"In short I think a "long" is the length of the particular syllable, and a "short" is half of that. Or at least, two shorts make up a long. This makes for something like a regular beat without being rigid." I hate to say it, Incantu, but you're talking about mensuralism here which was one of Cardine's greatest fears. When I listen to your recordings I hear this long/short interpretation of yours as mensuralism. You quote Kelly, but he would never approve of this. I studied Semiology with him and utilize his methods, and my singing of the chant sounds nothing like yours. The relative values that Cardine describes and Kelly expounds upon cannot be measured but are directly relational to the relative syllable values which are intrinsically tied to the intuition of speech rhythm. I have NO time at all to discuss this in any depth (too much work on things that affect sacred music in the Church on the ground level). I won't have the capacity to get into a discussion of this. Just wanted to share this and with others that what you describe as "Semiology" here is not going to be verfied as such by many of the leaders of this school of interpretation.
The innermost living principle of Gregorian chant is to be found in the Word of God and in the human response to it, both of which are imbedded in the context of the liturgy as an unendingly new sacramental happening that nourishes the life of the Christian community and its members (Agustoni/Goeschel, An Introduction to the Interpretation of Gregorian Chant, tr. Columba Kelly).
And then there is the kind of ideology that causes people to say things like...
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