Quintus Horatius Flaccus (‘Horace’) composed his Odes between 30 and 13 BC. For centuries, there was a general perception among classical scholars that he sang most of them in front of an audience to the accompaniment of his own lyre, following the practice of his models Sappho, Alcaeus, Pindar and other Greek lyric poets, whose musicianship is not in doubt.Footnote 1 Around the turn of thirteenth century, the grammarian Huguccio of Pisa defined an Ode as a ‘cantus’ (‘chant’) or ‘laus’ (‘praise’) that was ‘cantabilis’ (‘capable of being sung’).Footnote 2 In France, the music historian Jean-Benjamin de La Borde (1734–94) wrote that the Romans sang almost all their poetry and that the Odes of Horace were probably not recited but sung.Footnote 3 In Germany, the academician August Meineke (1790–1870) formulated the so-called Lex Meinekiana, in which he observed that the number of lines in nearly every Ode was divisible by four and that the quatrains implied a musical dimension.Footnote 4
The classical philologist Richard Heinze disagreed. Teaching in Leipzig in the 1920s, he asserted that Horace’s Odes were literary creations in song form.Footnote 5 This view became an orthodoxy among classical scholars which persists to the present day. In 1957 Eduard Fraenkel insisted that Horace was a non-musician.Footnote 6 Alessandro Barchiesi continues to propose that all Horace’s references to music are ‘at the level of theme, not of performance’ and that any notion of singing is a ‘fiction’.Footnote 7 Some take a similar position.Footnote 8 Others regard the issue as closed or unimportant.Footnote 9
The perpetuation of the orthodox viewpoint can be uncomfortable for musicians and musicologists, whose instincts pull them in another direction. In 2004, Sam Barrett observed in Early Music History: ‘Indications that this poetry was sung suggest a transformation in the reception of classical texts, for despite allusions to sung performance in the texts themselves, most philologists are convinced that, with occasional exceptions, classical Latin lyric poetry was not sung.’Footnote 10
Recently, T. P. Wiseman has argued that Horace composed Odes for sung performance in full view of the temples of Roman divinities.Footnote 11 It is appropriate to reopen the discussion, so that music historians can consider alternative views of Horace and construct a solid conceptual basis for their research into Horace’s musical reception in the early Middle Ages.Footnote 12
Horace’s creative turning point came in about 38 BC, when Virgil introduced him to Maecenas, one of the richest men in Rome, an adviser of Octavian the future Augustus, and sponsor of a poetic circle. Maecenas invited Horace to join his group and their friendship lasted a lifetime. They travelled together.Footnote 13 They seem to have been joint survivors of a naval disaster off Cape Palinurus in 36 BC, during the war against Pompeius Sextus.Footnote 14 Shortly afterwards, Maecenas gave Horace a country estate in the Sabine Hills, an agreeable space for reflection, entertaining and writing. For himself, Maecenas built a splendid mansion on the Esquiline Hill, where he hosted parties in a sunken auditorium with trompe l’oeil wall paintings and an apse with cascading water to cool the air and enhance the acoustics.Footnote 15
Previously, Horace had composed hexameter satires to amuse his listeners.Footnote 16 Now in his mid-thirties, he began to experiment with the metres of the Greek lyric poets. The term ‘lyric’ did not have today’s connotations. The Latin adjective ‘lyricus’ was used to describe the poets of antiquity, who composed for the lyre and sang their own compositions. Under the patronage of Maecenas, Horace addressed Odes both to friends and to Rome’s distinguished citizens,Footnote 17 using Alcaic, Sapphic, Asclepiad and other metres.Footnote 18
Horace called the Odes ‘carmina’ (‘songs’). In them, he moulded the syntax and inflexions of Latin, with its complex case and verb endings, into the measures of Greece. What might have been a rhetorical strait-jacket became a kaleidoscope of jewel-like phrases. Horace’s metres articulate the Odes, give them their musicality, shape their architecture and make them memorable.Footnote 19 The first stanza of Odes 1.37, written on the death of Cleopatra, provides an example:Footnote 20
The first two lines of the Alcaic quatrain have an identical rhythm. The long syllables of the third line slow the pace and build momentum like an incoming wave. The fourth line provides musical resolution with two opening dactyls before the tide recedes.Footnote 21
