Article 5G67T Gaming technology recreates 16th-century music in Scottish chapel

Gaming technology recreates 16th-century music in Scottish chapel

by
Libby Brooks Scotland correspondent
from Science | The Guardian on (#5G67T)

Researchers capture how choral music would have sounded in birthplace of Mary Queen of Scots

The sounds of an Easter concert performed for James IV in a Scottish chapel have been recreated using gaming technology alongside groundbreaking recording techniques that allow specialists to model how acoustics would have been affected by long-destroyed interior details, such as the curve of an alabaster sculpture or an oak roof beam.

Researchers have captured how they believe choral music would have sounded when played and sung in the now-ruined chapel at Linlithgow Palace, west Lothian, which was the birthplace of Mary Queen of Scots and where James IV visited for Easter celebrations around 1512.

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