Timeline of trends in music to 1899 See also:
List of years in music ,
Timeline of trends in music (1900-1949) ,
Timeline of trends in music (1950-1969) ,
Timeline of trends in music (1970-1979) ,
Timeline of trends in music (1980-1989) ,
Timeline of trends in music (1990-present)
c. 4000
BC
Harps and vertical flutes are played in Egypt
c. 3500
BC
Double clarinets and lyres are played in Egypt
c. 3000
BC
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The bamboo pipe is invented in China
c. 2500
BC
c. 2000
BC
c. 1500 BC
Hittites use
guitars, lyres, trumpets, tambourines
Harps are used to accompany dances in Egypt
c. 1000 BC
Music accompanies religious ceremonies in Israel
c. 800 BC
c. 700 BC
c. 685 BC
c. 675 BC
Terpander invents a new seven-stringed lyre and the Mixolydian scale
c. 600 BC
Modes appear in music
The vina is invented in India
c. 586 BC
c. 550 BC
c. 500 BC
Pindar begins writing
odes
Greek choral music reaches its peak
aulos, citharas, lyres are played in Greece
Pythagoras of Samos makes great strides in musical
theory
400 BC
Trumpet competitions are popular in Greece
340 BC
320 BC
300 BC
c. 250 BC
Ktesibios invents the hydraulis
c. 200 BC
The earliest evidence of music
in Japan
146 BC
The Romans conquer Greece and begin exporting its musical knowledge
elsewhere in Europe
140 BC
Emperor Han
Wudi takes over China and establishes an Imperial Office of Music
c. 50 BC
38 BC
The Chinese octave is divided into 60 notes
c. 350
Antiphonal psalmody appears in Christian churches
386
c. 450
Alternating singing between precentors and parishioners is introduced
in Christian churches
453
80 Korean musicians
arrive in Japan , greatly
influencing gagaku
c. 500
521
Boethius
introduces Greek notation to the West
c. 6000
600
c. 600
The first flowering of Arab
music occurs in what is now Syria
during the rule of the Umayyad
dynasty
609
619
The Chinese begin using large orchestras
650
Neumes, a system of notation, are introduced in Europe
c. 700
710
Beginning of the Nara
period in Japan , and
the introduction of komagaku and togaku music
c. 750
Gregorian chanting is popular throughout Europe
Byzantine
wind organs begin to replace water organs
850
Hucbald writes rules for composing the organum
c. 850
Vocals in church music begins moving in parallel; this is the beginning
of polyphony
(see organum )
980
Antiphonarium Codex Montpellier is written
c. 1000
Gryffull ab Aynam separates the positions of bard
and minstrel in Wales
Hat cheo begins to develop in Vietnam
c. 1015
Sight singing is introduced at Pomposa Monastery near Ravenna
1050
c. 1050
The harp is introduced to Europe
1050
c. 1030
Guido of Arezzo develops a method to learn music by ear, solfège
c. 1095
Le Chanson de Roland composed
c. 1100
1116
1121
The earliest performance of roi nuoc, or water puppetry, is recorded
in Vietnam
c. 1125
Trouveres and troubadours appear in France
c. 1150
French troubadours become more organized
1151
Leoninus, a French
composer, develops the ars antigua style
1176
c. 1180
c. 1182
c. 1200
The faux bourdon style begins in England
Hat tuong, which evolved from Chinese
opera , appears in Vietnam
Cymbals are invented
In England, France and Germany, wandering musicians form collectives
to help each other
Trumpets are used
as signals in battle in Europe
1225
c. 1250
Pérotin moves the ars antiqua school of music to its peak
Amir Khusrau is said to have invented qawwali, the sitar
and the tabla in Pakistan
1253
1262
Adam de la Halle writes the first operetta ,
"Le Jeu de la Feuillee"
c. 1265
Franco of Cologne and Pierre de la Croix develop the motet
c. 1300
1309
1322
The Pope expressly forbids counterpoint
c. 1325
Organ pedals are invented
"Tournai Mass", the first polyphonic Mass, is written
c. 1330
The ars nova style is invented
c. 1350
1360
Original forms of the clavichord
and cembalo appear
1377
Musicians at the papal chapel in Avignon
move to Rome , making it
the capital of music in Europe
1385
The marriage of Charles the VI and Isabella of Bavaria is the first
French court ball
1392
The Choson Dynasty begins in Korea ;
a rich tradition of court music arises during this dynasty
c. 1400
The dulcimer
is invented
Secular songs with French lyrics, chansons, are popular
1400
The Thais sack Angkor
and bring apsara dancers
back to the royal Thai court
c. 1420
The Burgundian School begins
c. 1426
1428
The Le dynasty comes to power in Vietnam ;
it will go on to restrict music like cheo, which is perceived as anti-establishment
1430
The Renaissance
begins, leading to the increasing popularity of secular music as well
as the diversification of musical styles across Europe
Aak music in Korea
is reconstructed from surviving 12th
century compositions
1465
First printed music appears in Europe
c. 1490
c. 1500
Broadside ballads begin their period of popularity in England
Italian madrigalss
appear
1505
1508
1522
The Spanish begin mass importation of African slaves to Cuba
and other Caribbean islands
1553
Ancestral forms of the violin