Between 30 BC and 23 BC, Horace composed eighty-eight Odes, which he then published in three volumes.Footnote 22 The collection was not enthusiastically received. Maecenas lost public esteem following a political scandal.Footnote 23 Horace’s presentation of what may (if the hypothesis of orality is valid) have pleased a live audience did not translate into wide readership.Footnote 24 Disappointed, Horace declared ‘non eadem est aetas, non mens’ (‘my age and inclination are not the same’) and reverted to writing agreeable hexameter verses.Footnote 25
Horace’s fortunes revived with the Secular Games of 17 BC. Augustus, as head of the College responsible for sacred rituals, commissioned him to compose the hymn for the occasion.Footnote 26 The Carmen Saeculare was performed on 3 June first on the Capitoline Hill and then on the Palatine by a mixed choir of twenty-seven boys and twenty-seven girls:
The biographer Suetonius, who had access to official archives, confirms that Horace composed the hymn.Footnote 29 His evidence is supported by a carved inscription which reads: ‘Carmen composuit Q Hor..ius Flaccus.’Footnote 30 A possible counterargument that Horace only composed the text is contradicted by Odes 4.6, in which Horace addresses one of the girls who participated in the choral performance:
Despite this evidence, Fraenkel maintained: ‘It is altogether unlikely that Horace, a non-musician, should have undertaken the arduous task of rehearsing and conducting the performance of a choir of amateurs.’Footnote 32 There is no evidential support for the proposition that Augustus’s quindecimviri authorised a hymn for a state occasion from a poet and choir who were not musically competent. Suetonius records that Augustus asked Horace to produce another ‘carmen’ to celebrate the victory of Drusus and Tiberius over the Germanic Vindelici tribe.Footnote 33 Horace continued to compose Odes in honour of the imperial family.Footnote 34 In 13 BC he brought out a fourth book of Odes at Augustus’s request.Footnote 35
Most classical philologists today reject Fraenkel’s position and acknowledge that Horace composed and conducted the Carmen Saeculare. However, they regard this sung performance as an exception to the norm and insist that the remainder of Horace’s Odes were purely literary compositions. L. P. Wilkinson, however, suggested that the Carmen Saeculare may not have been the first hymn composed by Horace.Footnote 36 The Ode to Mercury (Odes 1.10), dismissed by most critics as a ‘literary imitation’, was described by the early commentator Porphyrio as ‘hymnus’ (‘a hymn’).Footnote 37 The Ode to Diana (Odes 1.21) also has the appearance of hymn:
This juxtaposition of Diana, Apollo and Latona appears to be a direct reference to the sculptural group in the Temple of Apollo, which Augustus dedicated on 9 October 28 BC after his three-day triumph that August.Footnote 38 The ritualised structure of the Ode suggests that it was a choral hymn composed for performance either in the Temple itself or in the temple plaza.
In his Epilogue to Book 3, Horace describes his main achievement as ‘princeps Aeolium carmen ad Italos/deduxisse modos’.Footnote 39 Enoch Powell rendered this curiously as ‘the leader in converting Aeolian poetry into Italian diction’.Footnote 40 The literal and correct translation is ‘the first man to have translated Aeolian song into Italian modes’.Footnote 41 As Cicero explained, ‘in musicis, numeri et voces et modi’ (‘in music, there are numbers and voices and modes’).Footnote 42 The numbers are the rhythms or metres; the voices are the pitches or notes; and the modes represent the chosen musical scales with their particular intervallic relationships.
There is an eyewitness to support Horace’s musical claim. The poet Ovid (43 BC–c. AD 17), some twenty years Horace’s junior, reported that he saw and heard Horace giving a live performance in Rome. From his exile on the Black Sea, Ovid recalled the poets he knew and remarked on their different delivery methods:Footnote 43
Ovid’s account provides first-hand evidence that Macer read his treatises aloud, Propertius recited his poems and Horace sang his Odes to the accompaniment of his own lyre. It is hard to argue that the references to the other poets are factual but that the description of Horace is metaphorical.Footnote 49 Juvenal, the first-century poet, uses the same phrase as Ovid in describing Horace’s performance method, ‘feriat carmen’:Footnote 50
Striking the strings, usually with a plectrum, was what musicians did in Augustan Rome.
