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- Cauda abstract "The Cauda is a characteristic feature of songs in the Conductus style of a cappella music which flourished between the mid-12th and the mid-13th century. The conductus style placed strict rules on composition, and some such rules were devoted to the cauda, which came at the penultimate syllable of each verse. It takes the form of a lengthy section of counterpoint - where several simultaneous melodies are combined into one - slurred over the one syllable. The cauda was repeated in each verse.The significance of the cauda in Conductus music is such that most Conducti were divided into the categories Conductus cum Cauda and Conductus sine cauda (Conductus with or without Cauda.) The latter made up less than a third of the repertoire.The writing of medieval music did not include strict rhythmic notation, but when multiple notes were given to one syllable, known as a melisma, special notation, known as rhythmic modes, were used. As the cauda is a specific type of melisma, it contains this special notation.The word "cauda" is derived from the Latin word for tail. Conceptually, it is easy to see in the cauda, the root of the modern term, coda, which arrived when Latin was replaced by Italian as the musical lingua franca.Two notable examples occur in Vetus Abit Littera, a four-voice Christmas conductus from the Florence manuscript, and Dic Christi, Veritas, a tirade against clerical hypocrisy written by Philip the Chancellor. The latter is found in the Carmina burana manuscript in a monophonic version and in the Paris sources in an elaborate three-voice setting, laden with caudae.".
- Cauda wikiPageID "4557971".
- Cauda wikiPageLength "2007".
- Cauda wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Cauda wikiPageRevisionID "576938163".
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink A_cappella.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Carmina_Burana.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Carmina_burana.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Category:Medieval_music.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Christmas.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Coda_(music).
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Conductus.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Counterpoint.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Hypocrisy.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Italian_language.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Latin_language.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Lingua_franca.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Melisma.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Monophony.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Oxford_History_of_Western_Music.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Philip_the_Chancellor.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Pluteo_29.1.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Rhythmic_mode.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Taruskin.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLink Tail.
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cauda".
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLinkText "Ductias".
- Cauda wikiPageWikiLinkText "cauda".
- Cauda hasPhotoCollection Cauda.
- Cauda wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- Cauda subject Category:Medieval_music.
- Cauda hypernym Feature.
- Cauda type Work.
- Cauda comment "The Cauda is a characteristic feature of songs in the Conductus style of a cappella music which flourished between the mid-12th and the mid-13th century. The conductus style placed strict rules on composition, and some such rules were devoted to the cauda, which came at the penultimate syllable of each verse. It takes the form of a lengthy section of counterpoint - where several simultaneous melodies are combined into one - slurred over the one syllable.".
- Cauda label "Cauda".
- Cauda sameAs Cauda.
- Cauda sameAs m.03bxfn4.
- Cauda sameAs Q5054362.
- Cauda sameAs Q5054362.
- Cauda wasDerivedFrom Cauda?oldid=576938163.
- Cauda isPrimaryTopicOf Cauda.