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Neume

A neume (/njm/; sometimes spelled neum)[1][2][3] is the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five-line staff notation.

A sample of Kýrie Eléison XI (Orbis Factor) from the Liber Usualis. Listen to it interpreted.

The earliest neumes were inflective marks that indicated the general shape but not necessarily the exact notes or rhythms to be sung. Later developments included the use of heightened neumes that showed the relative pitches between neumes, and the creation of a four-line musical staff that identified particular pitches. Neumes do not generally indicate rhythm, but additional symbols were sometimes juxtaposed with neumes to indicate changes in articulation, duration, or tempo. Neumatic notation was later used in medieval music to indicate certain patterns of rhythm called rhythmic modes, and eventually evolved into modern musical notation. Neumatic notation remains standard in modern editions of plainchant.

Etymology edit

The word neume entered the English language in the Middle English forms newme, nevme, neme in the 15th century, from the Middle French neume, in turn from either medieval Latin pneuma or neuma, the former either from ancient Greek πνεῦμα pneuma ('breath') or νεῦμα neuma ("sign"),[4][5] or else directly from Greek as a corruption or an adaptation of the former.[6][citation needed]

Early history edit

Although chant was probably sung since the earliest days of the church, for centuries it was transmitted only orally.

The earliest known systems involving neumes are of Aramaic origin and were used to notate inflections in the quasi-emmelic (melodic) recitation of the Christian holy scriptures. As such they resemble functionally a similar system used for the notation of recitation of the Qur'an, the holy book of Islam. This early system was called ekphonetic notation, from the Greek ἐκφώνησις ekphonesis meaning quasi-melodic recitation of text.

Around the 9th century neumes began to become shorthand mnemonic aids for the proper melodic recitation of chant.[7] A prevalent view is that neumatic notation was first developed in the Eastern Roman Empire. This seems plausible given the well-documented peak of musical composition and cultural activity in major cities of the empire (now regions of southern Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Israel) at that time. The corpus of extant Byzantine music in manuscript and printed form is far larger than that of the Gregorian chant, due in part to the fact that neumes fell into disuse in the west after the rise of modern staff notation and with it the new techniques of polyphonic music, while the Eastern tradition of Greek orthodox church music and the reformed neume notation remains alive today.

Slavic neume notations ("Znamenny Chant") are on the whole even more difficult to decipher and transcribe than Byzantine or Gregorian neume notations.

Western plainchant edit

 
"Iubilate deo universa terra" shows psalm verses in unheightened cheironomic neumes.
 
Digraphic neumes in an 11th-century manuscript from Dijon. Letter names for individual notes in the neume are provided.

The earliest Western notation for chant appears in the 9th century. These early staffless neumes, called cheironomic or in campo aperto, appeared as freeform wavy lines above the text. Various scholars see these as deriving from cheironomic hand-gestures, from the ekphonetic notation of Byzantine chant, or from punctuation or accent marks.[8] A single neume could represent a single pitch, or a series of pitches all sung on the same syllable. Cheironomic neumes indicated changes in pitch and duration within each syllable, but did not attempt to specify the pitches of individual notes, the intervals between pitches within a neume, or the relative starting pitches of different syllables' neumes.

There is evidence that the earliest Western musical notation, in the form of neumes in campo aperto (without staff-lines), was created at Metz around 800, as a result of Charlemagne's desire for Frankish church musicians to retain the performance nuances used by the Roman singers.[9]

Presumably these were intended only as mnemonics for melodies learned by ear. The earliest extant manuscripts (9th–10th centuries) of such neumes include:

 
Cistercian neumes, St. Denis/St. Evrault, North France, 12th century. (Quon)iam prevenisti eum in benedictione and Offertorium. In omnem terram exivit sonus. Variation of the letter F to the left of each line.

In the early 11th century, Beneventan neumes (from the churches of Benevento in southern Italy) were written at varying distances from the text to indicate the overall shape of the melody; such neumes are called heightened or diastematic neumes, which showed the relative pitches between neumes. A few manuscripts from the same period use digraphic notation in which note names are included below the neumes. Shortly after this, one to four staff lines—an innovation traditionally ascribed to Guido d'Arezzo—clarified the exact relationship between pitches. One line was marked as representing a particular pitch, usually C or F. These neumes resembled the same thin, scripty style of the chironomic notation. By the 11th century, chironomic neumes had evolved into square notation;[10] in Germany, a variant called Gothic neumes continued to be used until the 16th century. This variant is also known as Hufnagel notation, as the used neumes resemble the nails (Hufnägel) one uses to attach horseshoes.[11]

 
"Gaudeamus omnes", from the Graduale Aboense, was scripted using square notation.

By the 13th century, the neumes of Gregorian chant were usually written in square notation on a staff with four lines and three spaces and a clef marker, as in the 14th–15th century Graduale Aboense shown here. In square notation, small groups of ascending notes on a syllable are shown as stacked squares, read from bottom to top, while descending notes are written with diamonds read from left to right. In melismatic chants, in which a syllable may be sung to a large number of notes, a series of smaller such groups of neumes are written in succession, read from left to right. A special symbol called the custos, placed at the end of a system, showed which pitch came next at the start of the following system. Special neumes such as the oriscus, quilisma, and liquescent neumes, indicate particular vocal treatments for these notes. This system of square notation is standard in modern chantbooks.

