Sacred Medieval Music
Secular Medieval Music
Sacred Renaissance Music
Secular Renaissance Music
Listening Test
100

The music that monks in the monastery sang.

Gregorian chant

100

These were the traveling musicians who wrote the secular music of the Middle Ages.

Troubadours/trouveres
100

Most music of the Renaissance, both sacred and secular, is this musical texture.

Polyphonic

100

This was the most popular instrument of the Renaissance.

Lute

100

A Gregorian chant like this uses this kind of texture.

Monophonic

200

This "School", led by Perotin and Leonin, developed the first system of measured rhythm in Europe.

The School of Notre Dame
200

Most music of the Middle Ages, secular or sacred, had this kind of texture.

Monophonic

200

The Catholic worship service whose 5 parts are Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei.

Mass

200

Secular music of the Renaissance was usually intended for this type of physical activity.

Dancing

200

An estampie like this is not a vocal song, instead it is this kind of song.

Instrumental.

300

Adding additional melodic lines to a Gregorian chant creates this kind of sacred song.

Organum

300

These were often the performers of secular Medieval music, who were not treated well in society and were often trusted sources of information.

Minstrels/jongleurs

300

This is a short, polyphonic, choral work set to a sacred Latin text other than the ordinary of the mass.

Motet

300

This was the musical center of the Renaissance.

Italy

300

This Renaissance mass has many different melodies being sung at once, meaning it has this kind of texture.

Polyphonic

400

This is the long sustained note that is often sung in the chant, not the small flying device that we know today.

Drone

400

This style of "new art" was the music of Italy and France in the 1400s that encouraged composers to try new rhythms and use syncopation.

Ars nova

400

When one voice/instrument plays a melody and another voice/instrument repeats the melody, you have this copycat musical technique.

Imitation

400

This invention helped make music more accessible to educated people in the Renaissance, and led to a "cultural rebirth".

Printing press

400

When the lyrics of a song represent what's happening in the music, such as in this madrigal here, it's called this.

Word painting

500

This woman was a nun and one of the earliest known composers of sacred music in the Middle Ages.

Hildegard of Bingen

500

He was one of the most celebrated French composers of the 1400s, who at the age of 60 wrote many songs about a 19 year old woman.

Guillaume de Machaut

500

This "School" was the bridge between Renaissance and Baroque music, using polyphony, instruments, and multiple choirs in sacred music.

The Venetian School

500

This Italian song style is a piece for several solo voices set to a short poem about love, and it became popular in England.

Madrigal

500

A lute song is not just vocal or instrumental. A lute song is a vocal song with an instrumental this (Hint: the answer starts with the letter "A")

Accompaniment

M
e
n
u