Chapter 3: Secular Music GET BOOKS TODAY Get in your presentation groups and discuss the following topic. Be prepared to present your group’s thoughts/ideas to the class at 10:35: Why was Leonardo da Vinci considered the epitome of the Renaissance Man? Would it be possible for someone today to match his achievements? Explain.
Chapter 3: Secular Music. GET BOOKS TODAY Get in your presentation groups and discuss the following topic. Be prepared to present your group’s thoughts/ideas to the class at 10:35: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Chapter 3: Secular Music
GET BOOKS TODAYGet in your presentation groups and discuss the
following topic. Be prepared to present your group’s thoughts/ideas to the class at 10:35:
Why was Leonardo da Vinci considered the epitome of the Renaissance Man? Would it be possible for
someone today to match his achievements? Explain.
VOCAL MUSIC
• Secular vocal music increasingly popular– Set to poems in Italian, French, Spanish, German,
Dutch, English– Printed music made performing it a leisure activity– Every educated person expected to play an
instrument and read notation– Written for groups of solo voices or solo voice with
accompaniment of instruments
VOCAL MUSIC
• Secular vocal music more popular– Text painting common– Composers imitated natural sounds like bird
calls, street cries.
Vocal Music cont…
• Renaissance Madrigal– For several voices set to a short poem– Usually about love– Like a motet, it combines homophonic and
polyphonic textures– Word painting, unusual harmonies– Originated in Italy around 1520– Published by the thousands in 16th. c. Italy
Vocal Music cont…
– Sung by cultivated aristocrats– 1588: after defeat of the Spanish Armada, a
volume of translated Italian madrigals was published in London.
• Triggered spurt of madrigal writing by English comp.
• Same time as Queen Elizabeth I, Shakespeare• Golden age of both English music AND literature,
but originated in Italy
LISTENING TO MADRIGAL
– As Vesta Was Descending (1601)Thomas Weelkes – one of the first English madrigalists
– See books pg. 112
Vocal Music cont…
• Renaissance Ballett (Fa-La)– Simpler than madrigal, dance-like– For several solo voices– Homophonic (a contrast to most Ren.
music), melody in highest voice– Same music repeated for each verse/stanza,
syllables “fa-la” used as refrain– Also originated in Italy, cultivated in England
LISTENING TO BALLETT
– Now Is the Month of Maying (1595)Thomas Morley
– See books pg. 113
INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
• Early 1500’s: inst. music was largely adapted from vocal music.
• Harpsichord, organ, luteLute – plucked stringinstrument with body shaped like half a pear
VOCABULARY REVIEW• Renaissance• Individualism• “Universal man”• Humanism• Realism• Linear Perspective• Text Painting/Word Painting• Imitation• Consonance/Dissonance• A cappella• Motet• Mass
– Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei
• Josquin Desprez• Imitation• Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
• Protestant Reformation• Counter-Reformation• Council of Trent• Madrigal• Thomas Weelkes• Ballett• Thomas Morley• Pavane/Passamezzo• Galliard• Lute• Cornett• Sackbut• Shawm• Recorder• Regal• Michael Praetorius
UNIT III PRESENTATIONS
Technology: Movable Type Printing Press, Gutenberg Bible
KalynJulianBlakeJacob
Religion: Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation
DominiquePhilAlecBilal
Exploration: Columbus, da Gama, MagellanKierynClaireChris
Taimoor
Art: da Vinci, Michelangelo, RaphaelEmmaAaronSamiRyan