Strictly
speaking, Byzantine music is the medieval sacred chant of Christian
Churches following the Orthodox rite. This tradition, encompassing the
Greek-speaking world, developed in Byzantium from the establishment of
its capital, Constantinople, in 330 until its fall in 1453. It is
undeniably of composite origin, drawing on the artistic and technical
productions of the classical age, on Jewish music, and inspired by the
monophonic vocal music that evolved in the early Christian cities of
Alexandria, Antioch and Epheus.
Early Christian Period
Byzantine
chant manuscripts date from the ninth century, while lectionaries of
biblical readings in Ekphonetic Notation (a primitive graphic system
designed to indicate the manner of reciting lessons from Scripture)
begin about a century earlier and continue in use until the twelfth or
thirteenth century. Our knowledge of the older period is derived from
Church service books Typika, patristic writings and medieval
histories. Scattered examples of hymn texts from the early centuries of
Greek Christianity still exist. Some of these employ the metrical
schemes of classical Greek poetry; but the change of pronunciation had
rendered those meters largely meaningless, and, except when classical
forms were imitated, Byzantine hymns of the following centuries are
prose-poetry ‹ unrhymed verses of irregular length and accentual
patterns. The common term for a short hymn of one stanza, or one of a
series of stanzas, is troparion (this may carry the further
connotation of a hymn interpolated between psalm verses). A famous
example, whose existence is attested as early as the fourth century, is
the Vesper hymn, Phos Hilaron, "Gladsome Light"; another, O Monogenes Yios,
"Only Begotten Son," ascribed to Justinian I (527-565), figures in the
introductory portion of the Divine Liturgy. Perhaps the earliest set of
troparia of known authorship are those of the monk Auxentios
(first half of the fifty century), attested in his biography but not
preserved in any later Byzantine order of service.
Medieval Period
Two
concepts must be understood if we are to appreciate fully the function
of music in Byzantine worship. The first, which retained currency in
Greek theological and mystical speculation until the dissolution of the
empire, was the belief in the angelic transmission of sacred chant: the
assumption that the early Church united men in the prayer of the
angelic choirs. This notion is certainly older than the Apocalypse
account (Revelations 4:8-11), for the musical function of angels as
conceived in the Old Testament is brought out dearly by Isaiah (6:1-4)
and Ezekiel (3:12). Most significant in the fact, outlined in Exodus
25, that the pattern for the earthly worship of Israel was derived from
heaven. The allusion is perpetuated in the writings of the early
Fathers, such as Clement of Rome, Justin, Ignatius of Antioch
Athenagoras of Athens and Pseudo-Dionysios the Areopagite. It receives
acknowledgement later in the liturgical treatises of Nicolas Kavasilas
and Symeon of Thessaloniki (Patrologia Graeca, CL, 368-492 and CLV, 536-699, respectively).
The
effect that this concept had on church music was threefold: first, it
bred a highly conservative attitude to musical composition; secondly,
it stabilized the melodic tradition of certain hymns; and thirdly, it
continued, for a time, the anonymity of the composer. For if a chant is
of heavenly origin, then the acknowledgement received by man in
transmitting it to posterity ought to be minimal. This is especially
true when he deals with hymns which were known to have been first sung
by angelic choirs‹such as the Amen, Alleluia, Trisagion, Sanctus and Doxology.
Consequently, until Palaeologan times, was inconceivable for a composer
to place his name beside a notated text in the manuscripts.
Ideas
of originality and free invention similar to those seen in later music
probably never existed in early Byzantine times. The very notion of
using traditional formulas (or melody-types) as a compositional
technique shows an archaic concept in liturgical chant, and is quite
the opposite of free, original creation. It seems evident that the
chants of the Byzantine repertory found in musical manuscripts from the
tenth century to the time of the Fourth Crusade (1204-1261), represent
the final and only surviving stage of an evolution, the beginnings of
which go back at least to the sixth century and possibly even to the
chant of the Synagogue. What exact changes took place in the music
during the formative stage is difficult to say; but certain chants in
use even today exhibit characteristics which may throw light on the
subject. These include recitation formulas, melody-types, and standard
phrases that are clearly evident in the folk music and other
traditional music of various cultures of the East, including the music
of the Jews.
The second, less permanent, concept was that of koinonia
or "communion." This was less permanent because, after the fourth
century, when it was analyzed and integrated into a theological system,
the bond and "oneness" that united the clergy and the faithful in
liturgical worship was less potent. It is, however, one of the key
ideas for understanding a number of realities for which we now have
different names. With regard to musical performance, this concept of koinonia
may be applied to the primitive use of the word choros. It referred,
not to a separate group within the congregation entrusted with musical
responsibilities, but to the congregation as a whole. St. Ignatius
wrote to the Church in Ephesus in the following way:
You
must every man of you join in a choir so that bring harmonious and in
concord and taking the keynote of God in unison, you may sing with one
voice through Jesus Christ to the Father, so that He may hear you and
through your good deeds recognize that you are parts of His Son.
