MUSICAL NOTATION

symbols used to make a written record of musical sounds.

Two different systems of letters were used to write down the instrumental and the vocal music of ancient Greece. In his five textbooks on music theory Boethius (c.a.d. 470–a.d. 525) applied the first 15 letters of the alphabet to the notes in use at the end of the Roman period. Notation of Gregorian chant was by means of neumes, which are thought to have been derived from symbols used in the Greek language to indicate pitch inflection. Neumes were certainly in use by the 6th cent., although the earliest extant manuscripts containing them are fragmentary ones from the 8th cent. These neumes indicated only the grouping of sounds in a given melody, evidently to recall to a singer the approximate shape of a melody already learned by ear.

Heighted neumes, arranged above and below a line, made the intervals of a melody more discernible in 10th-century notation, and by the end of the 12th cent. the staff perfected by Guido d'Arezzo was in use. Guido placed letters on certain lines to indicate their pitch, and thereby the pitch of the remaining lines and spaces. The letters evolved into the clef signs used today. Guido also invented a system of naming scale degrees using the initial syllables of the lines of a Latin hymn (ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la). Originally used for teaching sight singing, these or their derivatives are also used in some languages for naming absolute pitches.

A staff of five lines for vocal music was adopted in France and one of six lines in Italy. Instrumental music employed staves of varying numbers of lines until the 16th cent., when the five-line staff became the standard. Signs for chromatic alteration of tones appear almost from the beginning and had assumed their present shapes by the end of the 17th cent. The essential problems in pitch notation, the use of both lines and spaces to indicate successive scale degrees and the use of extra symbols to indicate raising or lowering a tone by a half step, were solved comparatively rapidly.

However, the evolution of the rhythmic notation used today took much longer than that for pitch. Mensural notation, in which each note has a specific time value, became a necessity with the development of polyphony. At first, certain patternings of neumes were used to represent the various rhythmic modes; later, in his Ars cantus mensurabilis (c.1280), Franco of Cologne created a clear indication for each note of its exact rhythmic length and selected certain neumes to represent tones of long and short duration. In his system, the long value was in principle equal to three of the short values.

In the 14th cent. Philippe de Vitry, author of Ars nova, which expands the system of Franco, codified the ready availability of duple divisions of the long and short notes. At the various rhythmic levels of a given piece either a 2:1 or a 3:1 relationship was implied, and a system of signs and colored notes developed for indicating which relationships were in force or were being temporarily altered.

In the 15th cent. numbers with the appearance of fractions indicated that one proportionality of rhythmic values was temporarily being substituted for another. Modern signatures evolved from these numbers. Bar lines, expression signs, and Italian terms to indicate tempo and dynamics came into use in the 17th cent. With the adoption of equal temperament and the major and minor modes, signatures indicating a major key or its relative minor became conventional. They assumed their present form during the baroque period.

The advent of aleatory music has produced notation systems, varying from piece to piece, indicating only approximate pitch, duration, and dynamic relations. Notation for electronic music is still not standardized but generally uses traditional reference symbols (staff and clef signs) in conjunction with specially adapted pitch and rhythm notation.

For a system of notation of lute and keyboard music, see tablature. See also score.

See W. Apel, The Notation of Polyphonic Music, 900–1600 (5th ed. 1961); C. F. A. Williams, The Story of Notation (1903, repr. 1969); E. Karkoschka, Notation in New Music (1972), G. Read, Music Notation (3d ed. 1972).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Musical Notation  - 2086 results