The elegist Propertius, some years younger than Horace, was invited to join Maecenas’s circle. Writing of his lover Cynthia in about 24 BC, he confirms that singing songs, while striking the lyre-strings with a plectrum, was part of the accepted culture.Footnote 52 According to Sallust, Sempronia, the wife of Decimus Brutus, played the cithara and danced elegantly.Footnote 53 Tiberius, Augustus’s stepson and the future emperor, composed a lyric song.Footnote 54
Horace frequently claims to be a player of the lyre, the barbitos and the cithara.Footnote 55 In Odes 1.31 he utters a prayer; he is apparently facing the statue of Apollo Citharoedus which stood in the plaza between the Temple of Apollo and Augustus’s mansion.Footnote 56 ‘What is the bard’s request to Apollo on his dedication?’ he asks:Footnote 57
Horace’s prayer is this: ‘Latoe, dones et precor integra/cum mente nec turpem senectam/degere nec cithara carentem’ (‘Son of Latona, grant, I pray also, that my mind continues unimpaired and that I do not spend my old age in shame or without the cithara’).Footnote 58 His prayer over, Horace seems to turn towards his audience, barbitos in hand, as he begins the next Ode:Footnote 59
In the Roman Odes, too, Horace creates musical adjacencies.Footnote 62 At the end of Odes 3.3, he senses that Juno’s oration on Rome’s destiny has run out of steam:Footnote 63
At the beginning of the next Ode, Horace makes immediate amends:
The juxtaposition is clearly intentional. The context and contents demand oral presentation if Horace’s humour is to work.Footnote 65
In Odes 4.9, Horace confirms that he is not just a ‘fidicen’ (‘a player of a stringed instrument’) but a composer: ‘non ante vulgatas per artis/verba loquor socianda chordis’ (‘Through arts not previously disseminated, I utter words to be married to strings’).Footnote 66 In Epistles 2.2, he asks: ‘Could I be expected here, in the midst of the swell of business and the storms of the city, to weave words that will set the sound of the lyre in motion?’Footnote 67 His musical awareness is confirmed by a joke about Augustus’s elderly cantor Tigellius: ‘si collibuisset, ab ovo/usqu[e] ad mala citaret “Io, Bacche!” modo summa/voce, mod[o] hac resonat quae chordis quattuor ima’ (‘If the mood had taken him, he would sing “Joy, Bacchus!” from hors d’oeuvre through to dessert at the topmost pitch, and then repeat it on the lowest note of the tetrachord’).Footnote 68
After the successful performance of the Carmen Saeculare in 17 BC, Horace thanked his Muse for her inspiration and for his public recognition as ‘the minstrel of the Roman lyre’:Footnote 69
In the period of his highest creativity, from 30 to 23 BC, Horace’s performances were generally given in private. He performed mainly at his sponsor’s entertainments in the Auditorium of Maecenas, honouring the great and good of Rome and his own friends with personally tailored ‘carmina’. Several reflected Epicurean philosophy; others touched on personal events, feelings and friendships, or supported the legitimacy of the Augustan regime. Some reflected Hellenistic influences.Footnote 71 In others, he entertains professional women for wine and song.Footnote 72 In the Ode to Numida (1.36), Horace describes ‘et ture et fidibus’Footnote 73 (‘with incense and strings’) an ‘amystis’,Footnote 74 a drinking contest imported from northern Greece. According to the third-century AD Athenaeus,Footnote 75 the competition was inseparable from musical accompaniment. A girl played the pipe, a guest sang to the tune and the revellers competed to see who could take the longest draught without pausing for breath.
Horace’s Metres
While scholars have made marked progress in recent years in the interpretation of early Greek musical inscriptions and papyri,Footnote 76 details of Roman musical performance are sketchy. There is no notation in the classical period for Horace’s Odes and the philological focus of Horatian scholars in the century after Heinze has contributed to his metres being regarded as imitative literary conceits, rather than fundamental elements in his performance art. The starting point for understanding Horace’s music has to be metre. He employed three principal metrical systems, Alcaic, Sapphic and Asclepiadean. Like his Greek lyric models, the metres relied on musical feet and rhythms and the placement of long and short syllables.
