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DescriptionHow Medieval Monks Invented the Way We Write Music Today in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!Fun FactBefore musical notation, music was passed down by memory! Around the 9th century, monks created neumes—squiggly symbols above lyrics—to guide melodies. Guido of Arezzo later added the staff and pitch names. His system was so effective, it's still the basis for how we read and write music today!__________________________________________________________________About Steven, HostSteven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.__________________________________________________________________You can FOLLOW ME on Instagram.
Chris, Ade and Jeremiah explore the ways new technology can help you make fantastic photos.
Chris, Ade and Jeremiah explore the ways new technology can help you make fantastic photos.
Step back in time and experience Medieval Village Vibes with this blend of Medieval Celtic Fantasy Music… so very relaxing. Feel the gentle rhythms of village life as a villager. Experience life in simpler times with relaxing Medieval Music which offers a tranquil escape, perfect for unwinding, focusing, or immersing yourself in a Celtic mediation. Let the music bring the charm of a medieval village to life, where Celtic melodies and daily routines create a cozy, peaceful atmosphere.
During summer time at Alnwick Castle, we love to invite historical musicians to play music of the past for our visitors in the castle grounds. New to Alnwick this year were the duo Pearl in the Egg (a.k.a Karen and Liz), who play melodies from the 11th century Saxon period to the 16th century Elizabethan.We joined them at the end of their final day of performances at the Castle to find out more about them, their instruments, and the kind of music you might hear at a castle like Alnwick - or a nearby tavern. The first part of the episode took place outside in the grounds, so you may hear various background noises. For this part of the podcast, we had an audience of castle visitors, including the Kaye family, who had some questions of their own to ask! You will hear some short excerpts of medieval music too.The second part of the episode happened inside, and also features excerpts of music, including an extended piece with vocals at the conclusion of our conversation.For more musical episodes of the Alnwick Castle Podcast, look in our feed for podcasts about medieval music with Trouvere, Tudor music, and the Northumbrian pipes. And head to pearlintheegg.co.uk for more about this great musician duo!
A Peaceful Tavern Day where Relaxing Medieval Music fills the air. This Fantasy Bard Tavern Ambience features enchanting Celtic Music with the cozy sounds of a soothing melodies of a bard's lute. Perfect for unwinding, studying, or sparking your imagination, let this peaceful tavern escape melt away your stress. Settle in for comforting sounds of medieval life create a serene backdrop, inviting you to relax and enjoy a timeless moment of tranquility.
In which your psychic friend and faithful deejay, Frozen Lazuras, spins choice cuts from Beachwood Sparks, The Monks, Helen Merrill, Memphis Electronic, Kramer, Soft Location and so much more. Plus, Medieval Music, Bollywood, Japanese Psych, etc. etc. etc.
Can our minds truly operate on a quantum level? Join Alex and Sophie on Discover Daily by Perplexity as they explore the intriguing possibility of quantum entanglement in the brain. Discover the groundbreaking hypothesis from researchers at Shanghai University that suggests nerve fibers in the brain might generate entangled particle pairs, potentially reshaping our understanding of brain function and consciousness. We also cover Mistral AI's introduction of Agents, a new feature that allows developers to create custom behaviors for AI applications, potentially revolutionizing fields such as customer support and data analysis. Additionally, we discuss X's departure from its San Francisco headquarters, marking the end of an era for the company in the city where it was founded and raising questions about the future of tech in the Bay Area.And then we move on to music, where we explore Teenage Engineering's unique EP-1320, the world's first electronic instrument dedicated to medieval music. This innovative beat machine offers music producers and enthusiasts a chance to create medieval-inspired compositions with modern electronic flair, blending historical sounds with cutting-edge technology.From Perplexity's Discover Feed:https://www.perplexity.ai/page/mistral-releases-agents-EzKZ6W87Qq6v86Qwt1A3RAhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/x-is-leaving-san-francisco-DmRJkTnUS3ywTJ4Xngj2FQhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/teenage-engineering-s-medieval-iEVLOSzLSQOjCdZE479IOghttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/quantum-entanglement-in-the-br-7rokEdmsR4uZQmYOlx5J.APerplexity is the fastest and most powerful way to search the web. Perplexity crawls the web and curates the most relevant and up-to-date sources (from academic papers to Reddit threads) to create the perfect response to any question or topic you're interested in. Take the world's knowledge with you anywhere. Available on iOS and Android Join our growing Discord community for the latest updates and exclusive content. Follow us on: Instagram Threads X (Twitter) YouTube Linkedin
Send us a Text Message.https://seidrblot.bandcamp.comIn this interview, I'm happy to be joined by Visy Bloodaxe of Seidrblot to talk about a range of topics including the music he makes with the band, working with wood, how a love of medieval music led to him learning how to build his own instruments, and finding escape through music in a world filled with noise.Support the Show.
Episode 7Music and the Coronation Dr Matthias Range Has published widely in both history and music, with the focus of his interdisciplinary research being sacred music and religious culture since the sixteenth century. An area of particular interest is the history of the British monarchy, which is the topic of his major book publications. He currently works as a post-doctoral researcher for the Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music at the Faculty of Music, University of Oxford. His book Music and Ceremonial at British Coronations CUP 2013 is one of the key works on Coronation Music.Dr Grahame Davies CVOHe spent 12 years in the Royal Household from where, as Deputy Private Secretary, he oversaw the music for the Coronation of King Charles III, and the Honours of Scotland ceremony, as well as leading the project to create the Cross of Wales, which led the Coronation procession. He is the author of 19 books in Welsh and English and a winner of the Wales Book of the Year Award. He has a degree in English from Anglia Ruskin University, a doctorate from Cardiff University, honorary doctorates of letters from Anglia Ruskin and Aberdeen Universities and is an honorary Professor of Practice of the University of Wales. Since November 2023 he has been Director of Mission and Strategy for the Church in Wales.
Join us as we talk about the interaction between music notation and memory, and the impact of that interaction on the spiritual lives of singers of Gregorian chant. Our guest is Dr. Anna Maria Busse Berger, Distinguished Professor of Music, emeritus, from UCDavis, and we dive into some of the topics from the first few chapters of her book, Medieval Music and the Art of Memory. Find out more about Dr. Busse Berger here: https://arts.ucdavis.edu/faculty-profile/anna-maria-busse-berger Buy Dr. Busse Berger's book here: https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520314276/medieval-music-and-the-art-of-memory Learn more about the graduate coursework in sacred music at the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music here: http://catholicinstituteofsacredmusic.org/
In this interview, I am humbled to invite Jacob Hee Lund for his first appearance on the Nordic Sound Channel. Mostly known as a member of Heilung, Jacob is actually a man of many, many hats and is a seasoned performer in the medieval reenactment scene in Denmark. In this interview, he walks us through his background, his countless music projects he's contributed to as a percussionist, and offers advice and reflection for young musicians looking to make a full time career. Also, as a veteran of this music scene over the last two decades, Jacob gives us some much needed perspective on the evolution of this genre we begrudgingly call “Viking music” for want of a more satisfying name. We close with a discussion of his new drum project Thrymskapr and reminiscing on Heilung at Red Rocks. Considering how much we still had to talk about after almost two hours, let's call it a safe bet that Jacob will be back on the channel before long.Jacob's associated bands: Asynje (Viking, electronic, folk); Auroq (folk, early music, fusion); Heilung; Mallebrok (folktronica); Virelai (medieval/ Viking); Fabel (renaissance early music); Fortuna (early, classical music); Huldre (folk metal); Leikarar (medieval); Norerne (Viking music for Moesgaard Viking market 40 anniversary celebration); Wicked strings / Lilly and the wicked strings (gothic metal); Eldjudnir (black metal); Bo-Nordmand (Danish folk music); Maja Kjær si orkester (Danish raw folk music). He's also a session musician for Efrén López and Eivør.For those who want to further explore the musicians Jacob mentioned: Jordi Savall (viol da gamba) and Otava Yo (Russian folk)0:00 Preamble1:53 Introduction4:25 Jacobs background8:20 The drum in early Europe13:05 Back to Jacob's background!34:15 Versatility and working as a professional musician43:04 Heilung49:36 Reflections on “Viking” music scene54:30 How genres evolve1:06:00 Collective imagining through music1:13:58 Thrymskapr and knowing your roots1:26:55 Heilung at Red RocksSupport the show
Merry Christmas to everyone! And what a feast of music we have on this episode of The Liturgical Looking Glass. Here is the playlist below: 1. Jesu Dulcis Memoria, Madelene Compos from the Album Catholic Communion Classics 2. Weihnachts-Oratorium, BWV 248, Pt. 1: Christmas Oratorio, BWV 248, Part I: Jauchzet, frohlocket, auf, preiset die Tage by the Hungarian Radio Chorus 3. Novus Miles Sequitur from the album Medieval Music with Gerald English and The Jaye Consort 4. In You, O Full of Grace - Megalynarion for Liturgy of Saint Basil the Great, composed by Gabriel Creemens, sung by Samuel Herron and Anastaseos Darian of the Dynamis Ensemble 5. Es ist ein Ros Entspungen from Chanticleer on their album Sing We Christmas 6. In Dulci Jubilo by Michael Praetorius 7. Adam Lay yBounden by Peter Warlock and sung by the Queen's Six 8. Jesu Dulcis Memoria sung by the London Oratory Choir 9. Jesu Rex Admirabilis by The Monteverdi Choir and directed by Sir John Eliot Gardiner 10. Alma Redemptoris Mater by Palestrina sung by Lincoln College Choir
For transcriptions and more detailed shownotes, please go to: https://swordschool.com/podcast/medieval-music-and-the-troubadours-with-alix-evans/ To support the show, come join the Patrons at https://www.patreon.com/theswordguy Alix Evans is a professional performer and teacher of historical music, founder of Falsa Musica, and has even fenced rapier in the SCA. We talk about what led Alix into becoming a musician, with a mention of her husband David Biggs. (Check out his episode here.) Alix explains what it is about historical music that is so interesting and how it differs from how music is commonly thought to work today. To listen to some troubadour music performed by Alix, at the end of the episode you can hear: Amours u trop tard me sui pris - attributed to Blance de Castille (who was queen of France around the beginning of the 13th century), voice and harp Deus enim rorem in ilas misit - by Hildegard of Bingen - this is is in phrygian!, just voice Ecce tempus gaudii - an instrumental setting of a 12th century song, just harp Gloria sanctorum - a 14th century chant from Ireland, voice and harp Frondens virga - another Hildegard piece just because it's pretty, voice and symphonia (early hurdy-gurdy) Reis glorios - 12th century troubadour piece by Giraut de Bornelh, just voice Troubadours came from Occitan in around the 11th and 12th centuries. They were a diverse set of people, writing poetry and setting it to music. Some were the wandering minstrels we think of today, but many stayed in one place. We talk about how to make a living from your passion by having a ‘portfolio career', and Alix tells us about her new project uncovering unknown and unfamiliar ways of making music and bringing them to audiences. For more information about Alix and her work, see her website: https://www.alix-evans.com/
Karen Cook (University of Hartford) joins the Infectious Historians to discuss some of her work on medieval music. Karen begins with an overview of medieval music - its purposes, context, instruments and the people who made it. She then moves on to speak about music related to epidemics - which is generally identified through its lyrics - with some analogies to Covid. The conversation then expands to include reception and medievalism, singling out a few video games that have used medieval or medieval-like music, as well as establishing new genres where contemporary pop music receives a “medieval” cover. Visit our website for links to the many music pieces Karen mentioned!
