I think they are a great idea. As Jackson notes, English tradition hymnals like The English Hymnal offered both plainsong and metered tunes for office hymns, many of the tunes taken from French sources!
I have a book, The French Diocesan Hymns and Their Melodies, by Cyril E Pocknee, which might interest you greatly. If you could find a copy I'm sure it would be a treasured addition to your library.
Still, it is recommended to get over the notion that Gregorian melodies are not rhythmic. They most definitely are, and, as noted above, the dominant current scholarly judgment is that they were sung with long and short notes in concord with the longs and shorts of their poetic texts. As with all the Gregorian chant repertory, there is increasing scholarly opinion that the equalists are far short of the mark - but, even if one is an equalist hold out it should be noted that even equalist chant has rhythm. There exists no music (or language) that doesn't have rhythm of one sort or another. There is likely to be little in difference of rhythmic approach between the Gregorian melody of Veni Creator and Down Ampney, the melody we use with Bianco da Sienna's wondrous 'Come Down, O Love Divine'. Or, to say it differently, it is likely that an early monk would have sung the Gregorian melody on your above link just as metrically as in your link to the second melody of the same hymn. This may be jarring to some who can only think of chant in equalist terms. However, I am far from alone in concluding that equalist chant is degenerate chant. But, there is no reason why we can't have both, for both can be equally beautifully performed - even though the one method almost certainly has a more ancient pedigree than the other. And they are both rhythmic, and both, due to their relationship to their poetic texts, are to one degree or another metrical....Gregorian melody and the more rhythmic one...
Could you elaborate on the connexion with the rite of Gregory the Great which you mention?...Lyons...
Still, it is recommended to get over the notion that Gregorian melodies are not rhythmic.
Could you elaborate on the connection with the rite of Gregory the Great which you mention?
Nearly all hymns are verse, poetry, and as such are metrical - they have metre.
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