Solesmes notation edit

Various manuscripts and printed editions of Gregorian chant, using varying styles of square-note neumes, circulated throughout the Catholic Church for centuries. Some editions added rhythmic patterns, or meter, to the chants. In the 19th century the monks of the Benedictine abbey of Solesmes, particularly Dom Joseph Pothier (1835–1923) and Dom André Mocquereau (1849–1930) collected facsimiles of the earliest manuscripts and published them in a series of 12 publications called Paléographie musicale (French article). They also assembled definitive versions of many of the chants, and developed a standardized form of the square-note notation that was adopted by the Catholic Church and is still in use in publications such as the Liber Usualis (although there are also published editions of this book in modern notation).

As a general rule, the notes of a single neume are never sung to more than one syllable; all three pitches of a three-note neume, for example, must all be sung on the same syllable. (This is not universally accepted; Richard Crocker has argued that in the special case of the early Aquitanian polyphony of the St. Martial school, neumes must have been "broken" between syllables to facilitate the coordination of parts.) However, a single syllable may be sung to so many notes that several neumes in succession are used to notate it. The single-note neumes indicate that only a single note corresponds to that syllable. Chants that primarily use single-note neumes are called syllabic; chants with typically one multi-note neume per syllable are called neumatic, and those with many neumes per syllable are called melismatic.

Rhythmic interpretation edit

The Solesmes monks also determined, based on their research, performance practice for Gregorian chant. Because of the ambiguity of medieval musical notation, the question of rhythm in Gregorian chant is contested by scholars. Some neumes, such as the pressus, do indicate the lengthening of notes.[contradictory] Common modern practice, following the Solesmes interpretation, is to perform Gregorian chant with no beat or regular metric accent, in which time is free, allowing the text to determine the accent and the melodic contour to determine phrasing. By the 13th century, with the widespread use of square notation, it is believed that most chant was sung with each note getting approximately an equal value, although Jerome of Moravia cites exceptions in which certain notes, such as the final notes of a chant, are lengthened.[12]

The Solesmes school, represented by Dom Pothier and Dom Mocquereau, supports a rhythm of equal values per note, allowing for lengthening and shortening of note values for musical purposes. A second school of thought, including Wagner, Jammers, and Lipphardt, supports different rhythmic realizations of chant by imposing musical meter on the chant in various ways.[13] Musicologist Gustave Reese said that the second group, called mensuralists, "have an impressive amount of historical evidence on their side" (Music in the Middle Ages, p. 146), but the equal-note Solesmes interpretation has permeated the musical world, apparently due to its ease of learning and resonance with modern musical taste.[14]

Illustrations edit

Examples of neumes may be seen here: "" (archive from 10 June 2006, accessed 12 September 2014), [1], [2].

Clefs edit

Neumes are written on a four-line staff on the lines and spaces, unlike modern music notation, which uses five lines. Chant does not rely on any absolute pitch or key; the clefs are only to establish the half and whole steps of the solfege or hexachord scale: "ut", "re", "mi", "fa", "sol", "la", "ti", "ut". The clef bracketing a line indicates the location "ut" in the case of the C clef, or "fa" in the case of the F clef as shown:

  C clef
  F clef

Single notes edit

  Punctum ("point")
  Virga ("rod")
  Bipunctum ("two points")

The virga and punctum are sung identically. Scholars disagree on whether the bipunctum indicates a note twice as long, or whether the same note should be re-articulated. When this latter interpretation is favoured, it may be called a repercussive neume.

Two notes edit

  Clivis ("by slope") Two notes descending
  Podatus or Pes ("foot") Two notes ascending

When two notes are one above the other, as in the podatus, the lower note is always sung first.

Three notes edit

  Scandicus Three notes ascending
  Climacus Three notes descending
  Torculus down-up-down
  Porrectus up-down-up

The fact that the first two notes of the porrectus are connected as a diagonal rather than as individual notes seems to be a scribe's shortcut.

Compound neumes edit

Several neumes in a row can be juxtaposed for a single syllable, but the following usages have specific names. These are only a few examples.

  Praepunctis a note appended to the beginning is praepunctis; this example is a podatus pressus because it involves a repeated note
  Subpunctis One or more notes appended at the end of a neume; this example is a scandicus subbipunctis

Other basic markings edit

  Flat Same meaning as modern flat; only occurs on B, and is placed before the entire neume, or group of neumes, rather than immediately before the affected note. Its effect typically lasts the length of a word and is reinserted if needed on the next word.
  Custos At the end of a staff, the custos indicates what the first note of the next staff will be
  Mora Like a dot in modern notation, lengthens the preceding note, typically doubling it

Interpretive marks edit

The interpretation of these markings is the subject of great dispute among scholars.