In this chapter, Jillian and Jerry get deep into the psychological trajectories of all of our main characters as they grapple with loss. From the heroic ambition of Eric, who fights for his brother at any cost, to the disingenuous nature of Topanga and Shawn, who decide to act like they are now together for some reason. Meanwhile Cory and Topanga actually have to act which is... STOPTIME!!!...................... ...................... ........................................... Also, we deal with the absolute 180 and seld-absorption of our beloved Amy as she switches places with Alan, going from the most rational mother, to someone who thinks her experience is the end all be all and projects that onto her child, giving him no room to make his own mistakes. Also both Cory and Feeny forget they already went over Romeo and Juliet together in 6th grade and Shawn is convinced he is on a TV show. All this and more in this grand 2 part journey of pain, suffering and an uncharacteristically bad, bad Amy. Find us on Twitter @StoryofCoryPod Or email us with your thoughts and opinions at StoryofCoryPod@gmail.com download (right click, save as...) WARNING: This episode contains adult language. =
The fortieth episode of the Alnwick Castle podcast is a special musical episode! Our hosts Deborah and Daniel have not started singing ... but they did speak to Paul and Gill, also known as Trouvere Medieval Minstrels, all about brilliant medieval music.The conversation with Paul and Gill took place within the grounds of Alnwick Castle - so you may hear various background noises throughout - where they spoke about what makes medieval music so special. You will hear about the difference between a troubadour and a trouvere, the stories of some individual medieval musicians, how music would have been an important part of life in a castle, and more.You will also get to hear selections of Trouvere performing medieval music, recorded live right here at Alnwick Castle!Find out more about Trouvere at www.medievalminstrels.com or find them on Facebook. To find out when they will next be performing here at Alnwick Castle, head to www.alnwickcastle.com .If you enjoyed this podcast, and would like some more music-themed episodes, please let us know! You can get in touch on twitter @alnwickcastle or by emailing podcast@alnwickcastle.com . Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast so you receive every new episode as it's released!
What did medieval music sound like? How can we read and perform the musical notation from medieval manuscripts? What does singing and playing music written before 1500 actually feel like? How did the early music tradition carry forward into the seventeenth century? In this episode, Reed O'Mara interviews musicologists Elena Mullins Bailey and Allison Monroe from the musical ensemble Trobár on the ins and outs of medieval song, both sacred and profane, and the mechanics of historical performance practice.For more about Reed, Elena, Allison, and this topic, check out our show notes: https://tinyurl.com/mmapodcast.
TECH CLUBBERS PODCAST W/ 01100110 01100110 ( ZeroElevenZero ) is a techno DJ and composer from Berlin. In their productions, 01100110 is constantly seeking for new rhythms and landscapes of sound. He has published music on Planet Rhythm, trau-ma and on his personal imprint Elektroakustische Tanzmusik. As a DJ, 01100110 has grown up in Berlins queer and left scene underground. He like to play a dark, cyberfuturistic and athmospheric sound that is sometimes mystic and melancholic, sometimes harsh and disobedient. His music is cross-inspired from his musical roots, which are situated a bit off from the oldschool techno genre. Industrial, Goth Music, Dark Ambient, Medieval Music and Harsh Noise are just a few to name of those. He is a resident of the booking agency Granit Souls , which supports queer and/or female artists. TRACKLIST: Pact Infernal - Meditations Nnamael - Samsara BØHM - Fluid Dynamics Paul McCreesh & the Gabrielli Consort & Players - Venetian Easter Mass - Oratio ( Dominus Vobiscum ) Keith Carnal - Rijwiel Viels, Pyramidal Decode - Entropia Variabile Introversion - Hush Deison, KK Null - Not fade away Cirkle - Kachira's Cave Vladw - Redov Body Sculptures - Painted Women lll 01100110 - Basso Continuo Slam - Zero Dip Cirkle - Landing 01100110 - Applied Ontology Lewis Fautzi - Knives Pact Infernal - Philosophy NØRBAK - Collective Disbelief BØHM - Molecular Geometry Else Marie Pade - Altocumulus Portavion - Oes Machina BRÄLLE - No More Tears The Preventer - Transtorno 14 Aurea Virgo - Seven Headed Beast Avox25, Temporal Geometryk - HX003 Deas - Oval Syndrome - Forever and a day M_R_T - Morgue Juan Trujillo - A Stellar Vistor Gustaf Hildebrand - Cataclysmic Variable 01100110 - Applied Epistemology ( Julieta Kopp Remix ) Ben Frost - Eurydice's Heel - Hades Dustin Zahn - Eternity's Edge Abdulla Rashim - Ultimate Reality Follow 01100110 here: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ZeroElevenZero Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zeroelevenzero/ Soundcloud: https://www.soundcloud.com/zeroelevenzero
Medieval Music near the Beach - Perfect Medieval Inn Playlist with Relaxing Beach waves. Transport Yourself to a Medieval Inn near the Beach with Soothing Music and Relaxing Beach Waves. Please rate our podcast 5 stars ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ at the top of your screen if you like this sound. If you're looking for the ultimate escape from the stresses of modern life, why not transport yourself to a medieval inn near the beach? In this episode, we'll take you on a journey to a simpler time, where the sound of waves crashing on the shore and soothing medieval music combine to create the perfect atmosphere for relaxation and comfort. Our expert guest will guide you through a selection of medieval music, carefully chosen for its calming and soothing qualities. We'll also combine these beautiful melodies with the sound of beach waves, creating a truly immersive and peaceful experience. You'll feel as though you're sitting in a cozy medieval inn, watching the waves roll in as you listen to the gentle strains of the music. The combination of soothing sounds and the tranquil atmosphere will help you unwind and let go of any stress or tension you may be carrying. But that's not all - this episode also includes a comforting message that will leave you feeling refreshed and rejuvenated. By the end of the episode, you'll feel like you've been transported to a different time and place, where peace and tranquility reign supreme. So, if you're ready to escape from the hustle and bustle of modern life and relax in a medieval inn near the beach, tune in to this episode. You won't be disappointed - the soothing music and relaxing beach waves will help you achieve the ultimate state of relaxation and comfort. Thank you for supporting the work. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill, reduce stress, and more. Thank you for supporting the work. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill and more. By creating a mental state of relaxation, peace, and considerate focus, nature sounds can be deeply relaxing. Sound therapy can help retrain the brain to listen more efficiently and help focus attention on tasks. Disclaimer: Please always consult with your doctor if you suffer from any mental issue. This audio is created for entertainment purposes only! Tags: Soundsky podcast, RWS podcast, Relaxing White Soothing Sounds, RWS, sound sky, relaxing music, soothing music, sleeping sounds, study sounds, nature sounds, deep sleep sounds, Soothing music, sleep music, study music, meditation music, relaxing music, relaxing white noise, yellow brick sounds, yellow brick cinema, Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds, the relaxed guys, relaxation,relaxing,relaxing music,sleep,sleep music,sleeping,sleeping music,smoothing relaxation,soothing ,soothing relaxation, TmSleep Soothing SoundX, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music,
Step back in time and into a modern world of fantasy with the "Medieval Inn LoFi Music - Royal Tavern - Fantasy with LoFi Beats Music for Relaxation and Adventure" podcast episode only on SoundSky Podcast. This episode features a collection of medieval-inspired tavern music that will transport you to a royal inn, surrounded by the sounds of a lively tavern. Perfect for fantasy lovers, this episode is designed to help you relax and unwind, while also sparking your imagination for adventure. Whether you're looking for background music for your D&D game or just need some calming sounds to soothe your mind, this episode has got you covered. Follow us now and let the sounds of the Medieval Inn Music - Royal Tavern take you on a journey to a world of fantasy and relaxation. If you want to donate to help the podcast grow:
Lord of the Rings Type Emotional Medieval Music & Ambience with Nature sounds (Birds, Forest wind, Water flowing) - Gandalf Journey. “I want to see the wild country again before I die, and the Mountains; but he is still in love with the Shire, with woods and fields and little rivers.” **This is made possible by all of you who support this page. Thank you! Enjoy these amazing landscapes representing Middle-Earth and an epic mix of music from The Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, and Lord of the Rings Online! What is your favorite realm of Middle-Earth? "I'm currently rereading the LOTR trilogy & stumbled upon this gem. Now I have this playing quietly while reading by candlelight. I recon it's about as close as being in Middle Earth as one can get!" - Ethan "I would rather share 3 hours of my lifetime with this music than face all the ages of this world never having heard it" - Dom "I always cry when I listen to LOTR music. I was in highschool and we didn't have in Bosnia option to buy original cds ,so I record it myself and made this cd book inside with tiny pics of main characters. I was listening to it whole highschool in my cd player. What a great time to be alive
