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From Jeffrey Tucker:
If you look back at the roots of chant, and even just take time to
understand what it means from a musical and historical point of view,
you quickly find that it has nothing to do with music conservatories,
stuffy performance venues, and rule-bound authoritarians. And, moreover,
it has nothing to do with social class, taste, and educational level.
The issue of the chanted Mass is really about whether the liturgy is
going to be permitted to be what it is or whether we are going to
replace its authentic voice with something else.
Maybe people forget that Gregorian chant is premodern in its origin.
It was not somehow invented in the age of winged collars, top hats, and
mutton chops. It arose from the world of the first millennium—before
there were universities, conservatories, cathedrals, or individually
owned books. Chant arose among people poorer than is even imaginable to
us today. The singers were from the lowest class. The composers too were
monks drawn from every strata of society. They did not write their
music down because no one had figured out how to write music. That only
began to happen in a coherent way about the 11th century. The work of
the chant composers continued for many centuries and the results have
been handed on to us today.
This is why chant is what it is today. And if you look closely, you
can discover that first-millennium sense about it. The more you sing it,
the more you discover its humane qualities—written and sung by people
just like us.
At the same time, it is a window into a world we do not know. The
sensibility of chant is spontaneous. It tells stories in the folk vein.
It emerged out of a culture of sharing. It wasn’t about musical theory
and technique. In those days, people couldn’t write music. Mostly, the
people who heard it couldn’t read either. There was no point because
books were exceptionally rare and only available to a tiny group. Chant
came about within this world to be the most compelling way to express
the faith in a worship context. (Read entire article.)
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1 comment:
Unfortunately, I rarely if ever hear chant used in our parish church. Latin chant is even rarer.
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