One need only listen to spoken words without music, to see that all poetry is read in a manner impossible to capture in our system of rhythmic notation. The very early Gregorian music probably enjoyed this freedom (later lost, and indeed only partially recovered in the renditions of Solemnes, the more pursuasive for their otherwise excellence, but largely recovered in the important researches of Giulio Silva, of San Francisco).
Hm. Indulging in a little blockquoting myself, I believe the author to be wrong. A string of spoken words without music HAS rhythm. Steve Reich, for example in "different trains", has done wonderful things by finding both the rhythm and the melody in ordinary prose. Rhythm is an essential thing about human art and, probably, human life.One need only listen to spoken words without music, to see that all poetry is read in a manner impossible to capture in our system of rhythmic notation.
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