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  2. Secular music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_music

    Non-religious secular music and sacred music were the two main genres of Western music during the Middle Ages and Renaissance era. [ citation needed ] The oldest written examples of secular music are songs with Latin lyrics. [ 1 ]

  3. Motet-chanson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motet-chanson

    Many consisted of three voice parts, with the lowest voice, a tenor or a contra, singing a sacred text in Latin, drawn from chant, while the two upper voices sang a secular text in French. Some were written for four to five voices, with the bassus taking the Latin part. [1]

  4. Tra le sollecitudini - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tra_le_sollecitudini

    It also prohibited female singers and restricted contralto and soprano parts to boys (thus excluding castratos for good), discouraged music with secular influences, and barred the use of piano, percussion, and all other instruments aside from the organ, unless given special permission from a bishop or comparable prelate to use wind instruments. [7]

  5. Medieval music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medieval_music

    Medieval music encompasses the sacred and secular music of Western Europe during the Middle Ages, [1] from approximately the 6th to 15th centuries. It is the first and longest major era of Western classical music and is followed by the Renaissance music; the two eras comprise what musicologists generally term as early music, preceding the common practice period.

  6. Gregorian chant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregorian_chant

    It is the music of the Roman Rite, performed in the Mass and the monastic Office. Although Gregorian chant supplanted or marginalized the other indigenous plainchant traditions of the Christian West to become the official music of the Christian liturgy, Ambrosian chant still continues in use in Milan, and there are musicologists exploring both ...

  7. Music of ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_ancient_Rome

    The music of ancient Rome was a part ... children's choir at the Secular Games in 17 BC. Music was ... corpus of Latin music theory written during ...

  8. Dies irae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dies_irae

    Centre panel from Memling's triptych Last Judgment (c. 1467–1471) " Dies irae" (Ecclesiastical Latin: [ˈdi.es ˈi.re]; "the Day of Wrath") is a Latin sequence attributed to either Thomas of Celano of the Franciscans (1200–1265) [1] or to Latino Malabranca Orsini (d. 1294), lector at the Dominican studium at Santa Sabina, the forerunner of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas ...

  9. List of secular cantatas by Johann Sebastian Bach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_secular_cantatas...

    Other secular cantatas are in the range of the church cantatas (BWV 1–200), most of them with an "a", "b" or "c" index added to the number of a church cantata while the cantatas share the same music. The same applies for the secular cantata precursors of the Easter Oratorio. Other secular cantatas are listed in BWV Anh.