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#329396 - 08/06/09 06:23 PM
Re: Anglican Chant
[Re: Our Lady's slave]
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Member
Registered: 06/25/02
Posts: 5211
Loc: Knoxville, TN
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I love that! I have seen it before, but never tire of it.
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#329526 - 08/08/09 06:54 AM
Re: Anglican Chant
[Re: Xristoforos]
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Member
Registered: 06/25/02
Posts: 5211
Loc: Knoxville, TN
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I thoroughly enjoy Anglican music and find it highly refined and elegant. I also like Gregorian, but some of it can grate on modern ears. One of the problems with Gregorian is that the "authorities" don't agree on what it is supposed to sound like. Those chants were largely replaced by polyphony for quite some time before Solemnes resurrected them. Of course by then, no one really knew how they were originally sung or what they sounded like. If you really want to see discord and disagreement, get 4 Gregorian experts together. As for sequences, there are approximately 5,000 of them. The texts of some are in the Analecta hymnica medii aevi. hymn texts To get the music would require going somewhere like Catholic U. and doing some extensive research. Some sequences have survived in the form of hymns in modern hymnals. Some can be found in The English Hymnal, 1936 and other editions. It is going to be interesting to see what happens to those psalm tones and other psalm settings now that the U.S. bishops have approved the Revised Grail Psalter as the psalm text to be used at mass.
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#329531 - 08/08/09 08:20 AM
Re: Anglican Chant
[Re: byzanTN]
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Member
Registered: 11/09/01
Posts: 5764
Loc: Falls Church, VA
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There is always Old Roman chant, the latest reconstructions of which show strong Byzantine influences.
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#329534 - 08/08/09 08:30 AM
Re: Anglican Chant
[Re: StuartK]
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Member
Registered: 06/25/02
Posts: 5211
Loc: Knoxville, TN
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I have heard the story for many years that those early chants grew out of Jewish temple music. Fact or fiction? Hard to prove, but interesting. However, it seems the eastern and western chants were more alike than different in the early days, pre-schism.
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#329539 - 08/08/09 09:09 AM
Re: Anglican Chant
[Re: byzanTN]
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Member
Registered: 11/09/01
Posts: 5764
Loc: Falls Church, VA
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Nobody really knows, in part because musical notation was primitive at best, and we don't know how to read the few bits of sheet music that have survived (not that this hasn't stopped musicologists from giving it the old college try). There are in fact numerous threads that contributed to the different families of liturgical chant, including (probably) Jewish synagogue music (particularly for psalmody), pagan temple music, and the ceremonial music of the Roman court (the latter particularly in the East), to which elements of the folk tradition were added in different places. A short treatise on the subject is Foundations of Christian Music: The Music of Pre-Constantinian Christianity, by Edward Foley (Liturgical Press, Collegeville, MN) 1996.
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