Cardine’s critique of Rhythmic Proportions cites what he considers to be Vollaerts’ three most salient arguments. Cardine responds to the first by positing in Vollaerts’ name a relationship of musical signs with which the book just does not deal, claiming an inconsistency which is in fact of the critic’s own creation. In his replies to all three arguments, and in his critique of Murray’s book, Cardine applies an unwarranted rigidity in the interpretation of parallel melodic phrases or formulæ, drawing therefrom conclusions themselves unwarranted. Cardine ends his essay with an error: he states that equalist is a free rhythm while strongly implying that proportional rhythm is not free. In fact, proportional rhythm and what we have called “syllabic rhythm” are the only pre-1000 rhythms that are free essentially and by their very nature. Proportional rhythm’s flowing, irregularly occurring measure of longs and shorts alone is able sensitively and perfectly to shape the pitches of complex melodies to the accentuation of prose.
In chant practice according to semiological principles, it is equal-length, non-divisible notes that are nuanced, and in this Dom Eugène continues the sort of æsthetic enunciated by Dom André Mocquereau one hundred years ago. Their chant does not naturally respect textual accents, and something approaching respect is achieved only through subtleties of singing that barely can be described or comunicated [sic] and are hardly reproducable [sic], a situation most unsuitable for liturgical song. (John Blackley, Rhythm in Western Sacred Music before the Mid-Twelfth Century and the Historical Importance of Proportional-Rhythm Chant. Lexington, VA: Schola Antiqua, 2008.)
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