The modes of ancient Greek music

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

The present essay is the sequel of an article on Greek music which the author contributed to the new edition of Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (London, 1890-91, art. Musica). In that article the long-standing controversy regarding the nature of the ancient musical Modes was briefly noticed, and some reasons were given for dissenting from the views maintained by Westphal, and now very generally accepted. A full discussion of the subject would have taken up more space than was then at the author's disposal, and he accordingly proposed to the Delegates of the Clarendon Press to treat the question in a separate form. He has now to thank them for undertaking the publication of a work which is necessarily addressed to a very limited circle. The progress of the work has been more than once delayed by the accession of materials. Much of it was written before the author had the opportunity of studying two very interesting documents first made known in the course of last year in the Bulletin de correspondance hellénique and the Philologus, viz. the [Pg x] so-called Seikelos inscription from Tralles, and a fragment of the Orestes of Euripides. But a much greater surprise was in store. The book was nearly ready for publication last November, when the newspapers reported that the French scholars engaged in excavating on the site of Delphi had found several pieces of musical notation, in particular a hymn to Apollo dating from the third century B.C. As the known remains of Greek music were either miserably brief, or so late as hardly to belong to classical antiquity, it was thought best to wait for the publication of the new material. The French School of Athens must be congratulated upon the good fortune which has attended their enterprise, and also upon the excellent form in which its results have been placed, within a comparatively short time, at the service of students. The writer of these pages, it will be readily understood, had especial reason to be interested in the announcement of a discovery which might give an entirely new complexion to the whole argument. It will be for the reader to determine whether the main thesis of the book has gained or lost by the new evidence. Mr. Hubert Parry prefaces his suggestive treatment of Greek music by some remarks on the difficulty of the subject. 'It still seems possible,' he observes, 'that a large portion of what has passed into the domain of "well-authenticated fact" is complete misapprehension, as Greek scholars have not time for a thorough study of music up to the standard required to judge securely of the matters in question, and [Pg xi] musicians as a rule are not extremely intimate with Greek' (The Art of Music, p. 24). To the present writer, who has no claim to the title of musician, the scepticism expressed in these words appears to be well founded. If his interpretation of the ancient texts furnishes musicians like Mr. Parry with a somewhat more trustworthy basis for their criticism of Greek music as an art, his object will be fully attained.

Author(s): D. B. Monro, David Binning Monro
Publisher: Clarendon Press
Year: 1894

Language: English
Pages: 145
City: Oxford
Tags: modesofancientgr00monr;ancient greek music;music history

Title page
Imprint
Half title
Print Information
Dedication
Preface
Table of Contents
§ 1. Introductory
§ 2. Statement of the question
§ 3. The Authorities
§ 4 The Early Poets
§ 5. Plato
§ 6. Heraclides Ponticus
§ 7. Aristotle—The Politics
§ 8. The Aristotelian Problems
§ 9. The Rhetoric
§ 10. Aristoxenus
§ 11. Names of keys
§ 12. Plutarch’s Dialogue on Music
§ 13. Modes employed on different instruments
§ 14. Recapitulation
§ 15. The Systems of Greek music
§ 16. The standard Octachord System
§ 17. Earlier Heptachord Scales
§ 18. The Perfect System
§ 19. Relation of System and Key
§ 20. Tonality of the Greek musical scale
§ 21. The Species of a Scale
§ 22. The Scales as treated by Aristoxenus
§ 23. The Seven Species
§ 24. Relation of the Species to the Keys
§ 25. The Ethos of Music
§ 26. The Ethos of the Genera and Species
§ 27. The Musical Notation
§ 28. Traces of the Species in the Notation
§ 29. Ptolemy's Scheme of Modes
§ 30. Nomenclature by Position
§ 31. Scales of the Lyre and Cithara
§ 32. Remains of Greek Music
§ 33. Modes of Aristides Quintilianus
§ 34. Credibility of Aristides Quintilianus
§ 35. Evidence for Scales of different species
§ 36. Conclusion
§ 37. Epilogue—Speech and Song
Appendix
Table I. Scales of the seven oldest Keys, with the species of the same name
Table II. The fifteen Keys
Music of the Orestes of Euripides
Musical part of the Seikelos inscription
The hymns recently discovered at Delphi
Index of passages discussed or referred to
Note on the Seikilos Inscription (pp. 89-91, 133)