A
marked feature of liturgical ceremony was the active part taken by the
people in its performance, particularly in the recitation or chanting
of hymns, responses and psalms. The terms choros, koinonia and ekklesia were used synonymously in the early Byzantine Church. In Psalms 149 and 150, the Septuagint translated the Hebrew word machol (dance) by the Greek word choros.
As a result, the early Church borrowed this word from classical
antiquity as a designation for the congregation, at worship and in song
in heaven and on earth both. Before long, however, a clericalizing
tendency soon began to manifest itself in linguistic usage,
particularly after the Council of Laodicea, whose fifteenth Canon
permitted only the canonical psaltai, "chanters", to sing at
the services. The word choros came to refer to the special priestly
function in the liturgy‹just as, architecturally speaking, the choir
became a reserved area near the sanctuary and choros eventually became the equivalent of the word kleros.
The development of large scale hymnographic forms begins in the fifth century with the rise of the kontakion,
a long and elaborate metrical sermon, reputedly of Syriac origin, which
finds its acme in the work of St. Romanos the Melodos (sixth century).
This dramatic homily, which usually paraphrases a Biblical narrative,
comprises some 20 to 30 stanzas and was sung during the Morning Office (Orthros)
in a simple and direct syllabic style (one note per syllable). The
earliest musical versions, however, are "melismatic" (that is, many
notes per syllable of text), and belong to the time of the ninth
century and later when kontakia were reduced to the ptooimion (introductory verse) and first oikos (stanza). In the second half of the seventh century, the kontakion
was supplanted by a new type of hymn, the kanon, initiated by St.
Andrew of Crete (ca. 660-ca. 740) and developed by Saints John of
Damascus and Kosmas of Jerusalem (both eighth century). Essentially,
the kanon is an hymnodic complex comprised of nine odes which
were originally attached to the nine Biblical canticles and to which
they were related by means of corresponding poetic allusion or textual
quotation.
The nine canticles are:
(1) and (2) The two songs of Moses (Exodus 15:1-19 and Deuteronomy 32:1-43);
(3)-(7)Tthe prayers of Hannah, Habbakuk, Isaiah, Jonah and the Three
Children (1 Kings [1 Samuel] 2:1-10; Habbakuk 3:1-19; Isaiah 26:9-20;
Jonah 2:3-10; Apoc. Daniel 3:26-56);
(8) The song of the Three Children (Apoc. Daniel 3:57-88);
(9) The Magnificat and the Benedictus (Luke 1:46-55 and 68-79).
Each
ode consists of an initial troparion, the heirmos, followed by three,
four or more troparia which are the exact metrical reproductions of the
heirmos, thereby allowing the same music to fit all troparia equally
well.
The nine heirmoi, however, are metrically
dissimilar; consequently, an entire kanon comprises nine independent
melodies (eight, when the second ode is omitted, which are united
musically by the same mode and textually by references to the general
theme of the liturgical occasion, and sometimes by an acrostic. Heirmoi
in syllabic style are gathered in the Heirmologion, a bulky
volume which first appeared in the middle of the tenth century and
contains over a thousand model troparia arranged into an oktoechos (the
eight-mode musical system).
Another kind of hymn, important both for its number and for the variety of its liturgical use, is the sticheron. Festal stichera, accompanying both the fixed psalms at the beginning and end of Vespers and the psalmody of the Lauds (the Ainoi)
in the Morning Office, exist for all special days of the year, the
Sundays and weekdays of Lent, and for the recurrent cycle of eight
weeks in the order of the modes beginning with Easter. Their melodies
preserved in the Sticherarion, are considerably more elaborate and varied than in the tradition of the Heirmologion.
Later Byzantine and Post-Byzantine Periods
With
the end of creative poetical composition, Byzantine chant entered its
final period, devoted largely to the production of more elaborate
musical settings of the traditional texts: either embellishments of the
earlier simpler melodies, or original music in highly ornamental style.
This was the work of the so-called Maistores, "masters," of
whom the most celebrated was St. John Koukouzeles (active c.1300),
compared in Byzantine writings to St. John of Damascus himself, as an
innovator in the development of chant. The multiplication of new
settings and elaborations of the old continued in the centuries
following the fall of Constantinople, until by the end of the
eighteenth century the original musical repertory of the medieval
musical manuscripts had been quite replaced by later compositions, and
even the basic model system had undergone profound modification.
Chrysanthos
of Madytos (ca. 1770-46), Gregory the Protopsaltes, and Chourmouzios
the Archivist were responsible for a much needed reform of the notation
of Greek ecclesiastical music. Essentially, this work consisted of a
simplification of the Byzantine musical symbols which, by the early
19th century, had become so complex and technical that only highly
skilled chanters were able to interpret them correctly. Despite its
numerous shortcomings the work of the three reformers is a landmark in
the history of Greek Church music, since it introduced the system of
neo-Byzantine music upon which are based the present-day chants of the
Greek Orthodox Church.