Alcaics
Horace uses the Alcaic metre in thirty-seven of his 103 Odes, including the six Roman Odes, and it is often associated with a philosophical theme. In Odes 2.14, Horace addresses Postumus:Footnote 77
The Alcaic stanza is set in motion by two eleven-syllable lines, each of which has five syllables before the caesura. The third line adds weight and momentum, as all but the third and seventh syllables are long. The fourth line begins with two dactyls and resolves the earlier build-up of weighty syllables. The last two stanzas of the Ode to Postumus illustrate the mood, musicality and architecture of Horace’s metrical treatment:
The pace is measured, the sentiment is Epicurean and the lapidary conclusion creates a natural rallentando. These features are also well illustrated at the close of the Ode to Dellius:Footnote 80
The consonantal and vocal harmony and the three successive elisions, one spilling over from the penultimate line, have a powerful musicality.
Sapphics
Horace derived his Sapphics from the songs of Sappho, using the Sapphic metre in twenty-five Odes. Many are hymn-like or offer gnomic advice. The metre is less fluid than Alcaics; typically, the stanzas are self-contained and end-stopped. The first three lines each have eleven syllables, which are identical in terms of quantities, although the beat can vary between monodic and choral treatments. The fourth line is a coda that closes off the stanza.
The Ode to Tranquillity (Odes 2.16), addressed to Grosphus, exemplifies the monodic pattern. There appear to be four beats in each of the first three lines and two beats in the fourth:
In the Ode to Tranquillity, as in most of Horace’s monodic Sapphic Odes, the first three lines have a caesura after the fifth syllable. By contrast, the Carmen Saeculare is a choral piece composed for performance at a religious ceremony. The quantities are the same as in the monodic Ode, but the rhythm is not.Footnote 82 The first line signals the difference:
Instead of the regular caesura after five syllables, there is a delayed caesura after six, marked here with a single vertical line. The same feature occurs twenty times in this seventy-six-line choral hymn. The effect is to have only three beats to the line, on the first, fifth and tenth syllables. The rhythmic variation is exemplified in the fourteenth stanza:Footnote 83
This different accentual rhythm may have reflected liturgical practice. The distinction between the monodic and choral Sapphic styles is confirmed in Odes 4.6, when Horace breaks off from his opening theme and embarks on a rehearsal for his choir:Footnote 84
Horace is conducting his choirboys and girls in rehearsal. His thumb is striking a surface, possibly the soundbox of his lyre, or perhaps he is using a plectrum. The last stanza of the Ode (‘nupta iam dices…’), discussed earlier, evidences a rhythmic change from hymn to narrative.
Asclepiads
Horace’s third most frequent metrical system is Asclepiadean. His Asclepiads come in various forms and lengths. Five types of Asclepiad metre appear in thirty-four Odes but all have the choriamb as their basic building block: tūm-tí-tí-tūm, like an insistent drumbeat.Footnote 87
Horace often chooses Asclepiads to create an agitated mood. The Ode to Pyrrha (Odes 1.5) rushes from stanza to stanza:
The combination of enjambment and the choriambic rhythm convey the anguish of a sore heart.
The Ode to Leuconoē (Odes 1.11) is composed in the Greater Asclepiad metre; it has sixteen syllables to the line. Each line begins and ends with a pair of syllables, which enclose three successive choriambs. Leuconoē needs firm guidance.Footnote 88 The percussive beat suggests that Horace’s advice is presented not as a literary homily, but as live entertainment:
Horace’s debt to folk music is evident in the Asclepiadean love duet of Odes 3.9, derived from a traditional carmen amoebaeum (‘alternating song’).Footnote 89 A similar tradition is apparent in the Ode to Neobulē (Odes 3.12), a unique example in Horace of the Ionic a minore metre.Footnote 90 This Ode is generally discussed as a literary monologue;Footnote 91 the manuscript tradition divides the lines as follows:Footnote 92
On being set out with two ionic feet to the line, the Ode’s rhythmic intensity becomes obvious:Footnote 93
The starting point of Horace’s Ode is a fragment of Alcaeus.Footnote 95 As with choriambs, there is no record in Greek lyric poetry of ionics being spoken rather than sung.Footnote 96 The second-century AD grammarian Hephaistion of Alexandria noted that Alcaeus composed many lyric songs in the ionic metre.Footnote 97 Horace’s Ode to Neobulē is consistent with performance art. It was acknowledged as a song in the early-eleventh-century goliardic songbook The Cambridge Songs,Footnote 98 discussed at the end of this article.
