PEROTIN, (1180 - 1225)
Protin was a successor of the composer Lonin in later
12th century Paris, active in his revision of the latters Magnus Liber
and in the composition of organum, discant and conductus, as polyphonic practices
in Western music developed.
Church Music
Examples of four-voice and three-voice organa by Protin
survive, representing a significant advance in polyphonic technique. Organum,
in its simplest form, consisted of the addition at first of a parallel part,
at the distance of a fourth or fifth, to an original plainchant melody. By the
12th century the additional melodic lines were no mere parallel additions to
the original but of greater rhythmic and melodic variety, based, as before,
on the underlying original plainchant of the traditional Catholic liturgy.
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