  Vertical episema
(vertical stroke)
Indicates a subsidiary accent when there are five or more notes in a neume group. This marking was an invention of the Solemnes interpreters, rather than a marking from the original manuscripts.
  Horizontal episema
(horizontal stroke)
Used over a single note or a group of notes (as shown), essentially ignored in the Solesmes interpretation; other scholars treat it as indicating a lengthening or stress on the note(s).
  Liquescent neume
(small note)
Can occur on almost any type of neume pointing up or down; usually associated with certain letter combinations such as double consonants, consonant pairs, or diphthongs in the text; usually interpreted as a kind of grace note
  Quilisma
(squiggly note)
Always as part of a multi-note neume, usually a climacus, this sign is a matter of great dispute; the Solesmes interpretation is that the preceding note is to be lengthened slightly.

Other interpretations of the quilisma:

  • Shake or trill—William Mahrt of Stanford University supports this interpretation. This interpretation is also put into practice by the Washington Cappella Antiqua, under the current direction of Patrick Jacobson.
  • Quarter-tone or accidental. The support for this interpretation lies in some early digraphic manuscripts that combine chironomic neumes with letter-names. In places where other manuscripts have quilismas these digraphs often have a strange symbol in place of a letter, suggesting to some scholars the use of a pitch outside the solmization system represented by the letter names.[citation needed]

There are other uncommon neume shapes thought to indicate special types of vocal performance, though their precise meaning is a matter of debate:[15]

  • The trigon.[16] The orthodox Solesme interpretation of this obscure three-note neume is a unison plus a third below, but there are other possibilities.[17] It appears to have originated at St. Gall, though it is also widespread in French chant sources from the 10th and 11th centuries.[18] It has been proposed that it may have a microtonal meaning, but there is "an admitted lack of conclusiveness in the arguments in favor of notes smaller than a semitone."[19]
  • The distropha and tristropha are groups of two and three apostrophes, usually of the same pitch. They probably differed from normal repeated notes (virgae or puncta) in the way they were sung. Although there is some doubt on the matter, most modern writers accept Aurelian of Réôme's description of a staccato reiteration.[20]
  • The oriscus is a single-note neume, usually found added as an auxiliary note to another neume. The name may derive from either the Greek horos (limit) or ōriskos (little hill). Its intended manner of performance is not clear. Although a microtonal interpretation has been suggested, there is possible contradicting evidence in the Dijon tonary, Montpellier H. 159.[21]
  • The pressus is a compound neume, usually involving an initial neume followed by an oriscus and a punctum. The initial neume may be a virga (in which case the virga + oriscus may be together called a virga strata), in which case the pressus indicates three notes; if the initial neume is a pes, then the compound indicates a four-note group. Just as with the oriscus itself, the interpretation is unsure. When chant came to be notated on a staff, the oriscus was normally represented as having the same pitch as the immediately preceding note.[22]

There are also litterae significativae in many manuscripts, usually interpreted to indicate variations in tempo, e.g. c = celeriter (fast), t = tenete (hold) (an early form of the tenuto), a = auge (lengthen, as in a tie). The Solesmes editions omit all such letters.

Other functions edit

Neumes were used for notating other kinds of melody than plainchant, including troubadour and trouvère melodies, monophonic versus and conductus, and the individual lines of polyphonic songs. In some traditions, such as the Notre Dame school of polyphony, certain patterns of neumes were used to represent particular rhythmic patterns called rhythmic modes.

Other types edit

  • Ekphonetic neumes annotating the melodic recitation of (Christian) holy scriptures.
  • Neumes of Byzantine music – in several stages, old Byzantine, middle Byzantine, late Byzantine and post-Byzantine, and neo-Byzantine (reformed).
  • Neumes of Slavic chant (Slavic neumes or "Znamenny Chant").
  • Mozarabic or Hispanic neumes (Spain), also called Visigothic script. These neumes have not been deciphered, but the Mozarabic liturgy varies somewhat from the Roman rite.
  • Catalan notation.[23]
  • Daseian notation – an early form of Western music notation used in 9th and 10th-century music theory treatises.
  • Buddhist chant uses a type of neume.

Digital notation edit

Because notation software usually focuses on modern European music notation, software that allows the user to use neumes is rare.

