Why not interpret the quilisma a bit -- at least write a tiny round note, like an appogiatura sign -- to suggest the usual performance?
Much of it is indeed too slow. Not actually 99%, but quite a bit. Especially that which often is heard being done according to what is supposed to be the so-called 'Solesmes method'. Chant done by this method does not, really, have to be slow, but very often it is sung at a snail's pace - and it is astonishing that, inspired by its glacial tempo, snickers are not heard. (Is it any wonder that people don't like chant when this is what they hear? [No, it isn't!].) Further, any books that suggest 'an approximate tempo of 144-160 notes per minute' is inviting a kabuki-like performance. This is as ridiculous in respect to chant as it is for a Beethoven sonata. Chant, like any other music, must live and breathe. There is elasticity in every chant, often within a single word. Imposing any tempo norms on it is to put it into shackles. Weather, the room, acoustics, the text, its meaning, message, or tale, the voices singing it, the choirmaster's expertise, the occasion, and on and on are the arbiters of chant tempo - NOT the metronome, nor any book's presumed parameters."99% of chant... "
and in the other a pointer to Richard L Crocker, which I followed to the recommended sample of a gradual : Universi here.ghmus7
I can't help but make another comment...the "New Church' is so big on participation and "giving the voice to the people" etc. etc. But the music they write is so quirky, bad and irregular that it's impossible to sing. One suspects: is all this pile of music really written for the "voice of the assembly" or for their own concerts, recordings and performances?
In fact in all the parishes I've attended the hymns are only written as text, never with notation, even for the choir.
'one of these days I'm going to hum a tune to you to see if you know it, and you will say 'I don't know, what are the words'
...especially when you have to turn pages after the second stanza... :-/Also - I do love some hymnbooks with words and music separate.
Catherine, you might also appreciate this recent invention ... not mine, unfortunately ;-)I would mark up the text with pencil squiggles to help remember the melody and rhythm...clever, eh? lol
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