the difference between sacred and secular music during the medieval period
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Sacred music was primarily in the form of the motet or the Mass, while secular music included madrigals and the rise of both instrumental music and dance music.
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The difference between sacred and secular music during the medieval period are:
- Music in the Medieval Era was both sacred, as well as, secular. The liturgical genre, primarily Gregorian chant, remained phonetic during the early medieval period. Polyphonic genres emerged during the late Medieval Era and became popular in the late Thirteenth or Early Fourteenth Centuries. The Ars nova is frequently related to the occurrence of such forms.
- Heterophonic plainchant was among the first innovations on monophonic plainchant. The organum, for example, used an accompanying line sung at a predetermined interval to expand on plainchant melody, resulting in a polyphony-monophony alternation. The concepts of the organum may be traced back to an anonymous ninth-century document called the Musica enchiladas, which established the practice of replicating sacred music in motion at periods of an interval, a fifth, or even a fourth.
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