Dictionary Definition
motet n : an unaccompanied choral composition
with sacred lyrics; intended to be sung as part of a church
service; originated in the 13th century
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɛt
Noun
- A composition adapted to sacred words in the elaborate polyphonic church style; an anthem.
Extensive Definition
In Western
music, motet is a word that is applied to a number of highly
varied choral musical
compositions.
The name comes either from the Latin movere, ("to
move") or a Latinized version of Old French
mot, "word" or "verbal utterance." The Medieval Latin for "motet"
is "motectum". If from the Latin, the name describes the movement
of the different voices against one another.
According to Margaret Bent (1997), "'a piece of
music in several parts with words' is as precise a definition of
the motet as will serve from the thirteenth to the late sixteenth
century and beyond. This is actually very close to one of the
earliest descriptions we have, that of the late thirteenth-century
theorist Johannes
de Grocheio." Grocheio was also one of the first scholars to
define a motet. Grocheio believed that the motet was "not intended
for the vulgar who do not understand its finer points and derive no
pleasure from hearing it: it is meant for educated people and those
who look for refinement in art."http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/endmiddle/bluedot/motet.html
Medieval motets
The earliest motets arose, in the thirteenth
century (Bent, 1997), out of the organum tradition exemplified in
the Notre
Dame school of Léonin and
Pérotin. The
motet arose from discant
(clausula) sections,
usually strophic
interludes, in a longer sequence of organum, to which upper voices
were added. Usually the discant represented a strophic sequence
in Latin which was sung as a discant over a cantus
firmus, which typically was a Gregorian
chant fragment with different words from the discant. The motet
took a definite rhythm from the words of the verse, and as such
appeared as a brief rhythmic interlude in the middle of the longer,
more chantlike organum.
The practice of discant over a cantus firmus
marked the beginnings of counterpoint in Western
music. From these first motets arose a medieval
tradition of secular
motets. These were two or three part compositions in which several
different texts, sometimes in different vernacular languages, were
sung simultaneously over a Latin cantus firmus that once again was
usually adapted from a passage of Gregorian chant. It is suspected
that, for the sake of intelligibility, in performance the cantus
firmus and one or another of the vocal lines were performed on
instruments.
Increasingly in the 14th and 15th centuries,
motets tended to be isorhythmic; that is, they
employed repeated rhythmic patterns in all voices—not
just the cantus firmus—which did not necessarily coincide
with repeating melodic patterns. Philippe
de Vitry was one of the earliest composers to use this
technique, and his work evidently had an influence on that of
Guillaume
de Machaut, one of the most famous named composers of late
medieval motets.
Renaissance motets
The name of the motet was preserved in the
transition from medieval to Renaissance
music, but the character of the composition was entirely
changed. While it grew out of the medieval isorhythmic motet, the
Renaissance composers of the motet generally abandoned the use of a
repeated figure as a cantus firmus. Guillaume
Dufay was a transitional figure in this regard; he wrote one of
the last important motets in the medieval, isorhythmic style, Nuper
rosarum flores (1436), and written to
commemorate the completion of Filippo
Brunelleschi's dome in
the Cathedral of
Florence.
During this time, however, the use of cantus firmi in works such as
the parody mass
tended to stretch the cantus firmus out to great lengths compared
to the multivoice descant above it. This tended to obscure the
rhythm supplied by the cantus firmus that had been apparent in the
medieval isorhythmic motet. The cascading, passing chords created
by the interplay between multiple voices, and the absence of a
strong or obvious beat, are the features that distinguish medieval
and renaissance motet styles.
Instead, the Renaissance motet is a polyphonic musical setting,
sometimes in imitative counterpoint, for chorus, of a Latin text,
usually sacred, not specifically connected to the liturgy of a given day, and
therefore suitable for use in any service. The texts of antiphons were frequently used
as motet texts. This is the sort of composition that is most
familiarly named by the name of "motet," and the Renaissance period
marked the flowering of the form.
In essence, these motets were sacred madrigals.
The relationship between the two forms is most obvious in the
composers who concentrated on sacred music, especially
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina, whose "motets" setting texts
from the Canticum
Canticorum, the Biblical "Song of
Solomon," are among the most lush and madrigal-like of Palestrina's
compositions, while his "madrigals" that set poems of Petrarch in praise
of the Blessed
Virgin Mary would not be out of place in church. The language
of the text was the decisive feature: if it's Latin, it's a motet;
if the vernacular, a madrigal. Religious compositions in vernacular
languages were often called madrigali
spirituali, "spiritual madrigals." Like their madrigal cousins,
Renaissance motets developed in episodic format, with separate
phrases of the source text being given independent melodic
treatment and contrapuntal development; contrapuntal passages often
alternate with monody.
Secular motets continued to be written however.
These motets typically set a Latin text in praise of a monarch, commemorating some
public triumph, or even praising music itself. Nevertheless, the
themes of courtly love
often found in the medieval secular motet were banished from the
Renaissance motet. Many secular motets are known as "ceremonial
motets" Characteristic of ceremonial motets was a clarity of
diction, for the audience was not presumed to be familiar already
with the text (as would have been true with Latin hymns) and also a
clear articulation of formal structure, for example a setting apart
of successive portions of text with sharp contrasts of texture or
rhythm. Adrian Willaert, Ludwig Senfl, and Cipriano de Rore were
among the most prominent composers of ceremonial motets during the
first half of the 16th century.
