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Music, Imagination and Experience in the Medieval World

Medieval Music: To Chant in a Vale of Tears by Professor Christopher Page. According to one early-medieval author, 'there are many who are moved by the sweetness of singing to bewail their sins, and who are readily brought to tears by the sweet sounds of a singer'. A thousand years later, Hector Berlioz tells how a musician was so moved during the performance of an opera that 'two streams of tears burst violently from his eyes, and he wept so hard that I was compelled to lead him out of the hall'. Tears and music have a long history together, but a show of tears means different things at different times. The purpose of this lecture is to explore the nature of a lachrymose response in the medieval experience of music. (from gresham.ac.uk)

Medieval Music: To Chant in a Vale of Tears


Go to the Series Home or watch other lectures:

1. Medieval Music: The Stations of the Breath
2. Medieval Music: Chant as Cure and Miracle
3. Medieval Music: To Sing and Dance
4. Medieval Music: To Chant in a Vale of Tears
5. Medieval Music: The Mystery of Women
6. Medieval Music: The Lands of the Bell Tower