The BEST Medieval Ancient, Viking Music, Folk Tavern Music - Reading and Study Music | Medieval Music Collection. The Middle Ages are often said to be dark because of a supposed lack of scientific and cultural advancement. During this time, feudalism was the dominant political system. In the history of Europe, the Middle Ages or medieval period lasted approximately from the late 5th to the late 15th centuries Violence was considered a necessary part of life in the Middle Ages (about 500–1500 A.D.). People were surrounded by violence in many forms, including wars, brutal tournaments, and deadly rivalries for power and land. Graphic depictions of violent religious events, such as Christ's Crucifixion, were also common. If you want to donate to help the podcast grow:
Embark on a unique journey with this Medieval Inn Music - Fantasy Bard -Tavern Music Compilation | Fantasy Tavern Medieval Music. Listen to this exquisite Celtic, Medieval, Tavern Music - Ancient Times Music for 15th Century over a crackling Fireplace and occasional howling wind sounds.. travel back in the middle age. What was life like in Medieval Times? Life was harsh, with a limited diet and little comfort. Women were subordinate to men, in both the peasant and noble classes, and were expected to ensure the smooth running of the household. Children had a 50% survival rate beyond age one, and began to contribute to family life around age twelve. What ended the Middle Ages? Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire, fell to the hands of the invading Ottoman Empire on May 29, 1453. This day, many believe, marks the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the 15th-century Renaissance. What are 7 facts about the Middle Ages? People had the vote. The church didn't conduct witch hunts. They had a Renaissance, and invented experimental science. They travelled – and traded – over very long distances. They had some great 'folk' customs. You didn't have to get married in church. Most great medieval authors didn't write. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill and more. By creating a mental state of relaxation, peace, and considerate focus, nature sounds can be deeply relaxing. Sound therapy can help retrain the brain to listen more efficiently and help focus attention on tasks. DISCLAIMER: These sounds are for educational purposes only. Please consult with your doctor for serious health issues. Contact Us for Partnerships Check more videos on our YouTube SoundSky Privacy Policy Tags: Soundsky podcast, RWS podcast, Relaxing White Soothing Sounds, RWS, sound sky, relaxing music, soothing music, sleeping sounds, study sounds, nature sounds, deep sleep sounds, Soothing music, sleep music, study music, meditation music, relaxing music,, relaxing white noise, yellow brick sounds, yellow brick cinema, Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds, the relaxed guys, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music medieval music,medieval music instrumental,medieval music beautiful,beautiful medieval music,medieval music compilation,medieval music 1 hour,medieval music game,celtic medieval music,celtic music,celtic music instrumental,instrumental music,music,celtic,fantasy medieval music,medieval music mix,tavern music,celtic tavern music,celtic inn music,minstrel music,bard music,minstrels,bards,taverns,village music,inns,ta outdoors,log cabin,inn,the witcher
Listen to this exquisite Celtic, Medieval, Tavern Music - Ancient Times Music for 15th Century over a crackling Fireplace and occasional howling wind sounds.. travel back in the middle age. What was life like in Medieval Times? Life was harsh, with a limited diet and little comfort. Women were subordinate to men, in both the peasant and noble classes, and were expected to ensure the smooth running of the household. Children had a 50% survival rate beyond age one, and began to contribute to family life around age twelve. What ended the Middle Ages? Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire, fell to the hands of the invading Ottoman Empire on May 29, 1453. This day, many believe, marks the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the 15th-century Renaissance. What are 7 facts about the Middle Ages? People had the vote. The church didn't conduct witch hunts. They had a Renaissance, and invented experimental science. They travelled – and traded – over very long distances. They had some great 'folk' customs. You didn't have to get married in church. Most great medieval authors didn't write. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill and more. By creating a mental state of relaxation, peace, and considerate focus, nature sounds can be deeply relaxing. Sound therapy can help retrain the brain to listen more efficiently and help focus attention on tasks. Disclaimer: Please always consult with your doctor if you suffer from any mental issue. This audio is created for entertainment purposes only! Tags: Soothing SoundX, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music medieval music,medieval music instrumental,medieval music beautiful,beautiful medieval music,medieval music compilation,medieval music 1 hour,medieval music game,celtic medieval music,celtic music,celtic music instrumental,instrumental music,music,celtic,fantasy medieval music,medieval music mix,tavern music,celtic tavern music,celtic inn music,minstrel music,bard music,minstrels,bards,taverns,village music,inns,ta outdoors,log cabin,inn,the witcher
Medieval Inn Tavern Music with Heavy RAIN & THUNDER - Middle Age/Medieval Music with thunderstorm (RAIN) Medieval Ancient Celtic Music with Rain & Thunder - Perfect Music for Writing & reading. Story time: The rain was coming down hard and the thunder rolled like battle drums in the kingdom of Arden. A knight named Sir Gareth was returning home after a long quest. His armor was dented and his cloak was torn, the once bright colors now dulled by the elements. As he trudged through the mud and the rain, he came upon a small village. The only inn of the village, "The Rusty Shield" had a warm light coming from the windows, inviting him in from the storm. He knocked on the door, the sound of the rain and thunder was still strong but muffled by the walls. The innkeeper opened the door, and upon seeing Sir Gareth's bedraggled state, invited him in and offered him a hot meal and a warm bed for the night. Sir Gareth gratefully accepted and was led to a room where a roaring fire was already burning in the fireplace. He sat down on the bed, taking off his helmet, he closed his eyes and took a deep breath feeling the warmth of the fire and the relief of being out of the rain. He could hear the sound of the rain and thunder outside, but now it was calming, as he was in a safe place. As the night went on, the rain and thunder outside gradually lessened, and Sir Gareth finally fell into a deep sleep, his dreams filled with the memories of his journey, and the comfort and refuge that he found on a stormy night. What makes this kind of music so wonderful is not only it's ability to transport you to a rougher yet simpler age, it's a music that sings more to the soul than the mind. DISCLAIMER: These sounds are for educational purposes only. Please consult with your doctor for serious health issues. Do not drive or operate heavy machinery while listening to this sound. Remember that loud sounds can potentially damage your hearing. Tags: Soundsky podcast, RWS podcast, Relaxing White Soothing Sounds, RWS, sound sky, relaxing music, soothing music, sleeping sounds, study sounds, nature sounds, deep sleep sounds, Soothing music, sleep music, study music, meditation music, relaxing music,, relaxing white noise, yellow brick sounds, yellow brick cinema, Tmsoft's White Noise Sleep Sounds, the relaxed guys, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music, rain,rainsounds,rain sounds,rain to sleep,rainsounds to sleep,the sounds of rain and thunder,the sound of rain,the sounds of rain,the rain with a thunderstorm,the sound of rain and thunder to sleep,the sound of rain and thunder, rain,rainsounds,rain sounds,rain to sleep,rainsounds to sleep,the sounds of rain and thunder,the sound of rain,the sounds of rain,the rain with a thunderstorm,the sound of rain and thunder to sleep,the sound of rain and thunder,the sound of rain to sleep,rain and thunder for sleep,the sound of rain and thunderstorms,sounds for sleep,sleep,thunderstorm for sleep,rainsounds at night,relaxing rain,rain sounds for sleeping,heavy rain sounds,rain asmr, rain and wind
