Solomon's Temple in ancient times. North Wind Picture Archives |
Roots of Music
Solomon's Temple, a Hebrew temple built around 950 B.C.E. in Jerusalem, may be one of the earliest influences on Western classical music.
Isaac Newton described the physical proportions of the nave of the
temple as a length of six, a width of two, and a height of three.
Scholars believe those dimensions optimized the flow of voices and sound
inside the space. Temples and religious buildings that followed used
similar dimensions, as well as architectural features like towers and
columns to control sound waves.
Why this matters: The acoustic features of these structures shaped early music composition. Musicologist Denis Stevens observed that even simple doubling of sung intervals on the scale of notes in fourths, fifths and octaves in a large building such as an abbey or cathedral is "magnificently sonorous." The buildings spurred the creation of harmonies and polyphony (the layering of simultaneous voices), which evolved into Western classical music. And the dimensions of ancient temples, churches and cathedrals inspired the concert halls of today.
What the experts say:
"Early music composers chose pitches, silence (rests), rhythms and
simple harmonies that sounded well throughout the physical building,"
writes Lynn Whidden, ethnomusicologist and professor emerita at Brandon
University in Manitoba. "When ornamentation was added inside, limiting
reverberation, the basic dynamics of classical music were set, even as
it spread among different societies and religions."
...except that no music was played inside the Heichal. The Leviim stood outside, on the other side of the Mizbeiach.
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