The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Romans, lend me your ears... and your bells, lyres and reed pipes: Composer delves into antiquity to recreate sounds of early Rome

Academic solves historic puzzle to bring ancient music to life

- By Ross Crae rcrae@sundaypost.com

Composer MaryAnn Tedstone Glover’s work has been heard on classic modern TV hits like The Apprentice and The Great British Bake Off.

But, for her latest project, she’s delved back thousands of years to solve a musical puzzle unearthed by her lifelong fascinatio­n with Ancient Rome.

As part of her PhD at Bath Spa University, the songwriter-turnedacad­emic has pieced together evidence and artefacts to reproduce the sounds of ancient street music.

While there are historical records of architectu­re, fashion, cuisine and more, until now there has been no thoroughly researched and evidence-based recreation of authentic Roman music.

“I really wanted to find out what the ordinary person on the streets would have heard, not the music of the Olympics or in an emperor’s court,” she said. “I was always really interested and thought it was a real puzzle that we knew what it looked like and there’s so much written about Ancient Rome, but we can’t hear it.”

Tedstone Glover, originally from Glasgow, hopes the album, which was released on Friday, will pave the way for film and TV production­s to rethink how they soundtrack ancient dramas.

“I’d love it if big films like Gladiator started using this kind of music,” she said. “The music you get in those films, although it’s atmospheri­c has got very little to do with the historical era.

“People get the wrong impression of what it sounded like and it would be really amazing if you could hear what the music of the time was really like. I think it’s an aspect of film that’s missing. There’s often a big orchestra but that’s not what really happened.

“If you can hear the actual original music, it’s a really tangible link that films would be missing a trick not to use.”

The Romans were the first civilisati­on to use music on a large scale at events and celebratio­ns. It would be played at gladiatori­al arenas, festivals, religious gatherings and around the streets of the Empire.

But, despite music being a part of everyday life, those playing it tended to be of lower socio-economic status.

Most art of the period showed street musicians playing the tibia/aulos (a type of pipe) and the harp-like lyre alongside percussion­ists and singers. Paintings show the difference in quality between the instrument­s held by those of higher class in comparison to those playing on the street. “I realised that the expensive instrument­s you see in museums weren’t what these people would’ve been playing,” Tedstone Glover said.

“Once I realised they had only access to cheap instrument­s and wouldn’t be able to read music because they weren’t educated enough, things became a lot simpler.

“It became a question of trying to fit those instrument­s together and working out how it sounded.”

A mosaic from Pompeii showed the tibia and the lyre being played together, while the writings of the philosophe­r Plato gave insight into voices “moving but rarely meeting” as the traditiona­l three-part harmony was yet to be invented.

To record the album, recreation­s of the instrument­s were created based on those seen in artworks and the artefacts available to study.

Among the eclectic collection gathered was a cup with beads in it, based on one from the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.

After several attempts, a playable version was created and it was in the studio that a percussion­ist turned it upside down and found it was able to be used like a bell.

It led to Tedstone Glover’s additional discovery that it could be seen as a symbol of Dionysus, the god of fertility and the figurehead of an illegal cult in Ancient Rome.

The tibia recreation was made up of two pipes with reeds at the top, similar to playing two oboes at once. It was so unstable that the notes played one day could sound completely different on another.

For the vocals, Papagena, a group who had provided the medieval-style acapellas in the Lord Of The Rings soundtrack, were brought in.

And to keep everything as authentic as possible, there would be no extra digital mixing or production added to the tracks and monitors from Oxford University kept an eye on proceeding­s to check that pronunciat­ion, accents, key and modes were correct.

“I don’t think an ensemble has been brought together that looks like this for 2000 years,” Tedstone Glover said.

Grammy-winning recording engineer and producer Trevor Gibson, of Circle Studios, was tasked with putting it all together, having mixed English band Bastille’s recent blend of band, orchestra and choir.

The album aims to takes the listener on a stroll through ancient Rome, from raucous parties to lullabies, encapsulat­ing archaic ideas of harmony and discomfort to the bell-like codes of the rattling cup.

After its release, Tedstone Glover’s research continues to unravel further mysteries of the music of ancient Rome, from the religious to the military. She said: “I want to look at what music was playing when gladiators came out in the big arenas. They had big water organs and brass instrument­s and I’d like to have them made and hear that big noise.

“I would like to recreate some music from the Bible and I’d really like to recreate some religious music, like the Vestal Virgins – what

did they play? Something that really fascinates me as well is that Nero played a lyre, which is where the saying about fiddling while Rome burns comes from. He was so desperate to play it in front of everybody that sometimes he played for three days at a time and people would be so desperate to leave the arena they’d throw themselves off the back.

“Some fainted and some pregnant women pretended they were in labour because they were so desperate to get out. I’d love to recreate that.”

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 ??  ?? Tedstone Glover and Russell Crowe in Gladiator film
Tedstone Glover and Russell Crowe in Gladiator film
 ??  ?? Statue of Roman god Dionysus playing a pipe
Statue of Roman god Dionysus playing a pipe

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