Once upon a time, in a land of rolling green hills and ancient forests, there was a small village nestled among the trees. It was a place of simple pleasures, where the people lived in harmony with nature and each other. One of the most beloved places in the village was the tavern, a cozy little inn where travelers and locals alike gathered to share stories and enjoy each other's company. The Tavern was always filled with the sound of laughter and the sweet melodies of music, played on fiddles and flutes by the talented musicians who lived in the village. One evening, as the sun was setting and the moon was rising, a group of travelers arrived in the village. They were a rugged bunch, with sun-weathered faces and clothes that had seen many a road. They made their way to the Tavern, where they were greeted warmly by the proprietor and shown to a table near the fire. As they settled in, one of the musicians struck up a lively tune on his fiddle, and the other patrons of the Tavern joined in, clapping their hands and tapping their feet to the beat. The travelers couldn't help but be drawn in by the music with Nature Sounds - Wind, Thunder, Water, and Leave Falling in the background and the friendly atmosphere of the Tavern. They found themselves laughing and chatting with the other guests, and before long, the stress of their journey seemed to melt away. As the night went on, the music became more and more enchanting, drawing everyone in the Tavern under its spell. It was as if the melodies were weaving a magical web, binding all of the guests together in a bond of joy and goodwill. And as the last notes of the music faded away and the travelers retired to their rooms, they knew that they had found a little piece of heaven in that humble Tavern in the forest. To listen to 8 HOURS Ad-free episodes and exclusive videos, subscribe here: https://anchor.fm/soothing-soundx/subscribe If you want to donate crypto, my Ethereum wallet address is here: 0x414afef51017e92d97778a56cb756e2f0096da39 Some comments include: " I've been waiting for more medieval music! This will really help me out when writing :) Thank you, guys!" Thank you for supporting the work. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill and more. By creating a mental state of relaxation, peace, and considerate focus, nature sounds can be deeply relaxing. Sound therapy can help retrain the brain to listen more efficiently and help focus attention on tasks. Disclaimer: Please always consult with your doctor if you suffer from any mental issue. This audio is created for entertainment purposes only! Tags: Soothing SoundX, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music
Tavern Medieval Inn Music with Wind & Crackling Fire - Beautiful Celtic Medieval Music. A large Dragonborn with a mighty battle-axe strapped to his back walks up to your table as you are drinking your mead while listening to the bard's music. He chuckles a bit, and asks you your name. After you've met, you begin to bond with this strong character telling stories all night. Next thing you know, the bartender is waking you up. You lift your head off the table and see daylight shining through the window. The warm heart is crackling and you see six empty mugs before you on the table. The bartender says that you fell asleep the night before. As you pay your tab, and are about to embark on your next adventure, you see a slip of parchment paper underneath one of the mugs. You slip it out of underneath the mug and it reads, "I'm glad we met, young traveler, be safe on your adventures. I hope we may meet again." You leave the cozy tavern with the thought of the Dragonborn from the night before on your mind. You smile. "I had the most heartwarming experience while listening to this. I am going through hard times now, and I felt so lonely, but these melodies - quiet, warm, and welcoming; something straight out of childhood. In the end, all the problems of life will fade and there is always the magic left. Magic of fantasy, tales, adventures, heroes, and stories. That keeps me alive and moving forward. Thank you for providing this little friendly and cozy nook where I can meet good old people, rest and recover my strengths." - Castor "If someone wants to experience a tavern like this in real life then you have to go to Tallinn, Estonia, there you have the "Olde Hansa You really imagine yourself in the Middle Ages"- Jan "I'm not from a Medieval time but I can truly sense and imagine the scene with this beautiful image and music. I don't know but I found myself traveling through the past time with so much strong feel whenever I see old photographs or clips. " - Ashkar Thank you for supporting the work. With our sounds, you can Study, Cry, Sleep, Meditate, work, focus, chill and more. By creating a mental state of relaxation, peace, and considerate focus, nature sounds can be deeply relaxing. Sound therapy can help retrain the brain to listen more efficiently and help focus attention on tasks. Disclaimer: Please always consult with your doctor if you suffer from any mental issue. This audio is created for entertainment purposes only! Tags: Soothing SoundX, relaxing sounds, Soundsky podcast, nature sounds, medieval music,fantasy music,medieval fantasy music,music,fantasy,medieval,epic music,epic fantasy music,celtic music,tavern music,medieval city music,medieval town music,medieval fantasy soundtrack,celtic fantasy music,celtic medieval fantasy,rpg fantasy music,party medieval music,inn music,medieval inn music,medieval folk music,medieval folk soundtrack,inn,tavern,folk medieval music,instrumental medieval music,instrumental medieval fantasy music, Fantasy bard tavern songs,fantasy bard tavern music,compilation,bard music,bard songs,tavern music,tavern songs,medieval music,RPG playlist,DND playlist,compilation mix,Dungeons and Dragons,Folk music,Dragon Age,The Witcher,Taverns of Azeroth,The Elder Scrolls,Skyrim,A Song of Ice and Fire,Dragon's Dogma, Kingdom Come: Deliverance,TES V Skyrim,Dragon Age Origins,Dragon Age 2,Dragon Age Inquisition,The Witcher 3 Wild Hunt,medieval covers,bardcore,
I'm sorry for the late release. This was suppose to publish on the day after Thanksgiving but Thanksgiving got my days all messed up.My dear friend @freddypavao and I sit down to chat and geek out about the #LordOfTheRings PrimeVideo series #TheRingsofPower.Grab a tea or coffee and come join us in this joyful chat.>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Social Media Links
Dark Castle Room on Rainy Night w/ Celtic Music | Medieval Music | Scottish Music, Tavern Music _____ Please subscribe for *DAILY* videos: https://bit.ly/31YtQPc Link to video: https://youtu.be/DCilBC7VuKs ========= BEST 4 EARBUDS FOR LISTENING EXPERIENCE: ➤ Most affordable but still high-quality sound, noise-canceling Bluetooth earbuds - https://bit.ly/3AQohjH ➤ Premium 180Hr Playtime Bluetooth earbuds w/ overall best sound & quality construction - https://bit.ly/3KJIFqW ➤ Affordable in-ear style Bluetooth earbuds w/ great sound - https://bit.ly/3BbAalk ➤ Affordable over-ear style exercise Bluetooth earbuds w/ great sound - https://bit.ly/3CWrwc2 _________________ SOOTHING SOUNDzzz ON SOCAL MEDIA: TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@soothingsounds000?lang=en Instagram https://www.instagram.com/soothingsoundzzz/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Soothing-Soundzzz-271614694688828/ Spotify (Podcast) https://open.spotify.com/show/6vHMEcA5DQdriv4SBNePwe ______________________ ABOUT: This channel is dedicated to making soothing audio, nature sounds, and relaxing ambiance to help people sleep better, fight insomnia, reduce stress, relieve anxiety, focus, study, read, ASMR, meditate, and more. #celticmusic #medievalcastle #scottishmusic #medievalinstruments #tavernmusic #rainynight #sleepmeditation #cozyambience #fallasleepfast #relaxingambience #relaxingsounds #soothingsoundzzz
Olá #NaçãoNerdNo episódio dessa semana entraremos no incrível imaginário de #Tolkien através da recém chegada @lotronprime (O Senhor dos Anéis – O Anéis do Poder) da @primevideoCom o maior orçamento já utilizado para uma série de streaming, a mesma chega como uma grande promessa. Visualmente incrível e deslumbrante, tanto na forma como retrata a terra média, bem como na caracterização dos personagens, conseguindo assim fazer uma boa reprodução visual da fantástica obra literária de J. R. R. Tolkien.Temos a presença de alguns personagens que já são bem conhecidos do público tolkiano tais como Elrond, Gil-Galad, Celebrimbor, Galadriel, Isildur, Elendil entre outros, mas também, nos são apresentados novos personagens que foram criados para a série, a exemplo das simpáticas pés-peludos (ancestrais dos hobbits) Nori Brandyfoot e Papoula, o inexpressivo elfo silvestre Arondir, a determinada Bronwyn, o terrível Adar e outros.Com foco na busca de Galadriel por vingança pela morte de seu irmão, a narrativa da série se passa no início da segunda era da Terra média, após a queda de Morgoth (Melkor), Mestre de Sauron e o Senhor do Escuro antecessor a ele.E é claro que para falar de Tolkien, tivemos que acionar um especialista (embora ele não se ache um, deu uma aula pra gente
Ethan Hoppe is a violinist and technical sergeant in the United States Air Force. He studied violin at Northwestern and Yale before the pandemic changed the trajectory of his career. We talk about the history of classical music, the power of listening to the same in an ancient world, memorizing the Game of Thrones theme song for a White House performance, and how visualization can be used as a tool to combat stage fright. Instagram: @robinsonerhardt TikTok: @robinsonerhardt Twitch: @robinsonerhardt --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/robinson-erhardt/support
Relax, focus and fall asleep faster. Fantasy Medieval Music & Calming Rain. Made just for your ears. Your Sleepy Music.
