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Ancient Greek Music – “First Delphic Hymn to Apollo”c.138BC
A studio quality recording of this piece can be heard on my NEW CD ALBUM, “An Ancient Lyre”:http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/mlevy4 (also out on iTunes)
This is my arrangement for solo lyre, of the famous “First Delphic Hymn to Apollo” – a precious surviving fragment of music, which is an amazing legacy from the mostly lost musical culture of ancient Greece! In this upload, I attempted to use ancient Greek cyclical tuning to TRY and achieve “Just Tuning”…with not very good results! I couldn’t get the 3rds to sound “right”
(
There are two Delphic Hymns that have been discovered, and they were dedicated to the god Apollo. Unlike the famous “Song of Seikilos” (the first COMPLETE piece of music that has been so far found to have survived from antiquity), the two Delphic Hymns have sadly not survived in their complete form. However, they do survive in substantial fragments…giving just a tantilizing taste of the glory of the tragically lost, magnificant musical culture of ancient Greece!
The two Delphic Hymns are dated c.138 BC and 128 BC. My rendition here, is of the earlier of them; the First Delphic Hymn. Although it has unfortunately not survived in its complete form, the First Delphic Hymn to Apollo is THE earliest unambiguous surviving fragment of notated music from ANYWHERE in the Western World! It is written in the ALPHABETICAL musical notation system used in ancient Greece, whereby alphabetical notation describing the pitch of the melody, is written above the text of the song, as can be clearly seen in this image of the actual Delphic Hymn, as it was found, inscribed in marble:
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/topics/Delphic_Hymns
The rhythm can easily be inferred from the syllables of the text.
The First Delphic Hymn to Apollo was discovered in 1893 by a French archaeologist. It was inscribed in marble, carved on an outside wall of the Treasury of the Athenians at Delphi.
All that is known about its composer is that it was written by an Athenian, around 138 BC, since the part of the inscription giving the name of the composer is too difficult to read. The Second Delphic Hymn is slightly more recent, and has been dated to precisely 128 BC; evidently it was first performed in the same year. The name of the composer of the Second Delphic Hymn has also survived, in a separate inscription: he is called “Limenius”. The occasion of the later hymn was the Pythian Festival, and this one, the earlier hymn, was probably written for the boys choir at the Pythian Games in 138 BC.
I am using a lyre very similar to the ancient Greek Kithara; the large wooden lyre favoured by the professional musicians of ancient Greece. My lyre is, in fact, a replica (based on an illustration of the instrument on an ancient Jewish coin), of the ancient Jewish “Kinnor”; the large wooden lyre which King David himself played 3000 years ago, as he danced before the Ark of the Covenant, and which for almost 1000 years, was played by the Levite musicians in the Temple of Jerusalem to accompany the singing of the Levitical Choir. The Kinnor and Kithara are indeed so similar,(even down to the very sound of the names given to these lyres!) that there may well have even been some cross-cultural musical influences between the cilizations of ancient Greece and ancient Israel??
The translation of the fragment of text which has survived of the this, the First Delphic Hymn to Apollo, is as follows:
“Hear me, you who posses deep-wooded Helicon,
fair-armed daughters of Zeus the magnificent!
Fly to beguile with your accents your brother,
golden-tressed Phoebus who, on the twin peak of this rock of Parnassus,
escorted by illustrius maidens of Delphi,
sets out for the limpid strams of Castalia, traversing,
on the Delphic promontory, the prophetic pinnacle.
Behold glorious Attica, nation of the great city which,
thanks to the prayers of the Tritonid warrior,
occupies a hillside sheltered from all harm.
On the holy alters Hephaestos cosumes the thighs of young bullocks,
mingled with the flames, the Arabian vapor rises towards Olympos.
The shrill rustling lotus murmurs its swelling song, and the golden kithara,
the sweet-sounding kithara, answers the voice of men.
And all the host of poets, dwellers in Attica, sing your glory, God,
famed for playing the kithara, son of great Zeus,
beside this snow-crowned peak, oh you who reveal to all mortals
the eternal and infallible oracles.
They sing how you conquered the prophetic tripod
guarded by a fierce dragon when, with your darts
you pierced the gaudy, tortuously coiling monster,
so that, uttering many fearful hisses, the beast expired.
They sing too, . . . .”
For full details, visit: http://www.ancientlyre.com
Duration : 0:2:9
@acerb45666555 ay …
@acerb45666555 ay caramba! lol
Lovely. I’ve never …
Lovely. I’ve never seen the notation, some kind of tablature?
@yaretzuki1 The …
@yaretzuki1 The lyre I am playing is actually a replica (based on ancient illustrations on 2nd century coins) of the ancient Biblical “Kinnor” – the 10-string lyre played by the Levites in the Temple of Jerusalem. It is strikingly similar to the ancient Greek Kithara – the large wooden lyre favoured by the professional musicians of ancient Greece.Coincidence, or evidence of ancint cross-cultural connections? For all details, please see my “ancientlyre” website…
whats the name of …
whats the name of that Instrument?
oh no!!! T bag si è …
oh no!!! T bag si è dato all musica greca!!! sembra T Bag di prison break!!
Εξαιρετικό
Εξαιρετικό
That’s cool.
That’s cool.
yes its the same …
yes its the same family
its called a …
its called a phorminx duh
its called a “lyre” …
its called a “lyre” duh like it says in the more info tab lol
Kithara? Am i …
Kithara? Am i mistaken, or what is this instrument called?
It sounds like …
It sounds like qanun. Isn’t it?
I tried tuning the …
(
I tried tuning the lyre cyclically in 5ths & 4ths in order to try and get to some sort of authentic ancient Greek “just intonation”…but I don’t have perfect pitch! I just couldn’t quite get the 3rds to sound right
Not sure if this an …
Not sure if this an ancient Greek tuning thing, but your B natural sounds a little flat…
Otherwise, very interesting to hear. Thanks for keeping the tradition alive!
exei omoiothtes me …
exei omoiothtes me to kanonaki telika
this is fantastic! …
this is fantastic! thank you for sharing
I wanted to convey …
I wanted to convey a more dreamy mood – as a contrast to the louder, faster recordings I have heard of this piece (eg on “Musique De La Grece Antique”)
In ancient Greek …
In ancient Greek musical notation, there was no “key signature” – the pitch was represented by alphabetical symbols above the text of the song, and the rhythm was inferred from the syllables of the text.
I’m from the rainy …
I’m from the rainy UK! For full details about my lyre, where to buy one, and my series of “online lyre lessons”, please visit my “ancientlyre” website (URL given on my Youtube Channel Page)
Hello …..are you …
Hello …..are you greek???
Im just interested in the instrument you are playing its a kind of harp but seems ancient greek in mode!!!
Where could i possibly find one?
@Garc1993 gotcha
@Garc1993 gotcha
Ah. I apologize, I …
Ah. I apologize, I meant in a High School level.
@Garc1993 so if i …
@Garc1993 so if i want to take up ancient greek in college, I’d have to leave the country?
What is the time …
What is the time signature?
sounds like he’s …
sounds like he’s playing it at half speed or something
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