Chapter 5 The Middle Ages Later Medieval Polyphony Key Terms Motet ars antiqua ars nova Isorhythm Hocket Later Medieval Polyphony Late Middle Ages moved toward: • Greater melodic independence • More intricate rhythms and notation • Greater focus on secular music de Vitry treatise Ars Nova (New Art) • Sophisticated notation system c. 1320 • Widely used for more than two centuries • Previous music now ars antiqua—ancient art These trends clearly visible after 1250 in the motet The Motet Originated in Notre Dame School • Composers added new words (mots, in French) to upper voice of organum Different words for each voice! Three voice motets became standard Poetry shifted from: • Latin to French • Sacred to secular (love poems, political satire) Voices moved at different speeds • Top voice fastest, bottom voice slowest Guillaume de Machaut Lived c. 1300-1377 A priest who served the courts of France and Luxembourg Greatest composer and greatest French poet of his day Described himself as short in height, blind in one eye, gout sufferer, and lover of nature, horseback riding, and falconry Machaut, “Quant en moi” Based on repeated chant fragment from Eastertide service, played by viol Above this are two faster voices, each singing a different poem about love Viol slow, tenor faster, soprano fastest Isorhythm—rhythms of each stanza repeat • Easiest to follow in the viol part • Count quarter notes: • 9 9 (rest 3) 6 9 9 (rest 9) Machaut, “Quant en moi” Hocket— Quick alternation between voices Derived from old French word for hiccup Note clever wordplay between soprano and tenor at line 7 of each stanza Machaut, “Quant en moi” SOPRANO’S POEM When I was first visited by Love, he so very sweetly Enamored my heart; A glance is what he gave me as a gift And along with amorous sentiments He presented me with this delightful idea: To hope To have Grace, and no rejections, But never in my whole life Was boldness a gift he meant for me. TENOR’S POEM Thanks to love and consummate beauty Fearing, Feigning Are what consume me entirely. Machaut, “Quant en moi” • Resting points between phrases, but voices don’t rest together; unfamiliar cadences • Some major and minor chords, but scale and tonal center are hard to hear • Metrical, moderately fast tempo • Quirky, nervous rhythms, great rhythmic variety • Nonimitative polyphony in three parts • Soprano, tenor, and viol used throughout • No obvious patterns of repetition • Poetry about love’s joys and sorrows Machaut, “Quant en moi” Note complicated rhythm of upper voices Nervous, hyperelegant manner of uttering words