My first
discovery of Greek musical annotations happened in 2012 when I saw the Seikilos column at the
While the Seikilos Epitaph is the only
complete song we have, the Delphic
Hymns are simply the oldest surviving examples so far, dating
from the 2nd century
BC. These Hymns were carved on the southern wall of the
Treasury of the Athenians in
The two
inscriptions from the Treasury of the Athenians, now exhibited at the
I followed the history of ancient Greek music and the reconstruction of ancient instruments, mainly the lyre/cithara and the flute, from 2016 onward, with several updates after Reconstructing ancient Greek music, an impossible task? We still find it difficult to accept that Homer's epics or the tragedies of Sophocles and Euripides originally were sung partially or in their entirety.
The sounds produced by ancient instruments are a far cry from today’s music, even from what is considered classical music or medieval troubadours. Modern music is mostly loud, to be heard beyond the daily noises of traffic, airplanes, and too many people attending the open-air events with screaming amplifiers. It is hard to imagine a quiet, tranquil spot in nature where we could catch the sound of a faraway flute or a string instrument floating on the wind. The basic essence of musical notes no longer reaches us.
With new discoveries and future in-depth research, we may expect to learn more about the music played in antiquity that could have been familiar to Alexander. I hope.
[Pictures from the Delphi Archaeological Museum]