The chant would most likely have been sung rather slower and with a more deliberate delivery
On our second Sunday we were on the island of Gotland, where there was simply no choice: we attended the sole Sunday Mass at the island’s one Catholic church, in the walled medieval city of Visby. Both the deacon and the priest (a convert from Lutheranism) introduced us to their wives after Mass, while we shared Swedish flatbread, hallonberry jam and plums from the presbytery garden.
In Visby, there was at least as much singing as there would have been at a Missa cantata in the Extraordinary Form: the readings were not chanted, but as if in compensation, the bidding prayers and the Eucharistic Prayer were. A small choir of four sang some simple motets at the offertory and communion; a schola cantorum of two (one of them playing organ chords the while) executed the proper Gregorian Communion antiphon (from the Graduale Triplex, I noticed), interspersing it with Psalm verses sung in Swedish to the appropriate Psalm-tone. Despite their small numbers, the singers made a fine sound; but it was very much art at the service of the liturgy, and here as elsewhere the people joined lustily in the congregational chants.
the Latin ... heavily accented with the native tongue (Scandinavian?) to the point that it was hardly recognisable as Latin.
I should probably start by getting my wife to teach me Old Norse.
and 16th Century Sarum.
The chant would most likely have been sung rather slower and with a more deliberate delivery; and the Latin have been heavily accented with the native tongue (Scandinavian?) to the point that it was hardly recognisable as Latin.
I'm sure it started out as an April 1 prank but there used to be a story of someone who applied for a grant to study spiral-incised pottery shards just in case the potter had steadied his hand on some kind of sounding board while caring on a conversation...I do not believe that even wire recording had been invented
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