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  1. Music notation from an early 14th-century English Missal. The scholar and music theorist Isidore of Seville, while writing in the early 7th century, considered that "unless sounds are held by the memory of man, they perish, because they cannot be written down."

  2. Apr 1, 2013 · From the origin of neumes in the ninth century to the rhythmic developments of the Ars Nova period in the fourteenth century, the evolution of music notation progressed as series of innovations that worked alongside oral traditions to meet the musical demands of each period. Volume. 4. Issue. 1. DOI. 10.15385/jmo.2013.4.1.1. Recommended Citation.

    • Hope R Strayer
    • 2013
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  4. From the origin of neumes in the ninth century to the rhythmic developments of the Ars Nova period in the fourteenth century, each musical period collaborated with the foundation of oral tradition to create and adapt notational forms.

    • Hope R Strayer
    • 2013
  5. Barring entered staff notation in the 17th century, but regularly spaced barring became a practice only in the 18th century. Separate tempo indications, arising first in the 17th century, were verbally expressed; for example, adagio, largo, presto.

  6. Over the next two centuries, as musical culture gradually evolved from one that was largely oral to one that was written, more precise rhythmic notations were developed to accommodate the increasingly complex polyphonic innovations of musicians.

    • Anna Maria, Busse Berger
    • 2002
  7. Nevertheless, throughout the 1400s, white notation had taken the majority of music notations regardless of its controversial views. The change in the musical notation does not affect music...

  8. Apr 27, 2015 · Listen • 2:58. US-PD / Wikipedia Creative Commons. A hymn of praise to the Semitic goddess of orchards, Nikkal, predates all the other early music we know by nearly a millennium, dating back to 14th Century BCE. The art of writing down melodies, preserving sound in time, was not something that was first invented just 1,000 years ago.

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