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        | a large body of unaccompanied vocal music in Latin, written for the Roman Catholic Church over a 1500 year period. Named after Pope Gregory. It was mainly written by churchmen and churchwomen. |  
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        | Syllabic/melismatic singing |  
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        | One or two notes per syllable/Many notes per syllable |  
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        | Leon wrote "Magnus liber organi," a great book of church music. Perot revised the book. Both were associated with the Notre Dame church of Paris. They essentially invented polyphony. |  
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        | Born in Germany, she was given to the church as a tithe and she wrote 77 chants including "O Greenest Branch" |  
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        | to take an existing chant and add another line |  
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        | the most important part of the Roman Catholic Church |  
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        | PROPER & ORDINARY: Introit, Gradual, Alleluia, Sequentia, Offertory, Communion, Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus Dei |  
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        | church of Notre Dame Reims, wrote "Mass of Our Lady" which was composed for the ordinary rather than the proper, meaning it could be sung any day. |  
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        | court music was usually public entertainment that would describe news and gossip. |  
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        | poet-musicians from southern France who sang songs of love and triumph |  
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        | French love song, usually 2, 3, or 4 voices |  
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        | trobairitz from Southern France who wrote the chanson "I Must Sing" |  
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        | ordained priest who excelled at writing chansons with the Court of Burgundy. Wrote "This Month of May." |  
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        | composers during the renaissance started to think of themselves as... |  
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        | artists and would regularly place their names in or on their work. |  
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        | Where did the Renaissance start? Why? |  
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        | Originated in Italy, influenced by ancient Greece and Rome, aimed to be more secular and scientific. |  
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        | difference between medieval and renaissance composers |  
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        medieval: anonymously composed music for church, preserved in manuscript. renaissance: considered artists, sought credit for their artistic works. |  
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        | from Northern France, excelled at writing motets. Known for "Hail, Mary." |  
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        | where one or more voices duplicate the melody |  
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        | What happened on October 31, 1517? |  
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        | Martin Luther's 95 theses, Protestant Reformation began. |  
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        | Protestant Reformation & Counter-Reformation |  
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        | reformation sought to get rid of all the corruption in the Catholic change. the Church of Rome countered by "cleansing" their administration and arts including music and literature. |  
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        | internal reformational meeting of the church. sought to get rid of polyphonic music. "mass for Pope Marcellus" changed their minds. |  
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        | composed "Mass for Pope Marcellus" which convinced the Council of Trent that polyphony could be used in church and still get the meaning across. |  
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        | composed by Palestrina, convinced Council of Trent that polyphony could still coherently be used in church. |  
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        motet: written for choir/church, in Latin. madrigals: several voices, secular, not in latin. |  
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        | when the music describes the text |  
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        | English madirgalist, composed "As Vesta Was from Latmos Hill Descending" for "The Triumphs of Oriana" |  
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        | comes from the Portuguese word barroco meaning a pearl of irregular shape. |  
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        | held that different musical moods could and should be used to influence the emotions of the listeners. |  
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        | difference between Renaissance and Baroque |  
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        | Renaissance was dominated by polyphony and imitative counterpoint, where each line was equal. Baroque, however, the voices are no longer equal. Baroque was mainly soloist accompanied. |  
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        | a new kind of solo singing, lead to the emergence of theatre and opera. |  
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        | bass-driven, chordal support. |  
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        | Baroque vs Renaissance texture |  
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        | Baroque is grand, passionate and dramatic. Renaissance was melodic and simple. |  
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        | numerical shorthand placed beneath the bass line. |  
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        | sudden jumps in volume, NOT creschendo/decreshendo |  
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