Early Middle Ages
The continuation of a Greco-Roman song culture in Italy after the Augustan Age is confirmed by Suetonius. Tiberius, Nero and Domitian all promoted musical contests. The court of Hadrian had a vibrant musical culture. A third-century statue of ‘Orpheus Citharode’ in Ravenna is a visual reminder of the interest in musical performance.Footnote 99 However, the collapse of Rome’s power in the third and fourth centuries, the spread of Christianity and its abhorrence of pagan writings, and invasions from northern Europe had a destructive effect on literary and musical culture. Treatises by Augustine of Hippo and Martianus Capella signalled a partial revival, which gathered pace in the sixth-century court of Theodoric the Great, where Boethius and Cassiodorus both served. The library at Vivarium, established by Cassiodorus, included an edition of Horace.Footnote 100 Thereafter, there is a codicological lacuna. Manuscripts were copied but were then lost.Footnote 101
The re-emergence of Horatian song in the early Middle Ages was triggered by Charlemagne’s Admonitio Generalis 72 of AD 789. In this directive, Charlemagne called for the founding of new monastery and cathedral schools and for the instruction of boys in mathematics, music and Latin grammar. The Benedictine monasteries of northern France and Aquitaine were at the forefront of the development.Footnote 102 Selected Odes of Horace became a core element in Latin studies. Horace may have been a pagan but he was a model of grammatical purity.Footnote 103 Nor had his rhythms been forgotten. When Paul the Deacon retired to Monte Cassino at about the time of Charlemagne’s edict, he composed a Hymn to St John the Baptist in Horatian Sapphics.Footnote 104
Manuscripts of Horace’s work were recopied in Benedictine scriptoria. They had a limited lifespan, as they were in regular use. The earliest surviving manuscripts with musical notation date from the ninth century and most are from the eleventh and twelfth.Footnote 105 Taken as a whole, they reveal that the Odes were chanted or sung in schoolrooms, abbeys and the wider community, over an area extending through Germany, Alsace Lorraine and northern France, to Brittany, Aquitaine and northern Italy.
Many of these manuscripts only came to public attention in 2002 as a result of the late Silvia Wälli’s study Melodien aus mittelalterlichen Horaz-Handschriften,Footnote 106 which is still being absorbed by music historians. In 1930, Guido Adler was aware of only six melodies.Footnote 107 Munk Olsen provided additional source material in the 1980s as a result of his wide-ranging study of early medieval Latin reception;Footnote 108 he was not, however, aware of the important St Petersburg manuscript PET4 until his Addenda et corrigenda of 1989.Footnote 109
Wälli identified twenty early manuscripts with varying degrees and standards of musical notation. They contain forty-eight notated passages, most of them marked with Aquitanian or Central-French neumes. These include the incipits of twenty-two Odes, the Carmen Saeculare and two of Horace’s early lyric Epodes, appearing as interlinear markings, footnotes or side-glosses. The most popular early medieval melodies, to judge from the frequency of their manuscript appearances, were the Ode to Tibullus (Odes 1.33) with seven appearances,Footnote 110 the prologue to Maecenas (Odes 1.1) with five, the Ode to Virgil (Odes 1.3), also with five, and the Bandusian Spring (Odes 3.13) with four.Footnote 111
Working mainly from photocopies, Wälli related some of the melodies to early medieval hymns;Footnote 112 others were from sources she was unable to identify. In Wälli’s view a purpose of the musical notation was to support orally transmitted melodies.Footnote 113 She believed it was unlikely that performance was restricted to schoolrooms or school audiences.Footnote 114
Five years after Wälli’s study, Jan Ziolkowski argued that a number of these passages were simple chants, recorded in footnotes or glosses and used as classroom aids by the schoolmaster to help students articulate and memorise their Latin.Footnote 115 Most of them were of no more than passing interest to music historians. The rise and fall of the notation reflected the sing-song voice of the teacher and sometimes revealed poor understanding of Horace’s metres.Footnote 116
