This article is about the musical term. See Antiphon (person) for an article about an orator of ancient Greece.
The word Antiphon is of Greek origin, αντί(opposite) + φωνη(sound).
An antiphon is a response, usually sung in Gregorian chant, to a psalm or some other part of a religious service, such as at Vespers or at a Mass. This meaning gave rise to the antiphony style of singing, see call and response.
A piece of music which is performed by two semi-independent choirs interacting with one another, often singing alternate musical phrases, is known as antiphonal. In particular, antiphonal psalmody is the singing or musical playing of psalms by alternating groups of performers. This is particularly common in the Anglican musical tradition, where the choir divides into two equal halves on opposite sides of the quire. The Indian concept sawal-jawab ("question" and "answer") can be considered antiphonal. The alteration of individual notes or pitches is hocket.
Antiphon can also be used outside of a strict musical or liturgical context to mean a more general response. When used in this way the word often maintains its religiousconnotation.
When two or more groups of singers sing in alternation the style of music can also be called polychoral. Specifically, this term is usually applied to music of the late Renaissance and early Baroque. Polychoral techniques are a definitive characteristic of the music of the Venetian school, and this music is often known as the Venetian polychoral style. The Venetian polychoral style was an important innovation of the late Renaissance, and this style, with its variations as it spread across Europe after 1600, helps to define the beginning of the Baroque era. Polychoral music was not limited to Italy in the Renaissance; it was popular in Spain and Germany, and there are examples from the 19th and 20th centuries, from composers as diverse as Hector Berlioz, Igor Stravinsky and Karlheinz Stockhausen.
That semester we were going to perform a polychoral piece, one which involved the interactions of two separate choruses.
Polychoral music had a long tradition, it appeared, and Adrian Willaert, the Flemish composer credited with inventing the style in the year 1550, was in fact not the first composer to write for more than one chorus.
The intent of this paper, therefore, is to provide a brief survey of polychoral works from their first appearance in the 1500s until the gradual decline in their popularity, with particular emphasis on the capacity of pieces to be performed with the choirs separated from each other by some degree of space.
Most of the compositions for this recording come from his Polyhymnia Caduceatrix et Panegyrica (1619) in which he explores all the possibilities of the polychoral composition that was to become the hallmark of the Baroque concertato style (combining and contrasting of instrumental and vocal forces).
Polychoral music employs two or more choirs of different ensembles that are placed in various locations throughout the church in order to create a stereophonic effect upon the listener.
The choirs may consist of instruments such as cornetts and trombones, recorders and flutes, or oboes and bassoons; or the choirs may be all high voices, all low voices, mixed high and low voices, or soloists.