Robert,
THANKS for that!
My dad always used to say, "Different strokes for different folks."
Here are two reasons I, personally, don't like these kind of transcriptions:
1. There are other important indications (e.g. spacing) that are not preserved by putting in adiastematic notation above box neumes.
2. By putting them over box neums, that would lead one to believe that those were the pitches sung by the monks writing the adiastematic notation (which, sadly, is not true).
Again: "Different strokes for different folks."
Jeffrey O, I'm curious, how are you able to say unequivocally that the adiastematic notation does not represent the pitches of the chant in the square note notation.
I have read statements by you which are similar in other posts, and there have always been people who write in response saying the Saint Gall/Laon notation lines up quite well most of the time in the TRIPLEX
When one has studied St Gall and Laon it is often easy to see, for example where in the mode 8 canticles at the Easter Vigil that the adiastematic notation clearly shows the dominant on the ancient reciting tone of ti and not on doh as it is written
and of course there are other little differences here and there, but the TRIPLEX with the ancient neumes above and below show an amazing continuity.
I generally stay away from commenting on the more outlandish posts,
but this statement needs to be backed up as it is certainly at odds with Gregorian Chant scholarship today, at least those in the main streams of academia.
My problem is in making unequivocal statements without backing up such statements.
2. By putting them over box neums, that would lead one to believe that those were the pitches sung by the monks writing the adiastematic notation (which, sadly, is not true).
The best thing one could say is that this is perhaps "sometimes" not true, and then give examples.
In other words, prove it when making a sweeping statement, especially when this is contrary to the bulk of modern scholarship on the subject.
No one in their right mind who knows anything about manuscripts would simply discard Montpellier H. 159.
Of course, when you speak of "pitch" are you speaking about actual pitches (A, F, G#), or relative? Montpellier shows us where the whole steps and half steps are using letters.
adiastematic notation show the original "shape" of the melody
and a clue to the subtle shading of the original rhythm.
When I was studying Gregorian Chant at University, we would sometimes change the melody as given in the TRIPLEX to reflect what we were actually seeing in St Gall/Laon.
The square notes in the Triplex do not reflect note for note the melodies as found in St Gall/laon all the time,
as the Gregorian melodies as we have them now in the modern book comes from a common reading of MANY manuscripts (see "Paleographie musicale-Justus ut Palma), there is no ONE manuscript which is thought to be THE manuscript which we should go back too.[sic]
In having the adiastemetic neumes above the notes in the TRIPLEX, one doesn't expect it to be ALWAYS note for note,
the Gregorian melodies were simply not restored by Solesmes this way,
and yet they show an amazing amazing similarity with those first manuscripts, the first musical notation in the Western world, often time note for note.
Now, someone might say that we only know that the melody is moving up or down in the early manuscripts because the theorists who explain the significance of the neumes have worked backwards from later manuscripts like H 159. But so what? This is a perfectly legitimate way of approaching the question. If you start from the hypothesis that the repertoire didn't change all that much from place to place or from time to time, you arrive at a much more coherent explanation of the significance of the neumes.
I don't see how anyone could suggest that these three examples are not of the same basic melody.
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