The Montpellier manuscript M425 and the St Petersburg manuscript PET4 are of critical importance, both as musical records and in informing the debate on early medieval Horatian reception. They contain the most complete notated passages and should be of fundamental interest to historians and musicologists.Footnote 117
The Montpellier Codex M425
The Montpellier codex was copied in the middle of the eleventh century in Aquitaine, a European centre of musical excellence.Footnote 118 The book, which became part of the Pithou collection,Footnote 119 has pages 20 cm high and 14.4 cm wide. It contains a manuscript version of the complete works of Horace on folded quarto vellum sheets. On fols. 50v and 51r, and the first four lines of fol. 51v, Horace’s Sapphic Ode to Phyllis (Odes 4.11) is set out in Carolingian minuscule.Footnote 120 (See Figures 1–2.) The text has been carefully formatted with incised horizontal lines to accommodate interlinear Aquitanian notation over the first twenty-four lines.Footnote 121 The first stanzas, set out below to reflect the manuscript layout and spelling, describe the welcome prepared by Horace for what Phyllis expects will be a pleasant evening with him on the Ides of April:
The Ode’s ending is significant both for its musical content and for Horace’s rhythmic treatment in this late composition:Footnote 122
In 1851, a researcher using the pen-name ‘Théodore Nisard’ went to Montpellier to decipher the neumes over the M425 Ode to Phyllis.Footnote 123 He had heard of a similarity between the melodic line of the Horatian Ode and the ‘ut-re-mi’ solmisation mnemonic of Guido d’Arezzo.Footnote 124 Guido had explained his sol-fa method in his Epistola de ignoto cantu (‘Letter concerning Unknown Chant’)Footnote 125 addressed to Monk Michael at Pomposa in about AD 1030.Footnote 126 He set the words of Paul the Deacon’s Hymn to St John the BaptistFootnote 127 to a ‘notissima symphonia’ (‘a very well-known melody’), placing alphabetical notes above Paul’s text.Footnote 128 Each half-line began one note higher than its predecessor:
Guido’s mnemonic used the first syllable of each half line of Sapphics: ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la. He pitched ‘ut’ on the note of C.Footnote 130
Guido was a product of central Italy. Trained at Pomposa and now choirmaster in Arezzo, he taught his choristers with a monochord. In rehearsal, he pointed to the four fingers of his left hand and the spaces in between, explaining that notes on the same line or space were always on the same pitch. He set out his system in the Micrologus and subsequently transposed the lines and spaces onto a stave.Footnote 131 In his Antiphoner he coloured the line for C in yellow and the line for F in red, teaching his students to extend the musical range to a gamut of twenty-one notes, which he designated with alphabetical markings.Footnote 132
Nisard did not delve into the relationship of M425 with Guido’s source music. He made the mistake of pitching the Horatian Ode’s first word ‘Est’ on D.Footnote 133 His misinterpretation was widely accepted for the next 150 years, despite muddying the connection with Guido.Footnote 134
The musical connection between Guido’s ‘ut-re-mi’ and the M425 setting of Horace’s Ode to Phyllis is unchallengeable if the first word of the Ode is pitched correctly. Nisard’s confusion may have arisen because the horizontal rope design above the incipit, together with the large opening E, interfered with the neumes. (See Figure 1 above.) The second stanza of the Ode, where the neumes are unimpeded, provides a better comparator. By matching Guido’s alphabetical notation to the Aquitanian neumes when pitched on C, it is possible to compare the Guidonian and Horatian versions, and decipher the M425 notation:Footnote 135
Although Guido’s Epistola de ignoto cantu predated M425 by about two decades, the date when the Aquitanian scribe recorded the melody for the Ode to Phyllis is not evidence of when he first heard it. What we can deduce is that there are two surviving and closely related tunes of broadly similar date, one recorded in Guido’s Epistola and the other in M425. Guido’s version covered a single stanza of Sapphics. M425 carries notation for the first six of the nine Horatian stanzas, twenty-four lines in all.