Join Ari and Matt as they give an overview of the most popular ways of fighting in medieval themed contexts, both for educational and competitive purposes. Show Notes: Paul Butler's Medieval Music
In this episode, Aidan joins the show to discuss the evolution of music including house and rap music (3:30). We then break down what constitutes "real" music (11:05) which Aidan argues must show some sort of structure. Finally, we talk about WAP and how 12 year olds are twerking (41:30)Sunday Punch is a Chicago podcast that talks about sports, pop culture, and politics.
Join Ari and Matt as they discuss some of the more sensitive topics of incorporating elements or entire impressions from other cultures. Show Notes: Paul Butler's Medieval Music
Join Ari and Matt as they discuss the words we use to discuss historical concepts and items, how they change, and how to employ them to their best effect. Show Notes: Paul Butler's Medieval Music
Join Ari and Matt as they dig deeply into the use of inventories as part of constructing historical impressions. Show Notes: The medieval inventories of the Tower armouries 1320–1410 Paul Butler's Medieval Music
DescriptionMedieval Western European music encompassed sacred and secular genres in the Middle Ages, from the fall of the Roman Empire to the Renaissance. It spans centuries and is worth considering as an integral part of our musical development. Join me, Steven Hobé, as we take a minute to get the scoop!Fun FactHildegard von Bingen was a rare Medieval female composer. Also known as Saint Hildegard and the Sibyl of the Rhine, was a German Benedictine abbess and polymath active as a writer, composer, philosopher, mystic, visionary, and as a medical writer and practitioner during the High Middle Ages. She is one of the best-known composers of sacred monophony, as well as the most recorded in modern history. She has been considered by many in Europe to be the founder of scientific natural history in Germany.About StevenSteven is a Canadian composer living in Toronto. He creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.A Note To Music Students et al.All recordings and sheet music are available on my site. I encourage you to take a look and play through some. Give me a shout if you have any questions.Got a topic? Pop me off an email at: TCMMPodcast@Gmail.com Support the show
Listen as Ari and Matt discuss colors, their use, and their vibrancy in medieval clothing and how it can apply to your impression. Show Notes: Rosalie's Medieval Woman The Company of the Staple Ylva the Red Popula Urbanum Historic Enterprises Page on Motley Could be Worse Comic Paul Butler's Medieval Music
This week we are going back to the Middle Ages for some bizarre music. First, we go to the early 1500s and visit a king who was presented with a very unusual gift: cats. But not just any cats, a piano made of screeching cats! We continue back to the 1300s and meet King Louis XI of France, who commissioned an Abbe to create the most unusual thing he could think of. The result: the pig piano! Last on out tour, we go to France in the 1100s and visit the Troubadour, Bertran de Born. He was a major celebrity of his time and would often write songs about war, soldiers and torture. Join us at the end where we read you some of his lyrics! You can contact us at: historyexplainsall@gmail.com anchor.fm/historyexplainsall instagram.com/historyexplainsitall_podcast Links for our sources, photos & maps can be found at: History Explains It All Podcast | Facebook Music used: Call to Adventure Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Logo design by Katelyn Meade-Malley: Portfolio Link: projectk2.portfoliobox.net/ LinkedIn Profile: linkedin.com/in/katelynn-meade-malley-134485102 Fiverr: fiverr.com/projectk2 Disclaimer: Neither host is any way a professional historian --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/historyexplainsall/message
Live from Town Hall Seattle, it's Soundside.
Ari and Matt discuss some tips and guidance for both the newcomer approaching a new group as well as how groups can help integrate newer members. Show Notes: Well Actually song As always, thank you to Paul Butler's Medieval Music.
Join Ari and Matt as they discuss ways to understand and respond to a specific variety of challenging questions. As always, thank you to Paul Butler's Medieval Music.
Join Ari and Matt as they remark on the elements which contribute to organizing a quality event. As always, thank you to Paul Butler's Medieval Music.
Michele Pasotti, musician, lutenist, conductor, researcher and philosopher shares fascinating insights into his musical passion, the "medieval music," in particular the musical style known as Ars subtilior. Thrilled by the refinement, elegance and complexity of this music, moved by its “dulcedo” and sensuality, Pasotti elaborates on his ongoing discoveries of the layers of subtle information that can be found between the lines in music and text of the period. You can find out more about Michele Pasotti's practice on https://lafontemusica.com.
Join Ari and Matt as they discuss reenactor burn out, specifically getting back in the groove as in person events begin to open up again. As always, thank you to Paul Butler's Medieval Music.
Join Ari and Matt as they explore developing an impression of a hunter. Show notes: Exploring the Medieval Hunt St. Hubert's Rangers The Forester's Guild (SCA) Paul Butler's Medieval Music
A wonderful experience relaxing with taverns music . High quality stereo world of warcraft tavern music and ambience , better than any study music will provide a great relaxing atmosphere for study and creativity. All you need to do is playing this video and listen to the World Of Warcraft Alliance Taverns .Enjoy!
Immerse yourself in a peaceful ancient forest, with serene nature sounds and medieval music.
RELAXING MEDIEVAL MUSIC Sleep Music + Insomnia Stress Relief Relaxing Music Want to get out of that bad mood you're in or Insomnia ? Listening to Medieval Music can help increase dopamine secretion, which activates the brain's reward and pleasure center. Do you toss and turn for hours before finally falling asleep? Rather than squeeze in another episode of Games of Thrones or New Girl, listen to Medieval Music. There are a ton of brainy benefits one derives from listening to Medieval Music. From pain management to improved sleep quality, listening to classical music has both mental and physical benefits. In fact, simply listening to Medieval Music as background noise can have a significant impact on your mood, productivity, and creativity. #HealingVibes #Relax #Medieval Music #SleepMusic SUBSCRIBE NOW
Not only do Ari and Matt share their initial thoughts on these two films based only on their trailers, but they spend sometime discussing the complicated relationship between the medieval living history community and medieval themed movies produced by Hollywood. Show Notes: The Could Be Worse comic referenced. Paul Butler's Medieval Music
DescriptionEver wondered who were the Medieval Troubadours? Back in the day, nothing was written down but passed from performer to performer as they travelled the countryside. Take a minute to get the scoop!Fun FactOne of the epic poems performed by troubadours was Beowulf. Beowulf was spoken by some and sung by others. Beowulf is the story of a hero who fights and defeats a huge monster. Another epic poem is that of the Song of Roland.About StevenSteven is a Canadian composer living in Toronto. He creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his website for more.A Note To Music Students et al.All recordings and sheet music are available on my site. I encourage you to take a look and play through some. Give me a shout if you have any questions.Got a topic? Pop me off an email at: TCMMPodcast@Gmail.com Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TCMM)
Join Ari and Matt as they provide an overview of cooking at events or when camping, which generally involves cooking over an open flame. Also a shout out to Mike Baker and his new podcast Deconstructing History. Thank you Paul Butler's Medieval Music for permission to use his music in our intro.
Join Ari and Matt as they tackle the touchy subject of reenactorisms and how they proliferate through the community. Thank you Paul Butler's Medieval Music for permission to use his music in our intro.
Description In this minute of classical music history, I'll delve into the life of Hildegard of Bingen who was, among other things, one of the first identifiable composers—dating back over 800 years to the early medieval period.Fun FactA character of the same name, Hildegard, was created for the Netflix series “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina”. Although Hildegard is mentioned in a long list of witches throughout history, there's no evidence she actually had any magical powers. About StevenSteven is a Canadian composer living in Toronto. He creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his website for more.A Note To Music Students et al.All recordings and sheet music are available on my site. I encourage you to take a look and play through some. Give me a shout if you have any questions.Got a topic? Pop me off an email at: TCMMPodcast@Gmail.com Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TCMM)
Join Ari and Matt as they discuss their favorite events of the year: The Pilgrim Progress Challenge! They go into some of the work behind the scenes, as well as contrasting the evolution of the event from last year to this year, what went right, what can be improved upon, and a couple characteristic, charmingly roguish rabbit trails along the way. Paul Butler's Medieval Music
Medieval music has left its DNA in most of the popular music today. It was a storytelling tool, whether to impart history, genealogy, or as a PR tool for nobles and knights. Our movies/shows are Game of Thrones, Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, and The Witcher. Special guests: violinist Bridget Hall and campsite guitarist Shay Golan.