  • Gregorio is a software especially written for that purpose. With its own GABC-Syntax and together with LuaTeX it provides high quality output of square notation neumes and also St. Gall neumes.
  • Finale can be enhanced with Medieval 2, a third-party package devoted to early music and especially neumes.[24][25]
  • Lilypond is able to produce output using neumes.[26]
  • Some open fonts[27][28] for neumes are available, which can be used by common office software or scorewriters.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dom Gregory Sunol, Textbook of Gregorian Chant According to the Solesmes Method, 2003, ISBN 0-7661-7241-4, ISBN 978-0-7661-7241-8.
  2. ^ Chants of the Church
  3. ^ Liber Usualis
  4. ^ "neume". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  5. ^ πνεῦμα, νεῦμα. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  6. ^ "neume". Oxford English Dictionary (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. 1989.
  7. ^ One of the earliest examples is the Planctus de obitu Karoli (c.814), which was provided neumatic notation in the 10th century, cf. Rosamond McKitterick (2008), Charlemagne: The Formation of a European Identity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-88672-4), 225 n54. For the lyrics, see Peter Godman (1985), Latin Poetry of the Carolingian Renaissance (Norman: University of Oklahoma Press), 206–11.
  8. ^ Kenneth Levy, "Plainchant", Grove Music Online, edited by Laura Macy (Accessed January 20, 2006), (subscription access)
  9. ^ James Grier Ademar de Chabannes, Carolingian Musical Practices, and "Nota Romana", Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 56, No. 1 (Spring, 2003), pp. 43–98, retrieved July 2007
  10. ^ "Gregorian Chant - Classical Music". sites.google.com.
  11. ^ David Hiley. "Hufnagel". Oxford Music Online. Oxford University. Retrieved 5 February 2015.
  12. ^ Hiley, "Chant", p. 44. "The performance of chant in equal note lengths from the 13th century onwards is well supported by contemporary statements."
  13. ^ Apel, Gregorian Chant, p. 127.
  14. ^ Mahrt "Chant", p. 18.
  15. ^ Don Michael Randel (ed.). 2003. "Neume". Harvard Dictionary of Music, fourth edition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-01163-5.
  16. ^ Willi Apel, ed. (1972). "Neume". Harvard Dictionary of Music, 2nd ed. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 572.
  17. ^ David Hughes, "The Musical Text of the Introit Ressurexi", in Music in Medieval Europe: Studies in Honour of Bryan Gillingham, edited by Terence Bailey and Alma Colk Santosuosso, 163–80 (Farnham, Surrey: Ashgate Publishing, 2007), p. 170. ISBN 978-0-7546-5239-7.
  18. ^ David Hughes, "An Enigmatic Neume", in Themes and Variations: Writings on Music in Honor of Rulan Chao Pian, edited by Bell Yung and Joseph S. C. Lam, 8–30 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press Press, 1994), pp. 13–14.
  19. ^ David Hughes, "An Enigmatic Neume", in Themes and Variations: Writings on Music in Honor of Rulan Chao Pian, edited by Bell Yung and Joseph S. C. Lam, 8–30 (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; Hong Kong: The Chinese University Press Press, 1994), p. 26.
  20. ^ David Hiley, "Distropha, tristropha [double apostrophe, bistropha; triple apostrophe]", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  21. ^ Anon., "Oriscus", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  22. ^ David Hiley, "Pressus", The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London: Macmillan Publishers, 2001).
  23. ^ Garrigosa i Massana, Joaquim (2003). Els manuscrits musicals a Catalunya fins al segle XIII. Lleida: Institut d'Estudis Ilerdencs. ISBN 9788489943742.
  24. ^ "Medieval 2 release". MakeMusic. 6 June 2017. Retrieved 2017-06-17.
  25. ^ "Medieval 2 website". Klemm Music Technology (for Robert Piéchaud). Retrieved 2017-06-17.
  26. ^ "Lilypond Notation Reference – Typesetting Gregorian Chant". Lilypond Development Team. Retrieved 2016-08-12.
  27. ^ . Marello.org. Archived from the original on 2016-10-31. Retrieved 2017-08-28.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  28. ^ "Liturgical Music / Downloads". Monastery Saint Meinrad Archabbey. Retrieved 2016-08-12.

References edit

  • Graduale triplex (1979). Tournai: Desclée & Socii. ISBN 2-85274-094-X, a special edition of the Graduale Romanum with chant notation in three forms, one above the other, for easy comparison: Laon, St. Gall, and square note
  • Liber usualis (1953). Tournai: Desclée & Socii.
  • Paléographie musicale. [full citation needed] ISBN 2-85274-219-5. Facsimiles of early adiastamatic chant manuscripts.
  • Apel, Willi (1990). Gregorian Chant. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-20601-4.
  • Constantin, Floros. "Universale Neumenkunde" (Universal Theory of Neumes); three-volume[full citation needed] covering all major styles and schools of neumatic musical notation in three major divisions: Byzantine, Gregorian and Slavic.
  • Hiley, David (1990). "Chant". In Performance Practice: Music before 1600, Howard Mayer Brown and Stanley Sadie, eds., pp. 37–54. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-02807-0.
  • Hiley, David (1995). Western Plainchant: A Handbook. Cambridge and New York: Clarendon Press and Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-19-816572-2.
  • Mahrt, William P. (2000). "Chant". In A Performer's Guide to Medieval Music, Ross Duffin, ed., pp. 1–22. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-33752-6.
  • McKinnon, James, ed. (1990). Antiquity and the Middle Ages. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-036153-4.
  • Wagner, Peter. (1911) Einführung in die Gregorianischen Melodien. Ein Handbuch der Choralwissenschaft. Leipzig: Breitkopf & Härtel.
  • Wilson, David (1990). Music of the Middle Ages. Schirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-872951-X.

