Gregorian Chant

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The simple techniques used in Gregorian Chant make me realize that music does not have to be over-embellished to be fascinating. The almost spooky monophonic style of music redefines what we perceive to be a unique sound. This music is characterized by a group of usually male voices all singing the same melody at the same time and is also known as the most important development in music during the medieval times.
This type of music was presumed to be first written in approximately 500 A.D. While some people think that Pope St. Gregory The Great is the founder of the style of Gregorian Chant, others strongly believe that the name actually comes from a way to describe a compound of Roman and Gallican Chant. It is also believed that Gregory The Great simply catalogued and coded this specific type of chant that was actually written by monks for masses. Roman, Gallican, and Gregorian Chant are types of Plainsong, a body of monophonic chants used for mass and liturgical purposes.
Monophonic texture, the simplest of all musical textures, is predominantly what creates this exclusive sound....

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