Of Medieval music, her work is in a league of its own. Before minor and major scale, musicians created rooms for you to inhabit. These rooms were sublime -- in Hildegard's case literally divinely inspired -- and did not try to earn or appeal to your emotion. But they still evoked deep, heart-wrenching response regardless.These spaces; these sacred realms of sound unfold and ebb and flow in ways that even later Renaissance era music started to drift away from as polyphony and counter-melody entered into the once extremely pure sounds. Yes, this would eventually lead to The Beatles, but at what price?Hildegard's small but powerful catalog of music actually sounds like a living heaven. Her music does not demand, yet it also does not shy-away. She made musical soundscapes that said so much without you ever understanding a word. There was no trying -- it is the opposite of try-hard.All music since has largely been exactly that -- trying to impress you with sound. The purity of this music from the 1100s was just enough of a step above traditional gregorian chant to differentiate itself and suggest something fresh -- but still grounded in such a simplicity that literally all music since has abandoned in every way.To say 'music peaked in 1100' might seem a little troll-y, but there is truth to it -- there never has been and never will be again the simple combination of everything that made Hildegard von Bingen's music so powerful. Just before modern music's true beginning of the beginning, but long-after centuries and thousands of years of foundation in sound.The goal was to connect you with something higher in the most pure, sincere way imaginable. To call your attention upwards. After all this time, nothing else has ever been as powerful in all of recorded music history. Music peaked with Hildegard von Bingen in the 1100s.
one of the first songs by her that really clicked with me: https://vocaroo.com/1dDUdlqtvdHgwhat is considered a popular work by her: https://vocaroo.com/1aS69MhxStQbGet the Complete Edition. It's 9CDs and it breezes by.
>>130294415Thank you chatgpt
>>130294505This was not written by ChatGPT. I have been writing like this online since 2008. ChatGPT writes like me. This 1000% came from heart and soul.
>>130294429I wonde what this sounded like to Medieval people who were used to fiddle tunes
You don't even like music