1 / 17

Intro to Music History

Intro to Music History. 6 Periods of Music History. (Ancient) – Doesn’t really count Medieval Renaissance Baroque Classical Romantic Modern. Ancient Period. This term refers to the music of the Ancient civilizations (Greece, Rome, Babylon, Mesopotamia, et cetera.

Mercy
Download Presentation

Intro to Music History

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intro to Music History

  2. 6 Periods of Music History • (Ancient) – Doesn’t really count • Medieval • Renaissance • Baroque • Classical • Romantic • Modern

  3. Ancient Period • This term refers to the music of the Ancient civilizations (Greece, Rome, Babylon, Mesopotamia, et cetera. • Very little is known about the music of these civilizations, but it is certain that music played a part in their lives. • How can historians know anything about music from these cultures?

  4. Medieval Period • 800 – 1300 C.E. • Music was very simple. • Gregorian Chant • Monophony vs. Polyphony • Beginnings of Notation – all handwritten

  5. Medieval Notation

  6. Renaissance • Renaissance Period – 1300-1600 C.E. • All music can be broken down into two main divisions Sacred and Secular • Sacred – having to do with religion • Secular – having nothing to do with religion

  7. Renaissance • Each division had different types of music. • How did musicians make a living? • Famous Composers: William Byrd, Giovanni di Palestrina, Claudio Monteverdi, Josquin Desprez.

  8. Baroque • Baroque Period -1600-1700 C.E. • Music Theory had advanced a lot since ancient times • Major Composers – J.S. Bach, Antonio Vivaldi, and G.F. Haendel

  9. Bach’s own Handwriting

  10. Baroque Notation Printing While the notation style is still not the same as today’s, the printing press made music much more readable than ever before.

  11. Classical • Classical Period – 1700-1800 C.E. • Music Theory and instruments were mostly formed by now to our modern standards. • Major Composers – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Joseph Haydn

  12. Romantic • Romantic Period – 1800-1900 C.E. • Musicians making a living on their own now. • Major Composers – Ludwig von Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Peter Tchaikovsky, Johannes Brahms

  13. Modern • Modern Period – 1900 C.E.– Present • Classical music led to the development of popular music. Jazz, Blues, Rock, Hip-Hop • In the 1900’s popular music became the dominant style of music.

  14. Modern Classical Music • Classical music still exists in today’s music world • It is not as popular with younger generations as pop music is. • Modern classical is very different than the music it came from. • Three different ways that classical music still exists. Pop classical, Retrospective classical, and new classical.

  15. Modern Classical • Classical Music in the 20th century has many different styles. • Neo-classicism, atonality, serial music, electronic music, et cetera. • Important Composers: Copland, Stravinsky, Schönberg.

  16. References • Pictures • Chant Manuscript - www.adoremus.org • William Byrd – www.rhapsody.com • Giovanni Plestrina – www.naxos.com • Claudio Monteverdi – www.8notes.com • Josquin Desprez – www.answers.com • J.S. Bach - weekly.ahram.org.eg/2000/511/cu1.htm • G.F. Händel – www.wikipedia.com • Bach Manuscript – www.jsbach.net • Sacred Music Magazine – Spring 2006

  17. References • Pictures • W.A. Mozart – www.pianoparadise.com • F.J. Haydn - www.malaspina.org • L.V. Beethoven - www.cl.cam.ac.uk • J. Brahms - facstaff.uww.edu • F. Schubert – www.musicwithease.com • P.I. Tchaikovsky - www.geocities.com/gtchao/PeterTchaikovsky.jpeg • A. Copland - www.safka-bareis.com • I. Stravinsky – www.malaspina.org • A. Schönberg - www.milkenarchive.org

More Related