There are three features in the Aquitanian notation that are particularly worthy of note. In the classical period, metrical analysis suggests that Horace, like Sappho, used only one note for each syllable of text. The early medieval setting in M425 is different. First, the treatment of the opening syllables of each Sapphic line varies as the stanza progresses; in the first line of every stanza the first syllable is sung on a single note but in lines 2 and 3 multiple notes are applied to each syllable.Footnote 136 Second, additional notes are introduced above some syllables at the middle or end of a line;Footnote 137 the underlying rhythm is Sapphic, but the ‘notissima symphonia’ develops with dramatic effect. Third, while the starting notes and elaborations in M425 are largely common to Guido d’Arezzo’s melody, there are two significant instances of artistic elaboration, which indicate that the melody was no mere adaptation of a Guidonian chant to help boys memorise their notes but performance art conceived and delivered to a high standard.
Horace’s Ode pivots architecturally on the word ‘quod’ (‘because’), the fourth word in the second line of the fifth stanza, after a pause at the midpoint of the nine-stanza Ode. Before this, Phyllis imagines Horace’s party is for her. Afterwards, she realises it is for Maecenas. Horace teases her, then he consoles her. In each of the other stanzas, the equivalent syllable to ‘quod’ is sung on the single note of G. Here, there is a pair of rising puncta (FG): ‘quo-ód’ (‘becau-aúse’), hesitation followed by revelation. This is the work of a scholar who understands the text and has the dramatic and musical skill to respond to it.
The scribe gives another example of his ability in the next stanza. Horace is describing Phyllis’s rival for the affections of Telephus:
Horace has used a delayed caesura after ‘lasciva’. He could have written:
Horace chose not to. A delayed caesura and the adjective ‘lasciva’ proved too tempting. The effect is to draw out the second syllable of ‘lasci-i-và’ (‘se-exy’) and to follow it with a nose-dive, a pause, a gulp and a squeak. The final syllable ‘-và’ falls from G by a fourth, perhaps even a fifth; after a brief hiatus, the first syllable of ‘ténet’ rises sharply to A, before a scandicus signals a three-note ascent, apparently starting on G. The scribe has offered a first-hand response to the text and validated the Ode to Phyllis as performance art.
Any attempt to transcribe the M425 music has inherent risks and uncertainties. Aquitanian neumes are diastematic and give no indication of either starting pitch or rhythm. Nevertheless, Guido’s use of alphabetic notation with a starting pitch of C, together with his selection of a well-known verse composition modelled on Horace’s Sapphic metre, allow a reasonable assumption of a musical line and note lengths to be made. The Sapphic metre suggests something approximating today’s 3/4 time in place of the common time assumed by Nisard (see Example 1).Footnote 138
The St Petersburg codex PET4
The St Petersburg manuscript dates to the late twelfth century and originated in a Benedictine scriptorium at Corbie or St-Germain-des-Prés in Paris. It is both a pedagogical edition of the complete works of Horace and a document of musical record for the Odes, which appear in the first thirty-two of the eighty-seven folios. Towards the back of the codex, from folios 84v to 87v, there is a metrical commentary in the same hand, which underlines the book’s serious purpose as an aid to study and analysis. The pages average about 22.25 × 10 cm. The leaves have been ruled with a fine implement to create a frame for the principal text, which typically measures about 19.7 × 6.25 cm and leaves a distance from the frame to the edge of about 3.2 cm. There are horizontal ruled lines about 4 mm apart to regulate the text and neumes.Footnote 139
The PET4 text is written in brown ink fading to sepia. The manuscript style is a carefully formed, slightly italicised, northern-French Carolingian minuscule, which supports the presumed provenance. There is interlinear musical notation in well-formed central-French neumes above the incipits of the first eleven Odes.Footnote 140
The neumes are part of a planned project, drawn with confidant penmanship and including both simple notes and ligatures. None of the neumed passages proves an unbroken link with Horace or pre-Carolingian Horatian song but some demonstrate that in the early medieval period the Odes were sung in performance as well as chanted in the schoolroom. The notation is more than an aide-memoire; it is a permanent musical record, a virtual songbook, supported by a metrical commentary.
Three of the neumed passages, in Odes 1.1, 1.6 and 1.9, are reasonably clear and illustrate the diversity of the musical tradition on which the scribe has drawn.