Welcome to Season 2 of Dragonfly Tales, a story podcast for children of all ages. So there is lots going on right now. Hurray! Valentine's Day, Pancake Day (UK) and Chinese New Year! And we have THREE amazing stories for you in this episode.Our first is from our young guest teller, Sofia. She is 8 years old and is telling a traditional tale from her home in France - Fox and Crow. Animal tales appear in every culture on every continent, and this one is a lovely version of an Aesop fable. Fox fools crow with its cunning and wit to win some food. A beautiful telling, Sofia! Bravo!If you would like to read more about the French version, you can do so HERE.This episode, we also welcome Master storyteller Daniel Morden. Daniel has been a storyteller for thirty years and he loves tales of all shapes, sizes and origins.You can watch him tell a tale on his YouTube channel HERE. Daniel has also written many fantastic books. You can find them by clicking HERE.And check out his website www.danielmorden.orgOur story celebrates Chinese New Year and explores the wonderful link between stories and customs. If you want to learn more about this amazing yearly festival and its stories, you can go HERE.If you would like a SHOUT OUT this season, then you can get in touch with us HERE or in our Dragonfly Tales Podcast Group, telling us your first name, your age and your town.And if you like our podcast, please leave us a review (Apple is great).If you would like to donate a little something towards our second season, we would be so grateful. You can donate to Dragonfly Tales Podcast by clicking here: DONATEYou can also follow us on:InstagramFacebook andTwitterThanks for listening! Theme Music by Leo Grazebrook on GaragebandStorytelling by Emily Hanna-Grazebrook at Tales from the DragonflyProduced by Andy GrazebrookArt by Light CreativeSound effects by ZapsplatChinese and Medieval Music by Royalty Free YouTube
When we hear Medieval music performed live, it speaks to us in a different way than almost any other music. It seems to have just appeared, as is, from the earth itself. Medieval music was originally passed down by oral tradition but soon a desire for standardization led to musical notation, rhythmic notation, and the seeds of so much music to come. Medieval music might be the most mysterious of all the eras of classical music, so let's dive right in, with Medieval Music in (almost) 60 minutes.
Das Maskuline am Stricken und Strickfestival “Strik Bornholm 2020”Stricken ist seit langer Zeit eine Sache nur für Frauen. Aber stimmt das überhaupt? Wir sprechen im Podcast mit dem “Prince of Knitting”, dem dänischen “Strickprinzen” Vithard Willumsen, über das Maskuline am Stricken. Vithard könnt Ihr unter anderem am kommenden Wochenende zum Bornholmer Strickfestival “Strik Bornholm” vom 3. bis 6. September in der Nordlandshalle in Allinge erleben. Tagestickets gibt's am Eingang.Hier könnt Ihr Vithard auf Instagram folgen:https://www.instagram.com/vithard/Hier gelangt Ihr zur Webseite von Vithard:https://vithard.dk4 Fakten zur Borgehoved bei Rø in der Rø PlantageIm siebten und letzten Teil unserer Reihe über die Bornholmer Burgen geht es heute um die Borgehoved bei Rø in der Rø Plantage. Eine Burg, von der man lange nicht wusste, dass sie überhaupt existierte. Seit 2014 ist das Waldareal auf dem Felskopf gerodet und zugänglich, Ihr erkennt den Burgwall um das etwa 3,2 Hektar grosse Areal trotz der umherliegenden Steine noch recht gut.So kommt Ihr zum Burgareal BorgehovedFahrt zum Forsthaus in der Rø Plantage – das ist das “Borgedalshus”. Adresse für's Navi: Sigtevej 14, 3760 Gudhjem. Parkt am Haus mit dem Reetdach (das wird übrigens das neue Fledermaus-Infocenter!) und geht auf der anderen Strassenseite am Haus des Försters in den Wald hinein. Da ist noch ein Schlagbaum, den könnt Ihr nicht verfehlen. Dann geht Ihr hinunter, überquert den kleinen Staudamm für den See und seht auf der rechten Seite schon eine frei stehende Felswand und ein ehemaliges Waldareal. Folgt dem Waldweg weiter den Hang hinauf (Ihr kreuzt dabei den neuen Hochheide-Wanderweg “Højlyngs-stien” quer über die Insel) und nach vielleicht 200 Metern geht in einem spitzen Winkel ein Waldweg nach rechts ab. Diesem folgt Ihr, bis Ihr auf das gerodete Waldareal kommt. Dort sind Infotafeln aufgestellt, und Ihr könnt in aller Ruhe das ganze Areal erkunden. Nicht zu übersehen ist der zusammengefallene Steinwall, dem Ihr folgen könnt.Hier gibt's eine Google-Maps-Karte über das ArealRADIO37 auf der neuen Bornholms StemmeAb Montag, dem 30. August hört Ihr uns auch auf der neuen Bornholms Stemme, die seit Samstag auf Sendung ist. Bornholms Stemme konzentriert sich vorrangig auf Nischenthemen – da geht's beispielsweise um Gartentipps, dann gibt es eine geniale Sendereihe über den Bornholmer Dialekt und es wird auch einen Versuch macht, ein paar deutsche Hörer zu gewinnen. Ab Montag gibt's einen 14-tägigen Versuch mit jeweils 5 Minuten deutschen Nachrichten. Jeweils von Montags bis freitags um 8:30 Uhr. Und zum anderen gibt's künftig – auch ab Montag – alle 14 Tage montags einen Zusammenschnitt der Themen unseres Magazins “Zwischen Nørrekaas und Christiansø”!So empfangt Ihr die neue Bornholms StemmeBornholms Stemme sendet vorerst nur als Live-Stream im Internet, später soll Stemman, die Stimme, auch auf DAB Plus und möglicherweise sogar auf UKW senden. Geht dazu auf stemman.dk oder findet die neue Radiostation beispielsweise auf TuneIn.https://app.stemman.dkDie Musik in dieser Podcast-Ausgabe: "It's Coming Together INSTRUMENTAL" von Heifervescent, "Head over Heels" von The Devil Music Co., "The Sea Diver" von Thierry Chauve, "Disco Night" von SoundForYou und "Saltarello IV" von Best of Medieval Music - wiedergegeben durch die Creative Commons Lizenz (cc-by, cc-nc, cc-nd).Habt Ihr Fragen, Anregungen, Themenvorschläge oder Kommentare?Dann schreibt uns: Entweder per Mail an studio@radio37.dk, per Kommentar auf unserer Facebook-Seite radio37.dk - oder ganz einfach per Sprachnachricht an die Whatsapp-Nummer 0045 2290 2750. Wir freuen uns!
