Music History chapters 7/8
Four-voice texture as developed in the fifteenth century consisted of
superius, contratenor altus, tenor, contratenor bassus
In what way did the Hundred Years' War influence music?
English composers spent time in France
The language used for secular song texts composed in the Burgundian style was
French
Court chapels were significant for music history because
They hired musicians for both sacred and secular music
The theorist who first described counterpoint that considered thirds and sixths consonances was
Tinctoris
Aeolian and Ionian modes were
added to the modal system by Heinrich Glareanus
The primary audience for printed music were
amateur musicians throughout Europe and the Americas
The idea that music could be a social accomplishment came from
ancient Greece
The Renaissance period is marked by an interest in
ancient Greek culture
The main textures for the Renaissance were
homophony and imitative counterpoint
The movement to embrace human knowledge was called
humanism
A mass that quotes more than one voice of a preexisting polyphonic work is called an
imitation mass
A mass in which all movements begin with the same motive is called a
motto mass
Renaissance painters achieved realistic effects through the use of
perspective and treatment of light
A mass in which each movement is based on a preexisting chant for that text is called a
plainsong mass
The Burgundian chanson was usually composed in which forms?
rondeau or ballade
Temperament is
tuning all pitches of a keyboard instrument to make thirds and sixths sound good
Fauxbourdon is best defined as
two composed voices with an improvised third voice, creating 6-3 chords
A mass in which all movements are based on the same pre-existing melody is called a
cantus-firmus mass
In the Renaissance, secular music was
composed by musicians who also composed church music
The "contenance angloise" refers to
the English style of polyphony