Which is a practical argument against semiology. If you think I'm promoting a "nuances of nuances" approach, you've misunderstood. Mensuralism is fundamentally about a simple 1:2 proportion with a steady beat, not a limitless range of agogic nuances.Having more than one person sing the ‘nuances of the nuances’ together requires a massive amount of time and energy.
Exactly! My concern is with making something available that's not only historically faithful but also user-friendly for modern singers. What people do with it interpretively and artistically is up to them. If people find my recordings unmusical, nothing would make me much happier than for someone to take my edition and produce a really stunning rendition of the chant. But they aren't! It seems like every other month, I see yet another cantor or schola announcing a project to record all the Sunday propers according to the Solesmes method or some variation of it (ok, maybe this is a slight exaggeration!). Why? Isn't there plenty of that already? Different priorities, I suppose, but I would rather hear recordings in a style that hasn't been recorded hundreds of times already.I also understand that aesthetics don't really have to do with your arguments, and to a certain point they are subjective.
If people find my recordings unmusical, nothing would make me much happier than for someone to take my edition and produce a really stunning rendition of the chant. But they aren't!
I don't disagree. My problem is when people take it and claim it's the original version. As for "meeting the changes of circumstances and situation," the only general changes in circumstance were the introduction of organum and ignorance of the authentic traditional rhythm, which was lost and forgotten. Could we not make an argument that the Medicaean editions were a good and legitimate development, traditional, reverent, prayerful, beautiful, edifying, etc.? And they were in use much longer than the Liber Usualis! But there the alterations were deliberate. Is that the distinction you make concerning what constitutes a "valid tradition"? If, centuries earlier, a reciting tone was changed from ti to do, or a note was altered to avoid a tritone, how is that essentially different from truncating a melisma or making it coincide with syllabic stress? What determines whether a tradition—or innovation—is valid or invalid? Maybe it simply comes down to what a particular Pope wants at a particular time period (and I intend no sarcasm with this remark). Maybe it depends on reception by the faithful at large. Maybe! But maybe antiquity also has something to do with it. Today's gradual includes the so-called Johannine Comma. If the verse is a fourth-century addition, as many scholars believe, does that necessarily mean it's not canonical scripture? Again, above my pay grade. In chant, the preface to the Vatican edition also mentions the right of later centuries to contribute to the patrimony of the Church, but surely that doesn't mean entirely neglecting/rejecting the rhythmic indications of the oldest sources.But I think the late Medieval chant is a valid tradition.
But maybe antiquity also has something to do with it.
But there the alterations were deliberate. Is that the distinction you make concerning what constitutes a "valid tradition"?
In chant, the preface to the Vatican edition also mentions the right of later centuries to contribute to the patrimony of the Church, but surely that doesn't mean entirely neglecting/rejecting the rhythmic indications of the oldest sources.
thisIf it causes irreverence, distraction, unnecessary difficulty for the singers, it is bad. If it causes devotion, beauty, recollection, it is good. I wouldn't necessarily condemn the tampering with the melismas in the Medicaean editions (although I certainly wouldn't be the one to suggest something like that), but I would see if the result is beautiful and edifying.
I'm generally not a fan of non-congregational singing in octaves, but this doesn't strike me as ugly or unedifying:I would see if the result is beautiful and edifying.
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