Musicologists have proved that the 'ancient chant' promulgated in the nineteenth century by the Benedictines of Solemnes [sic] was, in fact, their own invention rather than a historical reconstruction
We know almost nothing about the music that so deeply moved Augustine in Milan
[Flemish contrapuntalist Johannes] Tinctoris remarked in 1470 that all the music worth listening to had been written in the preceding forty years -- at the only moment in music history when a leading musician would have made that remark, and when it would have been true
"Musicologists have proved that the 'ancient chant' promulgated in the nineteenth century by the Benedictines of Solemnes [sic] was, in fact, their own invention rather than a historical reconstruction"
But what is his goal? to enlighten his First Things readers? or to prejudice them against any attempt to include chant in modern worship?
The academics have shown that the Middle Ages had a multiplicity of chants, and in many cases we do not know quite how they sounded.
and it is hard to imagine the American Church acquiring the resources to provide the sort of Church orchestral music that is common in Benedict's part of Germany.
goal-oriented tonal counterpoint uniquely is capable of evoking the sacred within its own terms, independently of the liturgy. A Bach chorale setting does this even if one doesn't know the words to the hymn.
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.