Music History Essay

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Music

Medieval, Baroque, and Renaissance music share core features and elements in common, while also revealing poignant differences that highlight aesthetic, geographic, social, and technological changes. Religiosity, simplicity of instrumentation, and monophic choral qualities characterize early medieval music. Vocals grew increasingly polyphonic toward the late Middle Ages. Renaissance music can be listened to as a sonic and cultural bridge between the medieval and Baroque periods. Instrumentation became more complex, and yet compositions remained religions in tone and relied on a select number of instruments. The Baroque witnessed a flourishing of creativity rooted in the technological advances in Renaissance instrument production and also in the social sensibilities that characterized the era.

Early medieval music bore witness to the intense religious fervor that permeated social life. This can especially be witnessed in the compositions of Hildegard von Bingen. For Hildegard, melody and voice are central elements, as hymns and antiphons comprised a large part of her corpus of compositions. Chanting is monophonic, but accompanied by instruments including harp, organ, and tambourine. French medieval composer Machaut also relied on monophonic elements in vocals. Yet Machaut also helped introduce a polyphonic sound into religious music, as can be heard in Messe de Notre Dame. The Messe de Notre Dame exhibits striking sonic dynamics, revealing the harbinger of evolution into the Baroque period. Comtessa de Dia's strophic compositions more closely hearken to Hildegard's, in their poetic simplicity.
Like Machaut, Comtessa de Dia's compositions such as "A Chantar" have strong dynamics that belie the simplicity of instrumentation. Medieval English composer Thomas Weelkes also helped to develop a polyphonic sound that would gradually morph into more sophisticated and layered compositions during the Renaissance era such as those by Josquin Desprez. Renaissance-era masses like Miserere mei are polyphonic, with rich dynamics and strong melodies.

Whereas medieval orchestras can hardly be called such, due to the constraints of size and the limited number of instruments written into any one composition, both Renaissance and Baroque composers composed forms with layered rhythms and melodies. Renaissance music can be listened to as a sonic and cultural bridge between the medieval and Baroque periods. For one, Renaissance composers in particular were not constrained by the expectations to write solely for religious settings or church audiences. Monteverdi's compositions like Manificat include polyphonic harmonies and intense dramatic qualities that correspond to the aesthetics common in the visual arts emerging at the same time. The transition from Renaissance to Baroque can also be witnessed in the deeply emotional qualities of Magnificat. Written for voice and organ, the vocals are layered and the melody complex.

During the peak of the Baroque period, instrumentation had shifted far from what it had been during….....

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