what early chant sounded like
Also, I wonder: in a place where there is no chant tradition to speak of, where Gregorian music arrived with the Church in the 19 or 20 century, what is to be done? Must we sing only in the Vaticana style, despite its faults, if that's our fifty-years-old and fifty-years-forgotten “tradition” ?
The Vaticana wasn't around in the 19th century, so it probably would have been one of the Medicean editions or the equalist plainchant in the books of a religious order, neither of which faithfully represents the oldest sources in light of the scholarship available today. The tradition was mutilated but never extinct. You might refer to the Pietras dubia responses and Col nostro (paragraph D) if you have concerns about what's lawful in actual liturgical practice for the TLM. For the novus ordo, alius cantus aptus subjectively seems to cover just about anything the celebrant doesn't dislike.in a place where there is no chant tradition to speak of, where Gregorian music arrived with the Church in the 19 or 20 century, what is to be done? Must we sing only in the Vaticana style, despite its faults, if that's our fifty-years-old and fifty-years-forgotten “tradition” ?
but there is not much evidence of drones being used with chant
However, there is simply NO way that anyone can say what it sounded like. EVERYTHING is guesswork.
Can we start treating these writings as written by fallible human beings who communicate what they see from their own perspective and wish their readers to understand, rather than as Sacred Scripture that can be quoted chapter and verse to dispel any critics?because Joannes Diaconus says so
rather than as Sacred Scripture that can be quoted chapter and verse to dispel any critics?
I am sincerely curious how one can determine what is orally transmissible, insofar as a Carolingian mind was not burdened
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