Mathieu se pète un trip pour ce mix. Attention, ça va BARDER. :') Mix Non é gran cousa se sabe / Cantigas de Santa Maria #26 (1230?) / Auteur original inconnu, mais attribué à Alphonse X (Int. Arany Zoltan)La suite meurtrière / The Shape of Medieval Music to Come (2003) / Harald Pettersson & Vox Vulgaris (Originale)Bonjorn bonjorn / Folk : Musiques traditionnelles du futur (2017) / Duo PuechGourdon (Originale)Fager som en Ros / Folkesange (2020) / Myrkur (Répertoire traditionnel suédois)Mortal Kombat Theme Song / Single (2020) / StantoughJe vivroie liement / Virelai #21 (1340?) / Guillaume de Machaut (Int. Ensemble Gilles Binchois)Ragnar the Red / The Elder Scroll V : Skyrim OST (2011) / Sven the BardSaltarello I / Manuscritos de Londres (1400?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Artefactum)Ai vist lo lop / Répertoire traditionnel occitan (1300?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Flos Florum)Ductia / De la Taberna a La Corte (1996) / Artefactum (Répertoire traditionnel andalous)Halo Theme Song / Single 2020 / LJBORokatanc / The Shape of Medieval Music to Come (2003) / Vox Vulgaris (Répertoire médiaéval hongrois?)La thouraz di sopra / Folk : Musiques traditionnelles du futur (2017) / La Tène (Originale)Palästinalied / Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (1220?) / Walther von den Vogelweide (Int. Arany Zoltan)Tempus est iocundum / Codex Buranus #179 (1200?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Artefactum)
Mathieu se pète un trip pour ce mix. Attention, ça va BARDER. :') Mix Non é gran cousa se sabe / Cantigas de Santa Maria #26 (1230?) / Auteur original inconnu, mais attribué à Alphonse X (Int. Arany Zoltan)La suite meurtrière / The Shape of Medieval Music to Come (2003) / Harald Pettersson & Vox Vulgaris (Originale)Bonjorn bonjorn / Folk : Musiques traditionnelles du futur (2017) / Duo PuechGourdon (Originale)Fager som en Ros / Folkesange (2020) / Myrkur (Répertoire traditionnel suédois)Mortal Kombat Theme Song / Single (2020) / StantoughJe vivroie liement / Virelai #21 (1340?) / Guillaume de Machaut (Int. Ensemble Gilles Binchois)Ragnar the Red / The Elder Scroll V : Skyrim OST (2011) / Sven the BardSaltarello I / Manuscritos de Londres (1400?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Artefactum)Ai vist lo lop / Répertoire traditionnel occitan (1300?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Flos Florum)Ductia / De la Taberna a La Corte (1996) / Artefactum (Répertoire traditionnel andalous)Halo Theme Song / Single 2020 / LJBORokatanc / The Shape of Medieval Music to Come (2003) / Vox Vulgaris (Répertoire médiaéval hongrois?)La thouraz di sopra / Folk : Musiques traditionnelles du futur (2017) / La Tène (Originale)Palästinalied / Kleine Heidelberger Liederhandschrift (1220?) / Walther von den Vogelweide (Int. Arany Zoltan)Tempus est iocundum / Codex Buranus #179 (1200?) / Auteur original inconnu (Int. Artefactum)
Sonnentempel, Ringburg und Silberschatz Die allermeisten von Euch sind schon öfter über den Rispebjerg gefahren - ohne ihn wirklich wahr genommen zu haben. Der Höhenzug, der an seiner höchsten Stelle 47 Meter über dem Meer liegt, ist eine natürliche Wetterscheide zwischen Pedersker und Poulsker auf Südbornholm.Ausserdem gibt es im 5. Teil unserer siebenteiligen Reihe über die Bornholmer Burgen - 5 Fakten über die Ringburg auf dem Rispebjerg, die Ihr vielleicht noch nicht kanntet. Wer mehr Informationen zum Rispebjerg haben möchte, der kann sich diesen Flyer der dänischen Naturbehörde (auch auf Deutsch) herunterladen.Der Wikingerschatz vom BjerregaardAm 26. März wurde bei Erdarbeiten zur Vergrösserung des Bjerregaards ein Wikingerschatz gefunden. Wir haben uns mit dem Chefarchäologen von Bornholms Museum, Finn Ole Sonne Nielsen, näher über den Schatz unterhalten und auch, warum man das Alter des Schatzes so genau datieren kann. Mehr Informationen zum Schatz gibt es auf der Webseite von Bornholms Museum.Corona/COVID-19-Testcenter auf Rädern auf BornholmDiesen Sommer ist ein mobiles COVID-19 Testcenter auf Bornholm unterwegs, wo Ihr ohne vorherige Terminvereinbarung auf COVID-19 (Virus und Antikörper) getestet werden könnt. Das Testcenter ist jeweils von 10.30-12.00 Uhr und 13.00-15.45 Uhr geöffnet. Montag, 20. Juli 2020: Nylars Rundkirche, Kirkevej 10K, Nylars (am Büro des Friedhofsgräbers) Dienstag, 21. Juli 2020: Pedersker Versammlungshaus, Hovedgade 56, Pedersker Donnerstag, 23. Juli 2020: Vestermarie Schule, Vestermarievej 16, Vestermarie (in der Kantine) Achtung: Ihr dürft Euch dort nur testen lassen, wenn Ihr keine sichtbaren Symptome auf COVID-19 aufweist.Musik: "It's Coming Together INSTRUMENTAL" von Heifervescent, "My Way" von Kristian Vuljar, "092_The Heat" von Mikes Organ Jam, "Hello" von Pinegroove, "Saltarello IV" von Best of Medieval Music - wiedergegeben durch die Creative Commons Lizenz (cc-by, cc-nc, cc-nd).Habt Ihr Fragen, Anregungen, Themenvorschläge oder Kommentare?Dann schreibt uns: Entweder per Mail an studio@radio37.dk, per Kommentar auf unserer Facebook-Seite radio37.dk - oder ganz einfach per Sprachnachricht an die Whatsapp-Nummer 0045 2290 2750. Wir freuen uns!
TV2/Bornholm zu Besuch bei RADIO37 - Der Bornholm-PodcastAm Dienstag war TV2/Bornholm zu Besuch bei uns in Poulsker und wollte unter anderem wissen, warum wir RADIO37 heissen. Wir haben für Euch die Beiträge verlinkt (leider nur auf Dänisch) und haben auch ein paar Bilder vom Drehen. https://tv2bornholm.dk/artikel/podcast-fra-poulsker-tyskerne-elsker-det https://play.tv2bornholm.dk/?area=specifikTV&id=791991#791991 https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=605514083734090 3 Fakten zur Gamleborg in den ParadisbakkerneMitten im Wald in den Paradisbakkerne liegt die Gamleborg - die ältere Gamleborg. Die Fluchtburg stammt aus der Eisenzeit, also um 200 nach Christus und war noch bis weit in die Wikingerzeit bis ins Jahr 1000 in Benutzung. Das haben verschiedene archäologische Funde ergeben.Hier ist eine Karte, wo Ihr die Burg findetRADIO37-HÖRER-BRIEFKASTEN zur Saxebro MølleJens aus dem Taunus hat uns nach dem aktuellen Stand bezüglich der Renovierungsarbeiten an der Saxebro Mølle bei Boderne gefragt. Die verfallene Mühle wurde 2019 vom Bornholmer Firmenchef Ole Almeborg aufgekauft, der die Mühle, die ehemalige Bäckerei und die Privatwohnung wieder in Stand setzt. Das dauert alles seine Zeit, die erste Etappe (die Renovierung der Mühle) soll aber bis Herbst 2020 fertig gestellt sein. Hier findet Ihr ein paar alte Bilder zur Mühle (auf den jeweiligen Pfeil klicken) TV2/Bornholm hat einen kleinen Schmalfilm mit alten Aufnahmen der Mühle und Bäckerei zusammengestellt Musik: "It's Coming Together INSTRUMENTAL" von Heifervescent, "Play Easy" von tubebackr, "Saltarello IV" von Best of Medieval Music, "Coffee at Midnight" von Lewis, "Last 2 Know" vom Neon NiteClub, "Back To Me (The Hearts Regret)" von Loveshadow ft. Frank aka Songboy 3, "Waste My Time" von The Devil Music Co. - wiedergegeben durch die Creative Commons Lizenz (cc-by, cc-nc, cc-nd).Habt Ihr Fragen, Anregungen, Themenvorschläge oder Kommentare?Dann schreibt uns: Entweder per Mail an studio@radio37.dk, per Kommentar auf unserer Facebook-Seite radio37.dk - oder ganz einfach per Sprachnachricht an die Whatsapp-Nummer 0045 2290 2750. Wir freuen uns!
Zusatzinfos zur RADIO37-Bornholm-Podcast-Ausagbe #26In der heutigen Ausgabe #26 von unserem RADIO37-Bornholm-Podcast gibt's ein paar Themen, zu denen Ihr auf unserer Webseite noch Zusatz-Informationen findet. Geht einfach auf den Eintrag zu unserer heutigen Ausgabe - den Link zur Ausgabe #26 findet Ihr hier.Musik: "It's Coming Together INSTRUMENTAL" von Heifervescent, "Nightmare" von Neon NiteClub, "The Secret" von Eliot Feldman, "Saltarello IV" von Best of Medieval Music, "Sittin' Throwin' Rocks" von Leonell Cassio ft. Lily Hain, und "Back To Me (The Hearts Regret)" von Loveshadow ft. Frank aka Songboy 3 - wiedergegeben durch die Creative Commons Lizenz (cc-by, cc-nc, cc-nd).Habt Ihr Fragen, Anregungen, Themenvorschläge oder Kommentare?Dann schreibt uns: Entweder per Mail an studio@radio37.dk, per Kommentar auf unserer Facebook-Seite radio37.dk - oder ganz einfach per Sprachnachricht an die Whatsapp-Nummer 0045 2290 2750. Wir freuen uns!
Crammed packed, full of goodness - this week radioblog is a corker. Medieval Music, Clay's Track Of The Week, D & B Doco, Film Review x 2, Statues WTF & tonnes more. Plus BRAND NEW Tracks offa: TRICKY, IGLU Noise, Black Taffy, TBG + New Old offa LIL Peep, Bakar, Subculture Sage, Collard, Gerling, Church + AP, Moodyman, Little Simz, Sweatson Klank, BADBADNOTGOOD, Sola Rosa, Blu & Exile, Drake, El Michels Affair, Milkavelli, ChasBeats, Odette, Boards + MORE. Rinsin'
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay's, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem's Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections.