Odes 1.1 to Maecenas
Odes 1.1, the prologue to Maecenas, is one of Horace’s compositions for which there is no credible case for sung performance in antiquity. It was a literary dedication composed in continuous Asclepiads and written shortly before the publication of the first three volumes of the Odes. In PET4, the limited heightening of the neumes produces a mundane musical line and this is also a feature of the four other neumed manuscripts of Odes 1.1 identified by Wälli.Footnote 141 (See Figure 3.) The version is rhythmically consistent with Horace’s Asclepiads but offers little of musical interest. It reflects a pedagogical tradition shared across northern Europe over three centuries.Footnote 142
Odes 1.6 to Agrippa and 1.33 to Tibullus
The neumed incipit for the Ode to Agrippa (Odes 1.6) has an unusual purpose.Footnote 143 The melody is shown above the first four lines but the tune ‘belongs’ to Odes 1.33, the Ode to Tibullus, also composed in Asclepiad quatrains.Footnote 144 (See Figure 4.) This is evident from the fact that the melody, or a slight variation, invariably occurs, when it does occur, in association with Odes 1.33. It appears in that relationship twice in glosses to M425.Footnote 145 It occurs similarly in four other neumed manuscripts.Footnote 146 It is never, other than in PET4, linked with Odes 1.6.
There is an obvious reason for the melody appearing above Odes 1.6 in the St Petersburg codex. The Ode is one of Horace’s Parade Odes.Footnote 147 As this marks the first appearance of this Asclepiadean metre in PET4, a document of musical record, the scribe has chosen to showcase the melody in this location.Footnote 148 Odes 1.6 is a ‘recusatio’ (‘refusal’) in which Horace turns down a request from Agrippa to honour his military achievements. The neumes are a rhythmic fit with the text, but an aesthetic misfit:
Once the music is transferred to its normal home of the Ode to Tibullus,Footnote 151 there is obvious artistic synergy:
The underlying choriambs are softened by a medieval song form. The racy subject matter as the Ode progresses, together with its wide dissemination, implies that the rendition was more closely related to goliardic performance than to monastic plainchant.Footnote 153
Odes 1.9 Ode to Thaliarchus (Soracte) Footnote 154
The Soracte Ode (Odes 1.9) is one of Horace’s best loved. It is the only one of his thirty-seven Odes in the Alcaic metre for which an early medieval setting survives. The neumes cover the entire first quatrain. The first line appears at the foot of fol. 3r below an introductory rubric.Footnote 155 The second line follows at the top of fol. 3v, where the vertical space makes the heightening of the neumes exceptionally clear. (See Figure 5a–b.) The third and fourth lines also have clear markings. A tentative attempt to transcribe the music is shown in Example 2. The final melismas are problematical but are a valuable indication of the style of performance.
Notwithstanding the challenges, the strophic composition makes it possible to deduce a musical line and rhythm for the entire Ode:
Horace’s Alcaics were modelled on Greek lyric poetry composed some six hundred years before his time. The interval between Horace’s Soracte Ode and PET4 was nearly twice as long. The underlying Alcaics can be discerned, but many syllables have been extended and there are significant musical elaborations. The diction and pace have changed, reflecting the development of vernacular Latin and popular song. The beauty of the musical line and the complex final melismas suggest that this was a concert piece performed by a practised singer. It is a jewel in the early medieval reception of Horace’s Odes.
The Benedictine manuscripts identified by Wälli do not hold all the clues to early medieval performance. There was a separate goliardic tradition. The Cambridge Songs, a collection of early medieval songs datable to AD 1039 and earlier, originated in Germany.Footnote 158 It contains an un-neumed version of Horace’s Ode to Neobulē (Odes 3.12).Footnote 159 The text has misspellings, misunderstandings and misplaced words.Footnote 160 But the principal message is that, not far from the time when the M425 scribe was recording the Ode to Phyllis in Aquitaine, an English traveller to the Rhineland heard a Horatian Ode being performed in the secular repertoire. The channels of transmission were oral and the melodies were spread through performance.Footnote 161 The traveller brought the text of the Ode to Neobulē to the church of St Augustine in Canterbury, where it was copied with other songs in the anthology.
This evidence serves as a reminder that the old distinction between the classical and medieval periods, with the imagined ‘Dark Ages’ in between, is counterproductive.Footnote 162 History operates as a continuum. The Carolingian call for revival in the monastery schools could not have been implemented unless there was a literary and musical tradition worth reviving. The goliardic song tradition survived because it appealed to the popular imagination. The musical performers of Horace’s Odes in the early medieval period seem to have been prompted by a long history of Horatian song which began with Horace himself.
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