Previous threads have included copies of notation for the Divine Praises sung in English. Does anyone have access to notation for the Latin version of the Divine Praises? Organ accompaniment is always welcome, as well.
Now which version? I was asked to set this for a hymn book last year, I think I found 4 or 5 different melodies, and a couple of differences in the text! I re-typeset two of the version which are attached below.
expeditus1, thank you for putting up this Vatican recording.
We have been singing the Laudes Divinae (with no repeats) in a version very close to those given by tomjaw' for three years. The priest chants the first half up to the half bar and the congregation finishes each line. It ends with Fiat, fiat.
fiat is Latin amen is Hebrew so be it is English
The Vatican version in the recording is really beautiful. I am going to try to transcribe the melody. Composing an accompaniment is probably beyond my capability at present. Is there anyone out there who can listen to this and take a dictation of the accompaniment? I would be most grateful.
In this style of prayer, Fiat is usually used at the end, as found in the Christus Vincit.
I have found very little music for the Divine Praises, I have looked through many chant books that have a vast number of pieces for Benediction, but no music for the Divine Praises. I have not seen any accompaniments, I know our Organists would ask for the chant music and ad lib. an accompaniment from that.
Looking through my notes from setting the above, I have found one of the versions I did not set the "Melodia solemnitor" Will try to find time to set this and post it on this thread.
The melody transcribed by tomjaw originates, as I understand, from the Abbey of Maredsous (Belgium). I have--somewhere--a mode vii setting, but--even if I knew where it was--it is very old and thus lacks some of the more recent additions. I have noticed that some Latin versions have magna Mater Dei, while others have excélsa Mater Dei. I suppose that the original is Italian.
Bumping this, since after looking around for the melodies, I now have the accompaniment (three sharps).
It's also a valuable pedagogical exercise. The nuns sent me the chant score with a Do clef, a reciting tone of La, and Si flat (what tomjaw posted originally). The Cistercians of Pluscarden sing on Do with the dominant on Mi, based on the transcription made for Gregobase. You also can sing with a Fa clef as above.
The accompaniment is messy, and if you check out the recording, all of the accents of spondees are sung long at the mediant and at the final, with a mora vocis given at the mediant as well, but the organ music doesn't account for that. I hope that someone finds it useful until I'm able to get a nicer version online.
I cleaned up the score so that it matches what's sung and have finally remembered to post it. We tried it out for the first time, and our people are enthusiastic, but it's pretty easy. Funnily enough, we had to use the original score, as the printed copy got misplaced, and I apparently never put the new PDF on Google Drive, so the things which I mentioned were fine…but hey, I think that neat copies are good to have.
nb: our custom is to triple "Blessed be her glorious Assumption" as that's the title of the parish.
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