Method

Mastering Byzantine Polyphony treats Byzantine music as a learnable system, not an inherited intuition.

It is built for students and musicians of all levels: children and adults, beginners and advanced alike. If you can hold a pitch, you can learn Byzantine Polyphony. It is designed for musicians who require clarity, reproducibility, and structural integrity, rather than oral ambiguity or devotional convention.

Methodological Exclusions

  • Oral transmission as the primary teaching mechanism
  • Vague microtonal claims without measurable reference
  • Mode-as-mood explanations
  • Authority by tradition rather than internal logic

Core Principles

  • Notation precedes interpretation
    Structure must exist before expression.
  • Modes are functional systems
    They are defined by behavior (not atmosphere) and they are the same modes used by musicians worldwide.
  • Polyphony is architectural
    Voices don’t have to rely on decoration. Instead, they relate by constraint.
  • Music is neither a sacrament nor a dogma
    It follows physical reality: a structured series of overtones.

How it is applied

The method is applied progressively: first in monophonic clarity, then in controlled two-voice structures, and finally in full polyphonic contexts.

Each stage is fully notated and constrained, so that errors are audible, easy to correct and diagnose.

Who this is for

  • Complete beginners who never had the chance to learn music
  • Musicians trained in Western notation
  • Choir directors who need reproducible results
  • Students who want rules before freedom
  • Arrangers and composers who always wanted to harmonize Byzantine music but didn’t have access to the correct theory

Who this is not for

  • Those seeking devotional explanations
  • Those who reject notation on principle
  • Those unwilling to abandon inherited habits

The full method cannot be summarized. It must be worked through.

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