Abstract

Prior to the establishment of the Roman rite with its Gregorian chant, in the Iberian Peninsula and Southern France the Mozarabic rite, with its own tradition of chant, was dominant from the sixth until the eleventh century. Few of these chants are preserved in pitch readable notation and thousands exist only in manuscripts using adiastematic neumes which specify only melodic contour relations and not exact intervals. Though their precise melodies appear to be forever lost it is possible to use computational machine learning and statistical sequence generation methods to produce plausible realizations. Pieces from the León antiphoner, dating from the early tenth century, were encoded into templates then instantiated by sampling from a statistical model trained on pitch-readable Gregorian chants. A concert of ten Mozarabic chant realizations was performed at a music festival in the Netherlands. This study shows that it is possible to construct realizations for incomplete ancient cultural remnants using only partial information compiled into templates, combined with statistical models learned from extant pieces to fill the templates.

Highlights

  • In medieval Europe several textually and musically related monophonic liturgical chant traditions existed

  • In 1080 this rite was officially abolished by the Council of Burgos and replaced by the Roman rite with its Gregorian chant

  • This section describes the application of the chant generation method to produce an entire concert of generated pieces

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Summary

Introduction

In medieval Europe several textually and musically related monophonic liturgical chant traditions existed. Most famous is the Franco-Roman chant of the Roman rite, better known as Gregorian chant. Most other rites and traditions were abolished at some point in favor of the Roman rite and its chant [1]. In 589 the Visigothic Kingdom of the Iberian peninsula was converted to Catholicism. In the early seventh century Iberian Catholicism developed into an independent rite of Christian worship which after the Muslim conquest of 711 became known as the Mozarabic rite. In 1080 this rite was officially abolished by the Council of Burgos and replaced by the Roman rite with its Gregorian chant.

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