External links edit

Learning Resources
  • The 1961 Liber Usualis compares, inter alia, modern and chant notations. It is also a handy reference for all the types of neumes.
Other
  • Oliver Gerlach (Ensemble Ison): Performing Western Plainchant—Introduction into the Latin Neumes of the 10th century (Accessed November 26, 2009)
  • David Hiley and Janka Szendrei: "Notation", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed June 12, 2006), (subscription access) 2008-05-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Font package for writing post-Byzantine neumes
  • Kenneth Levy: "Plainchant", Grove Music Online, ed. L. Macy (Accessed January 20, 2006), (subscription access) 2008-05-16 at the Wayback Machine
  • Comparative table of cheironomic and square neumes
  • , showing the same chant in many different notations
  • Catholic Encyclopedia entry for Neum
  • Solesmes Abbey
  • Byzantine notation
  • Music for Vespers 2010-12-16 at the Wayback Machine Byzantine notation

neume, daseia, redirects, here, greek, diacritic, rough, breathing, neume, sometimes, spelled, neum, basic, element, western, eastern, systems, musical, notation, prior, invention, five, line, staff, notation, sample, kýrie, eléison, orbis, factor, from, liber. Daseia redirects here For the Greek diacritic see Rough breathing A neume nj uː m sometimes spelled neum 1 2 3 is the basic element of Western and Eastern systems of musical notation prior to the invention of five line staff notation A sample of Kyrie Eleison XI Orbis Factor from the Liber Usualis Listen to it interpreted The earliest neumes were inflective marks that indicated the general shape but not necessarily the exact notes or rhythms to be sung Later developments included the use of heightened neumes that showed the relative pitches between neumes and the creation of a four line musical staff that identified particular pitches Neumes do not generally indicate rhythm but additional symbols were sometimes juxtaposed with neumes to indicate changes in articulation duration or tempo Neumatic notation was later used in medieval music to indicate certain patterns of rhythm called rhythmic modes and eventually evolved into modern musical notation Neumatic notation remains standard in modern editions of plainchant Contents 1 Etymology 2 Early history 3 Western plainchant 4 Solesmes notation 5 Rhythmic interpretation 6 Illustrations 6 1 Clefs 6 2 Single notes 6 3 Two notes 6 4 Three notes 6 5 Compound neumes 6 6 Other basic markings 6 7 Interpretive marks 7 Other functions 8 Other types 9 Digital notation 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 External linksEtymology editThe word neume entered the English language in the Middle English forms newme nevme neme in the 15th century from the Middle French neume in turn from either medieval Latin pneuma or neuma the former either from ancient Greek pneῦma pneuma breath or neῦma neuma sign 4 5 or else directly from Greek as a corruption or an adaptation of the former 6 citation needed Early history editAlthough chant was probably sung since the earliest days of the church for centuries it was transmitted only orally The earliest known systems involving neumes are of Aramaic origin and were used to notate inflections in the quasi emmelic melodic recitation of the Christian holy scriptures As such they resemble functionally a similar system used for the notation of recitation of the Qur an the holy book of Islam This early system was called ekphonetic notation from the Greek ἐkfwnhsis ekphonesis meaning quasi melodic recitation of text Around the 9th century neumes began to become shorthand mnemonic aids for the proper melodic recitation of chant 7 A prevalent view is that neumatic notation was first developed in the Eastern Roman Empire This seems plausible given the well documented peak of musical composition and cultural activity in major cities of the empire now regions of southern Turkey Syria Lebanon and Israel at that time The corpus of extant Byzantine music in manuscript and printed form is far larger than that of the Gregorian chant due in part to the fact that neumes fell into disuse in the west after the rise of modern staff notation and with it the new techniques of polyphonic music while the Eastern tradition of Greek orthodox church music and the reformed neume notation remains alive today Slavic neume notations Znamenny Chant are on the whole even more difficult to decipher and transcribe than Byzantine or Gregorian neume notations Western plainchant edit nbsp Iubilate deo universa terra shows psalm verses in unheightened cheironomic neumes nbsp Digraphic neumes in an 11th century manuscript from Dijon Letter names for individual notes in the neume are provided The earliest Western notation for chant appears in the 9th century These early staffless neumes called cheironomic or in campo aperto appeared as freeform wavy lines above the text Various scholars see these as deriving from cheironomic hand gestures from the ekphonetic notation of Byzantine chant or from punctuation or accent marks 8 A single neume could represent a single pitch or a series of pitches all sung on the same syllable Cheironomic neumes indicated changes in pitch and duration within each syllable but did not attempt to specify the pitches of individual notes the intervals between pitches within a neume or the relative starting pitches of different syllables neumes There is evidence that the earliest Western musical notation in the form of neumes in campo aperto without staff lines was created at Metz around 800 as a result of Charlemagne s desire for Frankish church musicians to retain the performance nuances used by the Roman singers 9 Presumably these were intended only as mnemonics for melodies learned by ear The earliest extant manuscripts 9th 10th centuries of such neumes include the abbey of St Gall in modern day Switzerland Messine neumes from the monastery of Metz in northeast France Aquitanian neumes southern France also used in Spain Laon Chartres Montpellier nbsp Cistercian neumes St Denis St Evrault North France 12th century Quon iam prevenisti eum in benedictione and Offertorium In omnem terram exivit sonus Variation of the letter F to the left of each line In the early 11th century