are invented
1562
1565
Women are banned from singing in Christian churches; the desire for
adult female voices leads to the practice of castration
1574
1578
Jean De Léry publishes the first account of Brazilian
music , Viagem à Terra do Brasil
1587
Gabriel Soares de Sousa publishes the first account of native Brazilian
musical forms, Tratado Descritivo do Brasil
1588
Thomas Morley is the guiding force in the English madrigal school
1590
Count Giovanni de Bardi gathers a group of artists, leading to the invention
of opera
c. 1590
1594
c. 1600
The European Renaissance ends and the Baroque
period begins; this is marked by increasing rigidity and codification
in music
The harp is added to European orchestras
Slaves brought to Morocco
from Mali lead to the
development of gnawa
1601
Giulio Caccini's Le nuove musiche, including a manifesto on the new
monodic style, is
published
1606
The first open-air operas appear in Rome
1607
1609
1631
The first professional female singers in Europe for several centuries
appear in England for a production of Chloridia
1639
Virgilio Mazzocchi and Marco Marazzoli write the first comic opera,
Chi Soffre Speri
1648
c. 1650
Beginning of modern harmony
The overture
emerges
1652
c. 1660
The seis arises in southern Spain
1664
1675
Matthew Locke's Psyche is the oldest surviving English opera
1685
c. 1690
1692
1696
c. 1700
1705
1711
The clarinet
is added to European orchestras
1719
1725
1742
1750
Bach dies; this is often considered the end of the Baroque period and
the beginning of the relatively simple Classical
period
1751
1762
Christoph Willibald von Glück writes Orfeo
ed Euridice with the express purpose ofreturning opera to its
roots
1767
The Burmese sack Ayuthaya and bring Thai musicians to their homeland,
thus leading to a mixture of Burmese, Thai and Cambodian musics in Burma
and elsewhere in southeast Asia
1772
The barrel organ is invented
1773
1774
1780
1783
Spain adopts a policy of encouraging Roman Catholics to move to its
colonies, leading to a French majority on the island of Trinidad ;
the French immigrants bring Carnival
and the roots of calypso
1786
1787
c. 1790
Bumba-meu-boi, a form of comedic dance, is popular in Brazil
1791
The waltz is popular
in England
The Haitian Revolution sends refugees to Cuba ,
bringing with them native musical forms (see: charanga)
1794
"Tammany, or The Indian Chief" by James
Hewitt is one of the first American operas
1802
The Garifunas arrive in Belize
(then British Honduras) and soon develop paranda music
1803
1807
Beethoven's Symphony
No. 5 is written; this is perhaps the most popular classical
symphony ever
1814
1821
1829
c. 1830
c. 1835
Lundu is developed in Brazil
Tamburitza is developed into increasingly complex forms in Croatia
1835
The first music conservatory in Switzerland
opens in Geneva
Elias Lönnrot's collection of runolaulu traditional Finnish song,
the Kalevala
is first published
1836
Maria Severa's performance of a fado
for the Comte de Vimisio causes him to fall in love with her and an ensuing
public controversy; this is the earliest certain example of fado's existence
1838
Indians begin arriving
in the Caribbean, especially Trinidad ,
in large numbers
1839
Barzaz-Breizh , the first collection of Breton folk song, is
published
"Te voglio bene assaie" is written; this is often said to be the beginning
of canzone napoletana
1840
c. 1840
1841
1848
The Kalevala ,
a collection of traditional Finnish runolaulu, inspires a rise in Finnish
nationalism
c. 1850
1852
1854
1860
Indian musicians
move to the royal court in Kabul ,
Afghanistan ,
bringing their musical influences
The rise of the Pocomania and Revival Zion churches in Jamaica
influences developing folk forms across the island
The bandoneon
was invented in Germany
1865
Ernest Gagnon publishes the first collection of traditional Quebecois
folk songs
1866
1868
1869
The golden age of flamenco
is usually said to begin
c. 1870
1870
1871
1874
Society for Culture and Education is founded in Finland
1875
1876
1877
1878
N'Dusseldorf forms in Vienna ,
soon becoming the pioneers of modern schrammelmusik
1880
c.1880
1882
c. 1890
Jean Sibelius '
Kullervo
inspires a rise in Finnish nationalism ,
greatly influencing music in his native land
The sabha (paying classical concert performances) associations begin
to shit from music into dance
The accordion
is introduced to Mexico
by Bohemian immigrants
Uilleann
pipes are introduced to Ireland
in their modern form
Augusto Hilario pioneers student fado at Coimbra University
1895
The National Czecho-Slavonic Ethnographical Exhibition is held in Prague ,
leading to a revival of traditional music and nationalist pride
Béla Vikár makes the first recordings of Hungarian folk
music
1896
Ragtime and cakewalk
are popularized in the United
States
Nicholas Bennett's Alawon Fy Nghwlad , a compilation of traditional
Welsh songs, is published; this, along with the formation of London-based
Welsh Societies, is part of a revival of Welsh folk music
1898
1899