneself for recitation and song.

Page 10: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

KitharaThe kithara: a strummed string instrument, more complicated than the lyre. It had a box-type frame with strings stretched from the cross-bar at the top to the sounding box at the bottom; it was held upright and played with a plectrum. The strings were tunable by adjusting wooden wedges along the cross-bar.

Page 11: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Aulos

The aulos: usually double, consisting of two double-reed (like an oboe) pipes, not joined but generally played with a mouth-band to hold both pipes steadily between the player's lips. Modern reconstructions indicate that they produced a low, clarinet-like sound.

Page 12: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Pan PipesThe Pan pipes: also known as panflute and syrinx is an ancient musical instrument based on the principle of the stopped pipe, consisting of a series of such pipes of gradually increasing length, tuned (by cutting) to a desired scale. Sound is produced by blowing across the top of the open pipe (like blowing across a bottle top).

Page 13: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

HydraulisThe hydraulis: a keyboard instrument, the forerunner of the modern organ. As the name indicates, the instrument used water to supply a constant flow of pressure to the pipes. Essentially, the air to the pipes that produce the sound comes from a wind-chest connected by a pipe to a dome; air is pumped in to compress water, and the water rises in the dome, compressing the air, and causing a steady supply of air to the pipes.

Page 14: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Ancient Seashell TrumpetA sea shell with a cut opening as a mouthpiece

Page 15: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Difficulties Understanding Ancient Greek Music

1. Much of the music was destroyed by fire2. Many do not agree about how to

interpret the music3. Much of the music was not written down

Page 16: Ancient Greece and Music. When: 800 BC to 400 AD.

Ancient Greek Culture and MusicAncient Greeks used music in their lives for the following:•To accompany dramatic plays•At sporting events and games•To accompany dancing•At ceremonies and rituals