Beneventan neumes from the churches of Benevento in southern Italy were written at varying distances from the text to indicate the overall shape of the melody such neumes are called heightened or diastematic neumes which showed the relative pitches between neumes A few manuscripts from the same period use digraphic notation in which note names are included below the neumes Shortly after this one to four staff lines an innovation traditionally ascribed to Guido d Arezzo clarified the exact relationship between pitches One line was marked as representing a particular pitch usually C or F These neumes resembled the same thin scripty style of the chironomic notation By the 11th century chironomic neumes had evolved into square notation 10 in Germany a variant called Gothic neumes continued to be used until the 16th century This variant is also known as Hufnagel notation as the used neumes resemble the nails Hufnagel one uses to attach horseshoes 11 nbsp Gaudeamus omnes from the Graduale Aboense was scripted using square notation By the 13th century the neumes of Gregorian chant were usually written in square notation on a staff with four lines and three spaces and a clef marker as in the 14th 15th century Graduale Aboense shown here In square notation small groups of ascending notes on a syllable are shown as stacked squares read from bottom to top while descending notes are written with diamonds read from left to right In melismatic chants in which a syllable may be sung to a large number of notes a series of smaller such groups of neumes are written in succession read from left to right A special symbol called the custos placed at the end of a system showed which pitch came next at the start of the following system Special neumes such as the oriscus quilisma and liquescent neumes indicate particular vocal treatments for these notes This system of square notation is standard in modern chantbooks Solesmes notation editVarious manuscripts and printed editions of Gregorian chant using varying styles of square note neumes circulated throughout the Catholic Church for centuries Some editions added rhythmic patterns or meter to the chants In the 19th century the monks of the Benedictine abbey of Solesmes particularly Dom Joseph Pothier 1835 1923 and Dom Andre Mocquereau 1849 1930 collected facsimiles of the earliest manuscripts and published them in a series of 12 publications called Paleographie musicale French article They also assembled definitive versions of many of the chants and developed a standardized form of the square note notation that was adopted by the Catholic Church and is still in use in publications such as the Liber Usualis although there are also published editions of this book in modern notation As a general rule the notes of a single neume are never sung to more than one syllable all three pitches of a three note neume for example must all be sung on the same syllable This is not universally accepted Richard Crocker has argued that in the special case of the early Aquitanian polyphony of the St Martial school neumes must have been broken between syllables to facilitate the coordination of parts However a single syllable may be sung to so many notes that several neumes in succession are used to notate it The single note neumes indicate that only a single note corresponds to that syllable Chants that primarily use single note neumes are called syllabic chants with typically one multi note neume per syllable are called neumatic and those with many neumes per syllable are called melismatic Rhythmic interpretation editThe Solesmes monks also determined based on their research performance practice for Gregorian chant Because of the ambiguity of medieval musical notation the question of rhythm in Gregorian chant is contested by scholars Some neumes such as the pressus do indicate the lengthening of notes contradictory Common modern practice following the Solesmes interpretation is to perform Gregorian chant with no beat or regular metric accent in which time is free allowing the text to determine the accent and the melodic contour to determine phrasing By the 13th century with the widespread use of square notation it is believed that most chant was sung with each note getting approximately an equal value although Jerome of Moravia cites exceptions in which certain notes such as the final notes of a chant are lengthened 12 The Solesmes school represented by Dom Pothier and Dom Mocquereau supports a rhythm of equal values per note allowing for lengthening and shortening of note values for musical purposes A second school of thought including Wagner Jammers and Lipphardt supports different rhythmic realizations of chant by imposing musical meter on the chant in various ways 13 Musicologist Gustave Reese said that the second group called mensuralists have an impressive amount of historical evidence on their side Music in the Middle Ages p 146 but the equal note Solesmes interpretation has permeated the musical world apparently due to its ease of learning and resonance with modern musical taste 14 Illustrations editExamples of neumes may be seen here Basic amp Liquescent Aquitanian Neumes archive from 10 June 2006 accessed 12 September 2014 1 2 Clefs edit Neumes are written on a four line staff on the lines and spaces unlike modern music notation which uses five lines Chant does not rely on any absolute pitch or key the clefs are only to establish the half and whole steps of the solfege or hexachord scale ut re mi fa sol la ti ut The clef bracketing a line indicates the location ut in the case of the C clef or fa in the case of the F clef as shown nbsp C clef nbsp F clef Single notes edit nbsp Punctum point nbsp Virga rod nbsp Bipunctum two points The virga and punctum are sung identically Scholars disagree on whether the bipunctum indicates a note twice as long or whether the same note should be re articulated When this latter interpretation is favoured it may be called a repercussive neume Two notes edit nbsp Clivis by slope Two notes descending nbsp Podatus or Pes foot Two notes ascending When two notes are one above the other as in the podatus the lower note is always sung first Three notes edit nbsp Scandicus Three notes ascending nbsp Climacus Three notes descending