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...unique tale in the field of notation, because they are based on...those of all other varieties of notation. If we conceive notation as a link connecting the writer...in fact, nearly all kinds of musical notation belong to this indirect...
...not problematic when the notation is used as only one element...oral transmission. Indian musical notations are therefore oral in origin...contrast with Western staff-notation, which is graphic in origin...in function. Indian oral notations may be written down, in...
...belong to the psychology of musical perception; they are artifices...the song into conventional notation aligned against it. 2 This...musical sounds omits. Ordinary notation ruthlessly segments the flow...simplified as conventional notation, constitutes an interpretation...transcribe into one of the Chinese notations, we would have found a...
...notate-able in Western written musical tradition has evolved over...only motivated by changing musical practice-in order to write...invites further changes in musical practice. The use of additive...formedness is that the rules of notation do capture some more theoretical...
...1977 . The perception of musical rhythm and metre. Perception...1976 . The stratification of musical rhythm . New Haven, CT...perception are critical, musical skill is distinctive: for most players a notation specifies temporal pattern...
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Simplifying Musical Practice in Order to Enhance Local Identity...conscious decision to simplify their complex musical and dance practice in order to strengthen...reduced, and the resultant changes in musical practice are the subject of this article...
Introducing a Music Notation Scheme for Pitch-vowel Interaction by Irigo...boosted). If we use traditional clefs for musical notation, harmonics and formants can be shown to coexist. The notation can be quite confusing and cluttered, however...
...be translated into musical notation by hand. Perhaps the...result in different musical conclusions depending...C. P. E. Bachs musical notation far exceeds in precision...it and much in the notations of later composers...
...British Sign Language: Variant of Stokoe Notation: Report on a Type-design Project by...British Sign Language (BSL) Stokoe notation. An informal email exchange elicited...group of academics who use BSL Stokoe notation, predominantly in the United Kingdom...
...is preceded by an engraved musical illustration, often of an...preface which explains the notation used and the "proper performance...in French. Lowerre 39 The Musical Bijou, an Album of Music and...Published numbers from The Musical Bouquet (London: C. Sheard...
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The Secret Life of Musical Notation: Defying Interpretive Traditions. by Ken Bales The Secret Life of Musical Notation: Defying Interpretive Traditions...pianists and piano teachers think about musical notation and interpretation. It re...
...Artworks. This Past July, She Performed at Miguel Abreu Gallery in New York as Part of "Agape," an Exhibition on Musical Notation Curated by Alex Waterman. She Is a Founding Member of the Fluxus Group. 1 ARTIST ORGANIZED ART (WWW.ARTISTORGANIZEDART...
...Music, Volume 1: the Earlist Notations to the Sixteenth Century by...Volume 1: the earliest notations to the sixteenth century xxxiii...index, bibliography, list of musical examples and elaborate chronological...intractable than in medieval notation, which means this first volume...if not by geography and musical training. Surely the sweep...
...that has already been written. Notation Musician enables one to follow the musical notes on a computer screen while...accompanist. Anyone who reads musical notation can study scores, and others can learn musical notation by watching the notes...
...Sharitss marks--resembling musical notation or written script and thus...that ran strongly through "Notation," expressed above all with...Kagels photographic score notations of 1959-60. The composer...Graham is using musical notation to make a logical slip into...
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...a Castle Ceiling Hid a Magical Musical Secret. Then One Man Solved...fascinating glimpse into a little-known musical past. The markings take the form...us they appear nothing like the musical notation we learn to sing and play. But...
...a Castle Ceiling Hid a Magical Musical Secret. Then One Man Solved...glimpse into our little-known musical past. The markings take the form...us they appear nothing like the musical notation we learn to sing and play. But...
...a Castle Ceiling Hid a Magical Musical Secret. Then One Man Solved...glimpse into our little-known musical past. The markings take the form...us they appear nothing like the musical notation we learn to sing and play. But...
...These notes are placed on the musical staff in somewhat the same...interspersed throughout the musical text. For instance, rests...increasing and descreasing volume in musical passages, are almost the same...methods." *** Beyond basic notation, higher mathematics and music...
...converts the graphical image into musical notation for Finale. Then, all thats needed...how the software interprets the notation, Green said. Cory, who has a...few inquiries. The Finale music notation software, itself, however, is...
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encyclopedia articles on: Musical Notation  - 42 results

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MUSICAL NOTATION symbols used to make a written record of musical sounds. Two different systems of letters were used to...to the notes in use at the end of the Roman period. Notation of Gregorian chant was by means of neumes, which are...
NOTATION see arithmetic and musical notation . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...adaptable to the Chinese language. Musical Notation Several types of notation were...which have educational as well as musical value. The Beijing Opera has produced...preserve the few remainders of ancient musical practice. Bibliography See J...
STAFF in musical notation, a set of horizontal lines upon and...only pitches. In early attempts at the notation of plainsong, a single line was drawn...foreshadowing the use of the clef (see musical notation ). Four-line staffs proved...
...seems to have derived from musical practice in the Jewish synagogue and Greek musical theory. During the late Middle...eight modes (see mode ). The notation of the chant evolved into systems of neumes (see musical notation ) that were still...
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