We are happy to share this announcement from Mr Christopher Jasper and the Gregorian Chant Academy, about an upcoming presentation on the birth of liturgical polyphony.
Whether we look to the classical mastery of Palestrina and Bach, or the structures of modern secular music, the DNA of Western music can ultimately be traced back to the sacred repository of Gregorian chant. Right at the center of this historical lineage stands one man, perhaps the singular, most influential musician of all time: the eleventh-century Benedictine monk Guido d’Arezzo, the inventor of the diatonic scale. This year marks the 1000th anniversary of the publication of one his most widely-diffused and influential works, the Micrologus.
But Guido’s revolutionary developments did not emerge from a historical vacuum. Before his time, a critical foundation was laid by two anonymous ninth-century musical treatises: the Musica Enchiriadis and the Scolica Enchiriadis (“The Music and School Handbook”). These little-known texts provide our earliest surviving written description of how to sing in harmony, a practice historically known as diaphony or organum.- The Carolingian Context: In the ninth century, Frankish rulers demanded strict political and liturgical unity, requiring the supplanting of local Gallican rites in favor of the Roman rite.
- The Crisis of Memory: Entire dioceses were suddenly forced to learn an immense new repertoire of Roman melodies without the aid of precise, pitch-specific notation, relying entirely on voices and memory.
- The Monochord as Theological Proof: Using the Pythagorean monochord, medieval theorists demonstrated that the primary consonances – the Octave, the Fifth, and the Fourth – were audible icons of the cosmic and theological order established by God.
