Catholic Music Through the Ages

Catholic Music Through the Ages
Title Catholic Music Through the Ages PDF eBook
Author Edward Schaefer
Publisher LiturgyTrainingPublications
Pages 274
Release 2008
Genre Music
ISBN 1595250204

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"The Church has always sought a dynamic balance between the expressive and the formative attributes of liturgical music. (This book) traces the development of the Church's music through the ages and is a chronicle of the music we have used in the earthly Liturgy of the Church. .... " [from back cover]

Benevantum Troporum Corpus I, Part 2

Benevantum Troporum Corpus I, Part 2
Title Benevantum Troporum Corpus I, Part 2 PDF eBook
Author Alejandro Planchart
Publisher A-R Editions, Inc.
Pages 264
Release 1994-07-01
Genre Music
ISBN 0895793040

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Sounding the Word of God

Sounding the Word of God
Title Sounding the Word of God PDF eBook
Author Susan Rankin
Publisher University of Notre Dame Pess
Pages 418
Release 2022-11-15
Genre History
ISBN 0268203423

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Drawing on a wide context of bookmaking, this sweeping study traces fundamental changes in books made to support musical practice during the Carolingian Renaissance. During the late eighth and ninth centuries, there were dramatic changes in the way European medieval scribes made books for singers, moving from heavy reliance on unwritten knowledge to the introduction of musical notation into manuscripts. Well-made liturgical books were vital to the success of the Carolingian fight for Christian salvation: these were the basis for carrying out worship correctly, rendering it most effective in petitions to the Christian God. In Sounding the Word of God, Susan Rankin explores Carolingian concern with the expression and control of sound in writing—discernible through instructions for readers and singers visible in liturgical books. Her central focus is on books made for singers, including those made for priests. The emergence of musical notations for ecclesiastical chant and of books designed to accommodate those notations, Rankin concludes, are important aspects of the impact of Carolingian reforming zeal on material culture. The book has three sections. Part 1 considers late antique and early medieval texts, which deal with the value of singing and its necessary regulation. Part 2 describes and investigates techniques used by Carolingian scribes to provide instructions for readers and singers. The extant books themselves are the focus of part 3. Rankin’s analysis of over two hundred manuscripts and extensive supporting images represents the work of a scholar who has spent a lifetime with the sources; her explication of the images, particularly those of the earlier manuscripts, changes the way in which musicologists and liturgical scholars will view the images. Indeed, it will change the way in which they approach the unfolding history of chant and liturgy in the Carolingian period.

Embellishing the Liturgy

Embellishing the Liturgy
Title Embellishing the Liturgy PDF eBook
Author Alejandro Enrique Planchart
Publisher Routledge
Pages 439
Release 2017-07-05
Genre Music
ISBN 1351940724

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After the imposition of Gregorian chant upon most of Europe by the authority of the Carolingian kings and emperors in the eighth and ninth centuries, a large number of repertories arose in connection with the new chant and its liturgy. Of these repertories, the tropes, together with the sequences, represent the main creative activity of European musicians in the ninth, tenth, and eleventh centuries. Because they were not an absolutely official part of the liturgy, as was Gregorian chant, they reflect local traditions, particularly in terms of melody, and more so than the new pieces that were composed at the time. In addition, the earlier layers of tropes represent, in many cases, a survival of the pre local pre Gregorian melodic traditions. This volume provides an introduction to the study of tropes in the form of an extensive anthology of major studies and a comprehensive bibliography and constitutes a classic reference resource for the study of one of the most important musico-liturgical genres of the central middle ages.

The Advent Project

The Advent Project
Title The Advent Project PDF eBook
Author James W. McKinnon
Publisher Univ of California Press
Pages 483
Release 2000-10-02
Genre Music
ISBN 0520221982

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This book considers the musical practices of the early Church with an incisive examination of the history of Christian chant from the years A.D. 200 to 800.

The Great Beginning of Citeaux

The Great Beginning of Citeaux
Title The Great Beginning of Citeaux PDF eBook
Author E. Rozanne Elder
Publisher Liturgical Press
Pages 649
Release 2012-05-01
Genre Religion
ISBN 0879077824

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In the closing decades of the twelfth century, the Cistercian Order had become an important ecclesiastical and economic power in Europe. Yet it had lost its influential spokesman, Bernard of Clairvaux, and as the century drew to a close, religious sensibilities were changing. The new mendicant orders, the Franciscans and the Dominicans, and the impulses they embodied were to shift the center of gravity in Christian religious life for centuries to come. It was in this transitional period that Conrad of Eberbach gradually—between the 1180s and 1215—compiled the Exordium magnum cisterciense: The Great Beginning of Cîteaux. It is a book of history and lore, often with miraculous stories, meant to continue a great spiritual tradition, and it is also a book meant to justify and repair the Order. The Exordium magnum was in part an effort to provide a historical and formative context for those who were to be Cistercians in the thirteenth century. Conrad's combination of a historical sensibility and the edifying exempla makes the Exordium magnum a remarkably innovative book. Its unique combination of genres—narratio and exempla—is conceivable only within the intellectual world of the twelfth or early thirteenth centuries, before exempla collections came to be complied solely for edification or use in sermons. The Great Beginning of Cîteaux is a revealing book and an excellent place to begin more detailed study of the Cistercian Order between 1174 and the middle of the thirteenth century.

Hymn Introits for the Liturgical Year

Hymn Introits for the Liturgical Year
Title Hymn Introits for the Liturgical Year PDF eBook
Author Christoph Tietze
Publisher LiturgyTrainingPublications
Pages 332
Release 2005
Genre Music
ISBN 9781595250117

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The introit is the entrance song to the eucharistic celebration of the Catholic Church, sung to a prescribed text that is thematically linked to the season or the particular celebration and belongs to the category of antiphonal Mass chants. The introit chant is the last of the Mass propers to be researched in detail. In this groundbreaking study, Christoph Tietze presents the history and development of the introit through the ages. He has also composed congregational settings of the proper parts of the Mass for the liturgical year. This book shows how to make these texts practical for parish use. It will help pastors, music directors, and seminarians better understand the texts for use in today's liturgies. Book jacket.