Hypolocrian mode
The Hypolocrian mode is an almost entirely theoretical mode, introduced into chant theory in the 19th century by the editors of the Pustet-Ratisbon, Mechlin, and Rheims-Cambrai Office-Books, who designated it mode 12. It is the plagal counterpart to the authentic Locrian mode, mode 11 in that system of numbering, in which the Ionian and Hypoionian become modes 13 and 14.[1] The ambitus of the mode lies between F and the F an octave higher, divided at the final, B. Its reciting tone (or tenor), is E, and its mediant is D. It has two participants, G and C. Although a few plainchant melodies, as well as polyphonic compositions, have been attributed to this mode by some writers, it will generally be found that they are really derived, by transposition, from some other tonality.[2]
References
- Rockstro 1880b, 342.
- Rockstro 1880a.
Sources
- Grove, George, ed. (1880). A Dictionary of Music and Musicians (A.D. 1450–1880), by Eminent Writers, English and Foreign. Vol. 2. London: Macmillan.
- Rockstro, William Smyth (1880a). "Locrian Mode". In Grove (1880), p. 158.
- Rockstro, William Smyth (1880b). "Modes, the Ecclesiastical". In Grove (1880), pp. 340–343.
Further reading
- Fellerer, Karl Gustav. 1982. "Kirchenmusikalische Reformbestrebungen um 1800". Analecta musicologica: Veröffentlichungen der Musikgeschichtlichen Abteilung des Deutschen Historischen Instituts in Rom 21:393–408.