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay's, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem's Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
There are a handful of pieces from the Medieval and Renaissance periods that most music students learn about in their introductory history courses; among them are Guillaume Du Fay’s, Ave regina celorum III and Johannes Ockeghem’s Missa Prolationum. Some of these foundational compositions have been studied by musicologists for over one hundred years, but generally they have been examined in isolation as masterworks by great composers. In her new book Composing Community in Late Medieval Music: Self-Reference, Pedagogy, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Jane D. Hatter effectively contextualizes these pieces within a larger repertory of motets and masses written between 1450 and 1550 that mention other musicians or explore complex theoretical topics. She sees these works as evidence of an international community of musicians that might have been separated geographically and isolated by their itinerant lifestyles, but who were connected through a shared attitude towards art and their own sense of themselves as composers and musicians. Connecting her insights to a similar phenomenon in the visual arts, Hatter shows that the repertory she studies reflects a musical culture that valued intergenerational connections between artists and compositional virtuosity based upon theoretical and pedagogical concepts that stretched back to antiquity, but that also permeated the musical training these composers received. Jane D. Hatter is a musicologist on faculty at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Jane has published on musical time in early sixteenth-century Italian paintings (Early Music, 2011) and also on intersections between popular devotions and ecclesiastical liturgy in Renaissance motets that include or quote the Ave Maria prayer (2012). More recently she has examined the persistence and conversion of music for women's churching ceremonies in both Catholic and Protestant contexts in the early Reformation period. Kristen M. Turner, Ph.D. is a lecturer at North Carolina State University in the music department. Her work centers on American musical culture at the turn of the twentieth century and has been published in several journals and essay collections. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Comedian Dan Donnelly (Scorpio) discusses catfishing, medieval music and emojis.
The Diabolus in Musica (The Devil in Music). The Devil’s Interval. The Terrors discuss the sound that scared the pants of the Middle Ages Church! We get into the musical theory, who used it, and it's uses in heavy metal. As an added bonus, hear Jody's teen voice! Picture: Tartini's Dream (1824) by Louis-Leopold Boilly (1761-1845)
The Cape Cod musical group, the Solstice Singers, has been performing for over a quarter century. They sing mainly medieval and Renaissance songs, complemented by drama, dance, poetry and period costumes.
In this supplemental episode we examine music in the Early Middle Ages. Essentially, this comes down to Gregorian Chanting (Religious) and secular music.
Only one more week until the premiere of Season 4! In the meantime, take one more look back at a favorite episode of mine, Medieval Music in 60 Minutes. We'll explore some of the first ever composers that we have records of, and take a deep dive into topics such as the Ethiopian Saint Yared, Gregorian Chant, Polyphony, Musical Notation, Troubadors, and more. If you ever wondered how classical music got its start, this is the episode to listen to! Thanks and see you next week!
KC Music Talk #4 Rob Foster interviews Victor Penniman: Medieval Music, Academia, working musician. Music Discussion, Music Podcast. www.robmusicianfoster.com
This was such an exciting episode for me! I had the great pleasure of talking with two fantastic video game composers. Adam and Jan wrote the music for Kingdom Come: Deliverance, a new, realistic, medieval RPG set in 1403 Bohemia. https://www.kingdomcomerpg.com/ We jumped right into the conversation so for clarity's sake, Adam speaks first, followed by Jan, as they discuss their experience with music growing up. -- Enjoying the podcast? You can now support us on Patreon! We've got different monthly rewards for you to enjoy including custom ringtones and super sweet shout-outs on the podcast. Keep up to date and follow @ComposerCast on Twitter. Our DMs are always open. Want to be a guest on the podcast or have a topic you think we should discuss? Send us an email to patreon@composercast.co.uk
Ever wanted to know the roots of all of the wonderful Western Classical Music we hear today? How musical notation developed? How rhythm developed? Well, today is the day you'll find out, because this week on Sticky Notes, it's Medieval Music in 60 Minutes! We'll talk about Gregorian Chant, Polyphony, Troubadours, and much much more, while of course, listening to a lot of intoxicating music that takes us back to a different era. Thanks for listening!
Episode 6 features a pre-concert talk by Scott Metcalfe given on February 3, 2018, in Cambridge. He discusses ideas about beauty and form presented in Robert Hass's A Little Book on Form (2017) and connects them to Blue Heron's work, pondering the issues raised by a 21st-century concert performance of a piece of late medieval music whose original purpose was to enhance a sacred liturgy.
Chanting has been practised for thousands of years by Hindus, Buddhists and Christians. It is said to have health benefits and today, practitioners suggest that it can combat the stresses of modern life. Joining Ernie Rea to discuss the power of chanting are Dr Sarah Shaw, Honorary Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies; Christopher Page, Professor of Medieval Music and Literature at the University of Cambridge and Gresham Professor of Music at Gresham College, London; and Michael Trimble Professor Emeritus and Consultant Physician to the Department of Psychological Medicine at the National Hospital London. Pop singer Belinda Carlisle talks about how chanting has helped her to combat her addictions. Producer: Beena Khetani.
Chanting has been practised for thousands of years by Hindus, Buddhists and Christians. It is said to have health benefits and today, practitioners suggest that it can combat the stresses of modern life. Joining Ernie Rea to discuss the power of chanting are Dr Sarah Shaw, Honorary Fellow of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies; Christopher Page, Professor of Medieval Music and Literature at the University of Cambridge and Gresham Professor of Music at Gresham College, London; and Michael Trimble Professor Emeritus and Consultant Physician to the Department of Psychological Medicine at the National Hospital London. Pop singer Belinda Carlisle talks about how chanting has helped her to combat her addictions. Producer: Beena Khetani.
During the last thirty years, the name of Hildegard of Bingen (d. 1179) composer, abbess and naturalist, has been gradually rescued from obscurity, notably by recordings of her works. The lecture will provide an opportunity to hear some of Hildegard's most impressive compositions but also to explore more widely the phenomenon of the medieval female composer. For while Hildegard was unique, she was not alone; the richness of the musical remains she has left eclipse every competitor, and yet there were many other female mystics who created rhapsodic spiritual song whose works have not survived. Many of them are little known, but here they will step into the light.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-the-mystery-of-women Gresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,900 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollegeInstagram: http://www.instagram.com/greshamcollege
What did it mean for to cry in response to music?: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-to-chant-in-a-vale-of-tearsAccording to one early-medieval author, 'there are many who are moved by the sweetness of singing to bewail their sins, and who are readily brought to tears by the sweet sounds of a singer'. A thousand years later, Hector Berlioz tells how a musician was so moved during the performance of an opera that 'two streams of tears burst violently from his eyes, and he wept so hard that I was compelled to lead him out of the hall'. Tears and music have a long history together, but a show of tears means different things at different times. The purpose of this lecture is to explore the nature of a lachrymose response in the medieval experience of music.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-to-chant-in-a-vale-of-tearsGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,800 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollegeInstagram: https:///www.instagram.com/greshamcollege
A lecture on dancing in medieval England and its contentious place in society alongside the increasingly sombre influence of the church: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-to-sing-and-danceDuring the eighteenth century, Western Europe gradually relinquished a form of musical experience that had been vital to the life of royal courts, town squares and streets for the best part of a thousand years: the company dance performed by dancers, especially young women, holding hands and moving in a ring or a line. Medieval poems, sermons, chronicles and a great many other kinds of writing reveal much about these dances: where they were performed, when, by whom and to what effect, enabling us to restore a picture that has greatly faded over the centuries.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-to-sing-and-danceGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,800 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollege
Professor Page examines the medieval belief in the healing power of song: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-chant-as-cure-and-miracleAs the monks were singing in a French abbey of the twelfth century, a cripple, who had crawled into the church suddenly, began to cry aloud and to extend his contorted limbs, 'and thus he that came into the church on four legs departed on two'. It has been generally forgotten that men and women in the Middle Ages believed that the singing of monks and clergy during worship had the ability to produce sudden and dramatic cures: the music entered the ear as a healing spiritual balm that could hasten results beyond the reach of any contemporary physician.Crooked limbs became straight with a loud, cracking sound; wounds and sores were closed and healed. This lecture will be devoted to this little-known landscape of medieval musical experience.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-chant-as-cure-and-miracleGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,800 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollegeInstagram: https:///www.instagram.com/greshamcollege
At the heart of virtually all the medieval music that survives, is the human voice. This is an ancient heritage. The early Christians under the Roman Empire believed themselves to be engaged in a pilgrimage through a transitory world, where they were strangers, to their true home and an eternal liturgy 'where my servants shall sing for joy of heart', as St John the Divine says in Revelation. But why have singing in worship? What was to be gained, in the early Church and in its medieval descendant, by having a choir singing snippets of the Scripture, often extracted from their original context and sewn together in new patterns? We shall find that the answer lies in the breathing body.The transcript and downloadable versions of the lecture are available from the Gresham College website: http://www.gresham.ac.uk/lectures-and-events/medieval-music-the-stations-of-the-breathGresham College has been giving free public lectures since 1597. This tradition continues today with all of our five or so public lectures a week being made available for free download from our website. There are currently over 1,800 lectures free to access or download from the website.Website: http://www.gresham.ac.ukTwitter: http://twitter.com/GreshamCollegeFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/greshamcollege
Two recordings explore a pastiche of musical styles in England in France across several centuries.
Three new recordings of music from the Middle Ages, including songs of the trouvères, music for Saint Francis of Assisi, and medieval dances.