Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Perhaps singing allows greater projection of voices - so would have been useful in churches and religious buildings. We don't know all the factors in using music for different purposes - though we have some awareness of the way religious music was used and developed over the centuries. It doesn't seem likely that there wasn't also a substantial use of secular music - songs - such as work songs, and some rather bawdy songs used for entertainment, but many of those would probably not have been written down, but rather passed on orally. Since churches and religious communities appear to have had a geater proportion of educated people who could both write down words and some of whom could also notate music, we may have a better picture of what music was used in churches than in other settings.
Apparently organs were used in churches around 900 AD (see https://viscountorgans.net/pipe-orga...n-church-life/), though it may have taken several centuries before this became the norm. By 1400AD many monasteries and churches had organs. Other instruments were also used, and we have some ideas of what they were and how they were used in the Renaissance period (approx 1300-1600) but perhaps rather less insight into instruments in use before that or how they were used.
We are aware of the use of music by minstrels and troubadours at least from the time of the Norman conquest - see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minstrel
and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troubadour but the role of music and also how it was to be performed has to be imagined, and many interpretations of music from the early periods must surely be speculative.
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