Self Escape Music Selfescapemusic@ymail.com Music of ancient Greece |
|||||
Home | Music of Peru | Music of Morocco | Music of Turkey | New Orlans Jazz | Texas Blues | Music of Morocco | Music of South India | Early history of Japanese music | Music of Ancient Egypt | Music of ancient Greece | Chord Finder | International Scales,Modes & History | Music of Ancient China | Music of North India | Santoor from India's Kashmir Region | The Persian Experience
|
|||||
At a certain point, Plato complained about the new music: From his references to "established forms" and "laws of music"
we can assume that at least some of the formality of the Pythagorean system of harmonics and consonance had taken hold of
Greek music, at least as it was performed by professional musicians in public, and that Plato was complaining about the falling
away from such principles into a "spirit of law-breaking". Among the lawbreakers would certainly be Aristoxenus, who held that the notes of the scale are to be judged, not as the Pythagoreans
held, by mathematical ratio, but by the ear. Aristoxenus said, essentially, that since you can't hear the "music of the spheres",
anyway, why not just sing and play what sounds good and reasonable to us? That simple philosophy underlay the entire later
movement to tempered scales and even bears comparison to the divide in 20th-century music between tonal music and atonal music.
Playing what "sounded good" violated the proper use of the
established ethos of modes that had developed by the time of Plato. That is, the Greeks had developed a complex system
of relating particular emotional and spiritual characteristics to certain modes (scales). The names for the various modes
derived from the names of Greek tribes and peoples, the temperament and emotions of which were said to be characterized by
the unique sound of each mode. Thus, Dorian modes were "harsh", Phrygian modes "sensual", and so forth. Elsewhere, Plato,
indeed, talks about the proper use of various modes, the Dorian, Phrygian, Lydian, etc. It is difficult
for the modern listener to relate to that concept of ethos in music except by comparing our own perceptions that a
minor scale is used for melancholy and a major scale for virtually everything else, from happy to heroic music. (Today, one
must look at the system of scales known as ragas in India for a better comparison, a system that prescribes certain scales
for the morning, others for the evening, and so on.)
|
||||
the lyre: a strummed and occasionally plucked string instrument, essentially a hand-held
zither built on a tortoise-shell frame, generally with seven or more strings
tuned to the notes of one of the modes. The lyre was used to accompany others or even oneself for recitation and song. the aulos, usually double, consisting of two double-reed (like an oboe) pipes, not joined but generally
played with a mouth-band to hold both pipes steadily between the player's lips. Modern reconstructions indicate that they
produced a low, clarinet-like sound. There is some confusion about the exact nature of the instrument; alternate descriptions
indicate single-reeds instead of double reeds.
|
||||
|
||||