nbsp Torculus down up down nbsp Porrectus up down up The fact that the first two notes of the porrectus are connected as a diagonal rather than as individual notes seems to be a scribe s shortcut Compound neumes edit Several neumes in a row can be juxtaposed for a single syllable but the following usages have specific names These are only a few examples nbsp Praepunctis a note appended to the beginning is praepunctis this example is a podatus pressus because it involves a repeated note nbsp Subpunctis One or more notes appended at the end of a neume this example is a scandicus subbipunctis Other basic markings edit nbsp Flat Same meaning as modern flat only occurs on B and is placed before the entire neume or group of neumes rather than immediately before the affected note Its effect typically lasts the length of a word and is reinserted if needed on the next word nbsp Custos At the end of a staff the custos indicates what the first note of the next staff will be nbsp Mora Like a dot in modern notation lengthens the preceding note typically doubling it Interpretive marks edit The interpretation of these markings is the subject of great dispute among scholars nbsp Vertical episema vertical stroke Indicates a subsidiary accent when there are five or more notes in a neume group This marking was an invention of the Solemnes interpreters rather than a marking from the original manuscripts nbsp Horizontal episema horizontal stroke Used over a single note or a group of notes as shown essentially ignored in the Solesmes interpretation other scholars treat it as indicating a lengthening or stress on the note s nbsp Liquescent neume small note Can occur on almost any type of neume pointing up or down usually associated with certain letter combinations such as double consonants consonant pairs or diphthongs in the text usually interpreted as a kind of grace note nbsp Quilisma squiggly note Always as part of a multi note neume usually a climacus this sign is a matter of great dispute the Solesmes interpretation is that the preceding note is to be lengthened slightly Other interpretations of the quilisma Shake or trill William Mahrt of Stanford University supports this interpretation This interpretation is also put into practice by the Washington Cappella Antiqua under the current direction of Patrick Jacobson Quarter tone or accidental The support for this interpretation lies in some early digraphic manuscripts that combine chironomic neumes with letter names In places where other manuscripts have quilismas these digraphs often have a strange symbol in place of a letter suggesting to some scholars the use of a pitch outside the solmization system represented by the letter names citation needed There are other uncommon neume shapes thought to indicate special types of vocal performance though their precise meaning is a matter of debate 15 The trigon 16 The orthodox Solesme interpretation of this obscure three note neume is a unison plus a third below but there are other possibilities 17 It appears to have originated at St Gall though it is also widespread in French chant sources from the 10th and 11th centuries 18 It has been proposed that it may have a microtonal meaning but there is an admitted lack of conclusiveness in the arguments in favor of notes smaller than a semitone 19 The distropha and tristropha are groups of two and three apostrophes usually of the same pitch They probably differed from normal repeated notes virgae or puncta in the way they were sung Although there is some doubt on the matter most modern writers accept Aurelian of Reome s description of a staccato reiteration 20 The oriscus is a single note neume usually found added as an auxiliary note to another neume The name may derive from either the Greek horos limit or ōriskos little hill Its intended manner of performance is not clear Although a microtonal interpretation has been suggested there is possible contradicting evidence in the Dijon tonary Montpellier H 159 21 The pressus is a compound neume usually involving an initial neume followed by an oriscus and a punctum The initial neume may be a virga in which case the virga oriscus may be together called a virga strata in which case the pressus indicates three notes if the initial neume is a pes then the compound indicates a four note group Just as with the oriscus itself the interpretation is unsure When chant came to be notated on a staff the oriscus was normally represented as having the same pitch as the immediately preceding note 22 There are also litterae significativae in many manuscripts usually interpreted to indicate variations in tempo e g c celeriter fast t tenete hold an early form of the tenuto a auge lengthen as in a tie The Solesmes editions omit all such letters Other functions editNeumes were used for notating other kinds of melody than plainchant including troubadour and trouvere melodies monophonic versus and conductus and the individual lines of polyphonic songs In some traditions such as the Notre Dame school of polyphony certain patterns of neumes were used to represent particular rhythmic patterns called rhythmic modes Other types editEkphonetic neumes annotating the melodic recitation of Christian holy scriptures Neumes of Byzantine music in several stages old Byzantine middle Byzantine late Byzantine and post Byzantine and neo Byzantine reformed Neumes of Slavic chant Slavic neumes or Znamenny Chant Mozarabic or Hispanic neumes Spain also called Visigothic script These neumes have not been deciphered but the Mozarabic liturgy varies somewhat from the Roman rite Catalan notation 23 Daseian notation an early form of Western music notation used in 9th and 10th century music theory treatises Buddhist chant uses a type of neume Digital notation editBecause notation software usually focuses on modern European music notation software that allows the user to use neumes is rare Gregorio is a software especially written for that purpose With its own GABC Syntax and together with LuaTeX it provides high quality output of square notation neumes and also St Gall neumes Finale can be enhanced with Medieval 2 a third party package devoted to early music and especially neumes 24 25 Lilypond is able to produce output using neumes 26 Some open fonts 