Transcript CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 10
MUSIC THEORY OF THE
ARS ANTIQUA AND ARS NOVA
Franco of Cologne
• A German intellectual who had come to Paris to
teach around 1280.
• He wrote of treatise entitled Ars cantus
mensurabilis (Art of Measured Song), which first
sets forth a system to classify consonant and
dissonant intervals.
CONSONANT AND DISSONANT INTERVALS
• CONSONANCES
– Perfect consonances
• unison and octave
– Intermediate consonances
• fifth and fourth
– Imperfect consonances
• major and minor thirds
• DISSONANCES
– Imperfect dissonances
• minor seventh, major sixth, whole tone
– Perfect dissonances:
• minor sixth, semitone, tritone, major seventh
Scholasticism
• Such a rigid system of classification was typical of
an intellectual movement in thirteenth-century Paris
called scholasticism.
• Scholastics organized their various materials in
hierarchies of descending importance—chains of
categories and relationships.
• Today, when we prepare an outline with many
topics and subtopics, we engage in a scholastic
exercise.
• Franco posited four basic musical durations:
duplex long, long, breve and semibreve, and each
of these had a corresponding rest.
• Except for the duple relationship between double
long and long, all relationships were triple.
• This is the basis of the music of what we call the
Ars antiqua (Old Art)—the music of the thirteenth
century organized into relatively simple, triple
meter units.
• It is also the basis mensural notation (symbolspecific notation), in which each symbol, be it
long, breve, or semibreve, has its own specific
value.
Early notational symbols and their
corresponding rests
Ars nova
• About 1320 two music theorists, Jean des Murs
(c1290-c1351) and Philippe de Vitry (1291-1361),
described a type of music called the Ars nova (New
Art). The music of the Ars nova involved four
innovations:
1) the introduction of a new short value called the minim as a
subdivision of the semibreve
2) the recognition that music might just as well be written in
duple meter as triple
a. the relationships, semibreve to breve, minim to semibreve,
for example, could be duple as well as triple
b. a dot was introduced to show triple duration
3) the introduction of triplets into otherwise duple relationships,
and conversely two notes into the time normally occupied by
three
4) meter signatures (time signatures) were introduced to
indicate to performers how the various note values were to be
divided into units of twos or threes.
The four basic symbols indicate the four
basic medieval meter signatures
• The very different values, both cultural and
temporal, espoused by partisans of the Ars
antiqua, on one side, and the Ars nova, on the
other, led to passionate discourse. Jacques de
Liège (c1260-c1330), a theorist who coined the
term “Ars nova” and Pope John XXII were among
the strongest proponents of the conservative
style, while Philippe de Vitry and later Guillaume
de Machaut advocated newer, more progressive
music.