Translated into modern musical notation, the tune is something like this:
The following is a transliteration of the words which are sung to the melody, and an English translation:
- Hoson zes, phainou
- Meden holos su lupou
- Pros oligon esti to zen
- To telos ho chronos apaitei
- While you live, shine
- Don't suffer anything at all
- Life is short
- And time demands its toll
The find has been dated variously from around 200 BC to around AD 100. While older music with notation exists (for example the Delphic Hymns), all of it is in fragments; the Seikilos epitaph is unique in that it is a complete, though short, composition.
Some scholars believe that an extant corpus of Chinese music, first recorded in the Tang dynasty (618-907 AD), predates this work as well as the earlier fragments of Greek music. This is based on the conjecture that because the recorded examples of Chinese music are ceremonial, and the ceremonies in which they were employed are thought to have existed "perhaps more than one thousand years before Christ" (Aalst), the musical compositions themselves are likely to have been performed, even in 1000 BC, in precisely the manner prescribed by the sources that were written down in the seventh century AD. It is based on this conjecture that Aalst dates the "Entrance Hymn for the Emperor" to c. 1000 BC. Even allowing for the hypothesis that the Emperor's court musicians transmitted these melodies with complete fidelity over sixteen centuries and that the Chinese court ceremonies never changed, there is no material evidence to date the composition, or any other piece of Chinese music, to earlier than the Tang dynasty (Pan). This leaves the Epitaph of Seikilos the oldest complete musical composition that can be reliably dated. It is the inscription of the Epitaph that is actually dated to the first century AD; it would be possible likewise to form a conjecture that the song itself was sung before this.
References
- Historical Anthology of Music. Two volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 1949. ISBN 0674393007
Chinese Music. J.A. van Aalst, 1884, 1933.
- Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London, Macmillan Publishers Ltd., 1980.
China. Rulan Chao Pan, 1980.
External link
Categories: Music history | Ancient music