27 28 for neumes are available which can be used by common office software or scorewriters See also editMensural notation Musical notation Znamenny ChantNotes edit Dom Gregory Sunol Textbook of Gregorian Chant According to the Solesmes Method 2003 ISBN 0 7661 7241 4 ISBN 978 0 7661 7241 8 Chants of the Church Liber Usualis neume Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required pneῦma neῦma Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project neume Oxford English Dictionary 2nd ed Oxford University Press 1989 One of the earliest examples is the Planctus de obitu Karoli c 814 which was provided neumatic notation in the 10th century cf Rosamond McKitterick 2008 Charlemagne The Formation of a European Identity Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 88672 4 225 n54 For the lyrics see Peter Godman 1985 Latin Poetry of the Carolingian Renaissance Norman University of Oklahoma Press 206 11 Kenneth Levy Plainchant Grove Music Online edited by Laura Macy Accessed January 20 2006 subscription access James Grier Ademar de Chabannes Carolingian Musical Practices and Nota Romana Journal of the American Musicological Society Vol 56 No 1 Spring 2003 pp 43 98 retrieved July 2007 Gregorian Chant Classical Music sites google com David Hiley Hufnagel Oxford Music Online Oxford University Retrieved 5 February 2015 Hiley Chant p 44 The performance of chant in equal note lengths from the 13th century onwards is well supported by contemporary statements Apel Gregorian Chant p 127 Mahrt Chant p 18 Don Michael Randel ed 2003 Neume Harvard Dictionary of Music fourth edition Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01163 5 Willi Apel ed 1972 Neume Harvard Dictionary of Music 2nd ed Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press p 572 David Hughes The Musical Text of the Introit Ressurexi in Music in Medieval Europe Studies in Honour of Bryan Gillingham edited by Terence Bailey and Alma Colk Santosuosso 163 80 Farnham Surrey Ashgate Publishing 2007 p 170 ISBN 978 0 7546 5239 7 David Hughes An Enigmatic Neume in Themes and Variations Writings on Music in Honor of Rulan Chao Pian edited by Bell Yung and Joseph S C Lam 8 30 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Hong Kong The Chinese University Press Press 1994 pp 13 14 David Hughes An Enigmatic Neume in Themes and Variations Writings on Music in Honor of Rulan Chao Pian edited by Bell Yung and Joseph S C Lam 8 30 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Hong Kong The Chinese University Press Press 1994 p 26 David Hiley Distropha tristropha double apostrophe bistropha triple apostrophe The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Anon Oriscus The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 David Hiley Pressus The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians second edition edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell London Macmillan Publishers 2001 Garrigosa i Massana Joaquim 2003 Els manuscrits musicals a Catalunya fins al segle XIII Lleida Institut d Estudis Ilerdencs ISBN 9788489943742 Medieval 2 release MakeMusic 6 June 2017 Retrieved 2017 06 17 Medieval 2 website Klemm Music Technology for Robert Piechaud Retrieved 2017 06 17 Lilypond Notation Reference Typesetting Gregorian Chant Lilypond Development Team Retrieved 2016 08 12 CaeciliaeCaeciliae Marello org Archived from the original on 2016 10 31 Retrieved 2017 08 28 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Liturgical Music Downloads Monastery Saint Meinrad Archabbey Retrieved 2016 08 12 References editGraduale triplex 1979 Tournai Desclee amp Socii ISBN 2 85274 094 X a special edition of the Graduale Romanum with chant notation in three forms one above the other for easy comparison Laon St Gall and square note Liber usualis 1953 Tournai Desclee amp Socii Paleographie musicale full citation needed ISBN 2 85274 219 5 Facsimiles of early adiastamatic chant manuscripts Apel Willi 1990 Gregorian Chant Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20601 4 Constantin Floros Universale Neumenkunde Universal Theory of Neumes three volume full citation needed covering all major styles and schools of neumatic musical notation in three major divisions Byzantine Gregorian and Slavic Hiley David 1990 Chant In Performance Practice Music before 1600 Howard Mayer Brown and Stanley Sadie eds pp 37 54 New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 02807 0 Hiley David 1995 Western Plainchant A Handbook Cambridge and New York Clarendon Press and Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 19 816572 2 Mahrt William P 2000 Chant In A Performer s Guide to Medieval Music Ross Duffin ed pp 1 22 Bloomington IN Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 33752 6 McKinnon James ed 1990 Antiquity and the Middle Ages Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 036153 4 Wagner Peter 1911 Einfuhrung in die Gregorianischen Melodien Ein Handbuch der Choralwissenschaft Leipzig Breitkopf amp Hartel Wilson David 1990 Music of the Middle Ages Schirmer Books ISBN 0 02 872951 X External links editLearning Resources The 1961 Liber Usualis compares inter alia modern and chant notations It is also a handy reference for all the types of neumes Singing Gregorian Chant Pitch and Mode Other Oliver Gerlach Ensemble Ison Performing Western Plainchant Introduction into the Latin Neumes of the 10th century Accessed November 26 2009 David Hiley and Janka Szendrei Notation Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed June 12 2006 subscription access Archived 2008 05 16 at the Wayback Machine Font package for writing post Byzantine neumes Kenneth Levy Plainchant Grove Music Online ed L Macy Accessed January 20 2006 subscription access Archived 2008 05 16 at the Wayback Machine Comparative table of cheironomic and square neumes Samples of early notation showing the same chant in many different notations Catholic Encyclopedia entry for Neum Solesmes Abbey The Intonation of the Eight Tones Byzantine notation Music for Vespers Archived 2010 12 16 at the Wayback Machine Byzantine notation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neume amp oldid 1206436566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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