ISORHYTHM

Isorhythmic tenor from the first part of the Kyrie of Machaut's Messe de Nostre Dame (c. 1360). A ''color'' of 28 notes, is arranged with a four-note ''talea'' pattern which repeats seven times.

'Isorhythm' (from Greek for the same rhythm) is a musical technique that arranges a fixed pattern of pitches with a repeating rhythmic pattern. It consists of an order of durations or rhythms, called a 'talea' ("cutting", plural ''taleae''), which is repeated within a tenor melody whose pitch content or series, called the 'color' (repetition), varied in the number of members from the talea. The term was coined in 1904 by Friedrich Ludwig to describe this practice in 14th and 15th century polyphonic motets but is also used in motets of the middle ages, the music of India, and by modern composers such as Alban Berg, Olivier Messiaen, and John Cage. It may be used in all voices or only a few voices. In motets, it began in the tenor voice but was then extended to higher ones.
Ars nova composer Philippe de Vitry has been credited with the invention of the technique, but it "was neither an invention of Philippe de Vitry nor his exclusive property in the early fourteenth century." The isorhythmic construction was often varied through the use of strict or free rhythmic diminuation in the repetition of the color. (Hoppin 1978, p.363)
Isorhythmic techniques were also used by Guillaume Dufay, but his work also marks the extensive use of the more fluid polyphonic styles of the early renaissance.
The talea was often a rhythmic mode. The color of isorhythm may be compared with the tone row of the twelve-tone technique's fixed order of pitches and varied durations. The modern musical innovation of integral serialism in the classes of Olivier Messiaen sprang from a study of the 12 tone compositions of Anton Webern and the isothythmic organization within motets of Guillaume de Machaut.
'''Coloration''' also refers to otherwise perfect notes colored red or with an open notehead to indicate the loss of 1/3 their duration, making them imperfect.

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External links

Source



★ Hoppin, Richard H. (1978). ''Medieval Music''. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-09090-6.

External links



Here Of A Sunday Morning WBAI 99.5 FM: Isorhythm

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