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  1. Leonin. The leonin guard the shining lands of Oreskos, a golden plain where even the gods rarely trespass. Prides of these nomadic, lion-like humanoids rarely interact with other peoples, having all they need in their shimmering homeland and knowing the treachery of strangers. Still, some leonin wonder what lies beyond Oreskos’s border ...

  2. Léonin. Léonin (lived in the late 12th century) is the first composer we know about who wrote organum, a kind of church music. We know nothing about his life. He was probably French. He seems to have worked at Notre Dame Cathedral because he wrote a collection of music called Magnus Liber (meaning: Big Book), or, at least, he wrote some of it ...

  3. 9 de feb. de 2015 · Listen to the beautiful organum duplum of Leonin, Pascha Nostrum, with score and interpretation.

  4. Léonin was the first known significant composer of polyphonic organum. He was probably French, probably lived and worked in Paris at the Notre Dame Cathedral and was the earliest member of the Notre Dame school of polyphony and the ars antiqua style who is known by name. The name Léonin is derived from "Leoninus," which is the Latin ...

  5. www.wikiwand.com › es › LéoninLéonin - Wikiwand

    Un monje anónimo inglés, conocido actualmente por el nombre de Anónimo IV, escribió un siglo después de su muerte que Léonin era el mejor compositor de organum para la expansión del servicio divino. Esta es la única referencia escrita que se tiene de Léonin. Léonin o Magister Leoninus es, junto con Perotín, el primer compositor ...

  6. Pérotin. Léonin. Notre-Dame school, during the late 12th and early 13th centuries, an important group of composers and singers working under the patronage of the great Cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris. The Notre-Dame school is important to the history of music because it produced the earliest repertory of polyphonic (multipart) music to gain ...

  7. acearchive.org › notre-dame-schoolNotre-Dame school

    25 de feb. de 2023 · Notre-Dame school of polyphony was a group of composers who worked at Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris between 1160 and 1250. The only named composers are Léonin and Pérotin, who produced organum and motets. The music theorists of the era described the music, especially its rhythm. The school developed the notation showing relative durations of notes within and between parts, called the ...

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