The music of Ancient Greece: EMS 28 January
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostLucie Skeaping talks to Prof Armand D'Angour of Jesus College Oxford about the music and poetry of Ancient Greece, from Homer to Mesomedes via Sappho, Euripides, Pindar and Athenaeus.
Ancient Greek poetry, yes but music? Intriguing.
Hiya doversoul1,
Sonata for solo lyre played by Homer, maybe?Last edited by Stanfordian; 28-01-18, 11:07.
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Like this maybe?
This video features clips from 4 of my many albums of my of ancient lyre music, featuring both the actual surviving fragments of the music of Ancient Greece,...
Or this?
Subscribe for more music: http://bit.ly/SubscribeFMRecords Find us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/FMRecordsFacebookFind us on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2HF6ZJvAn...
I think musical accompaniment to recitation is documented....but beyond that everything must be conjectural. But many people have conjectured!
I often think EMS doesn't go early enough...so can't complain about this one..
Some images: https://www.pinterest.co.uk/magistramichaud/lyre/Last edited by ardcarp; 27-01-18, 23:38.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostThis one has been in the catalogue for years...a very interesting disc:
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI think musical accompaniment to recitation is documented....but beyond that everything must be conjectural. But many people have conjectured!
What I'd like to know is how closely the Church modes with their fancy Greek names corresponded to anything the Ancient Greeks used.
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Richard Tarleton
This is nothing. Sarah W has just played some Palaeolithic music from 40,000 years ago, played on a flute made from the ulna of a griffon vulture found in the French Pyrenees. Or rather a modern reconstruction of what palaeolithic music might have been like . I thought it sounded a bit like Gheorge Zamfir's music for Picnic at Hanging Rock.
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played on a flute made from the ulna of a griffon vulture
What I'd like to know is how closely the Church modes with their fancy Greek names corresponded to anything the Ancient Greeks used.
Then there's Ambrosian chant:
Medieval Ambrosian chant of the church of Mediolanum (Milan). Title: "Canticum: Ecce quam bonum et jocundum".Performers: Ensemble Organum, Director: Marcel P...
(Don't know where the 'drone' comes from. I tried working out the notes, and don't think it's a cantus firmus...just a bass drone going up and down to suit the chant.)Last edited by ardcarp; 28-01-18, 13:10.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostBeats the Andean Nose Flute every time.......
I can't pretend to any specialist knowledge at all. But Gregorian Chant (we were told...also at university in the 60s!) had its roots in Mozarabic chant. I gather 'Mozarabic' has something to do with Muslims in the Iberian peninsula. I also gather that Greek culture was an influence on Islamic scholarship...especially their mathematics. So why not their religious chanting? Since 'chant' was an orally transmitted phenomenon, it wouldn't be surprising if it had its roots...constantly evolving of course...in the Ancient World. As for the fancy Greek names for the Modes, I suspect they were applied retrospectively. Maybe we'll learn more today in EMS.
Then there's Ambrosian chant:
Medieval Ambrosian chant of the church of Mediolanum (Milan). Title: "Canticum: Ecce quam bonum et jocundum".Performers: Ensemble Organum, Director: Marcel P...
(Don't know where the 'drone' comes from. I tried working out the notes, and don't think it's a cantus firmus...just a bass drone going up and down to suit the chant.)
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That was a fascinating programme. Prof Armand was such a powerful advocate for his re-interpretation of music from The Ancient World, one almost felt his conjecture must be right! Callum Armstrong's playing of the Aulos (about 11 mins in) was stunning, I thought*. Though this wasn't one of the programme's own recordings, they did have the amazing singer Steff Conner accompanied by Barnaby Brown. I knew Barnaby when he was a choral scholar at Gonville and Caius in the early 90s, and it was interesting to hear that choir attempt some chorus work...for which pronouncing Ancient Greek must have been the hardest part. Also interesting to hear Barnaby wax lyrical on his subject. Playing 'ethnic' pipes was always his passion.
Interesting to hear that, according to slightly later writers, the Mixolydian mode was Sppho's favourite. (Though I gather what was then known as the Mixolydian does not correspond to the 'modern' version, i.e. a scale exemplified by playing all the white notes of the piano starting on G.)
Prof Armand was emphatic that music was an integral part of poetry and recitation in Ancient Greece; and it never occurred to me that the words 'lyrical' and even 'lyrics' stem from 'lyre', the instrument.
* And no breaks for breath! Circular breathing throughout. Must be killing!
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That was a fascinating programme.
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The sound of the aulos was not what I had expected
There was a passing reference to a plucked string instrument other than the lyre. Reading up a bit about Ancient Greek music, it seems that Pythagoras...scourge of many a schoolkid....did experiments with a monochord to establish the mathematical ratios of the length of string which produced an octave (2:1) a fifth(3:2) and a fourth (3:4). And some other stuff.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI'm not sure what I expected! But its timbre sounded different in the hands of Barnaby (more quavering and oboe-ish) and in the hands of Calum (more steady and clarinettish). Not very apt descriptions perhaps.
There was a passing reference to a plucked string instrument other than the lyre. Reading up a bit about Ancient Greek music, it seems that Pythagoras...scourge of many a schoolkid....did experiments with a monochord to establish the mathematical ratios of the length of string which produced an octave (2:1) a fifth(3:2) and a fourth (3:4). And some other stuff.
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