The motet was one of the pre-eminent forms of
Renaissance
music. Other important composers of Renaissance motets
include:
- Alexander Agricola
- Gilles Binchois
- Antoine Busnois
- William Byrd
- Johannes Vodnianus Campanus
- Loyset Compère
- Josquin Des Prez
- John Dunstaple
- Antoine de Févin
- Francisco Guerrero
- Nicolas Gombert
- Heinrich Isaac
- Pierre de La Rue
- Orlando di Lasso
- Cristóbal de Morales
- Jean Mouton
- Jacob Obrecht
- Johannes Ockeghem
- Martin Peerson
- Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina
- Thomas Tallis
- John Taverner
- Tomás Luis de Victoria
In the latter part of the 16th century, Giovanni
Gabrieli and other composers developed a new style, the
polychoral motet, in
which two or more choirs
of singers (or instruments) alternated. This style of motet was
sometimes called the Venetian motet to distinguish it from the
Netherlands or Flemish motet written elsewhere.
Baroque motets
The name "motet" was preserved into Baroque
music, especially in France, where the word was applied to
petits motets, sacred choral compositions whose only accompaniment
was a basso
continuo; and grands motets, which included instruments up to
and including a full orchestra. Jean-Baptiste
Lully was an important composer of this sort of motet. Lully's
motets often included parts for soloists as well as choirs; they
were longer, including multiple movement in which different
soloist, choral, or instrumental forces were employed. Lully's
motets also continued the Renaissance tradition of semi-secular
Latin motets in works such as Plaude Laetare Gallia, written to
celebrate the baptism of
King Louis
XIV's son; its text by Pierre
Perrin begins:
- Plaude laetare Gallia
- Rore caelesti rigantur lilia,
- Sacro Delphinus fonte lavatur
- Et christianus Christo dicatur.
- Rore caelesti rigantur lilia,
-
- (Rejoice and sing, France: the lily is bathed with heavenly dew. The Dauphin is bathed in the sacred font, and the Christian is dedicated to Christ.)
In Germany, too,
pieces called motets were written in the new musical languages of
the Baroque. Heinrich
Schütz wrote many motets in a series of publications called
Symphoniae
sacrae, some in Latin and some in German.
Johann
Sebastian Bach also wrote seven surviving works he called
motets; Bach's motets were relatively long pieces in German on
sacred themes for choir and basso continuo. Bach's motets
are:
- BWV 225 Singet dem Herrn ein neues Lied (1726)
- BWV 226 Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf (1729)
- BWV 227 Jesu, meine Freude (?)
- BWV 228 Fürchte dich nicht (?)
- BWV 229 Komm, Jesu, komm! (1730 ?)
- BWV 230 Lobet den Herrn alle Heiden (?)
- BWV 231 Sei Lob und Preis mit Ehren (?)
There is also a piece of a cantata that is
classified as a motet.
The motet since Bach
Later 18th-century composers wrote few motets,
although Mozart's
well-known Ave verum
corpus is in this genre.
In the 19th century German composers continued to
write motets occasionally, notably Johannes
Brahms (in German) and Anton
Bruckner (in Latin). French composers of motets included
Camille
Saint-Saëns and César
Franck. Similar compositions in the English language are called
anthems, but some later
English composers, such as Charles
Villiers Stanford, wrote motets in Latin. The majority of these
compositions are a cappella,
but some are accompanied by organ.
In the 20th century, composers of motets have
often consciously imitated earlier styles. Examples include works
by Charles
Villiers Stanford, Edmund
Rubbra, Ralph
Vaughan Williams, Hugo
Distler, and Ernst
Krenek.
Sources
- Margaret Bent (1997). "The late-medieval motet", Companion to Medieval & Renaissance Music. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816540-4.
- The Development of the motet
- Blanche Gangwere, Music History During the Renaissance Period, 1520–1550. Westport, Connecticut, Praeger Publishers. 2004.
Notes
motet in Arabic: موتيت
motet in Catalan: Motet
motet in Czech: Moteto
motet in Danish: Motet
motet in German: Motette
motet in Modern Greek (1453-): Μοτέτο
motet in Spanish: Motete (música)
motet in Esperanto: Moteto
motet in French: Motet
motet in Galician: Mottetto
motet in Korean: 모테트
motet in Italian: Mottetto
motet in Hebrew: מוטט
motet in Georgian: მოტეტი
motet in Luxembourgish: Motett
motet in Lithuanian: Motetas
motet in Hungarian: Motetta
motet in Dutch: Motet
motet in Japanese: モテット
motet in Norwegian: Motett
motet in Polish: Motet
motet in Portuguese: Moteto
motet in Russian: Мотет
motet in Simple English: Motet
motet in Slovak: Moteto
motet in Slovenian: Motet
motet in Finnish: Motetti
motet in Swedish: Motett
motet in Thai: โมเต็ต
motet in Vietnamese: Bản Motet