There are some recordings of what little Greek and Roman music there is, but interpretation is extremely conjectural
That said, I question your premise. Chant is the living music of the Church, with an established performance practice (Solesmes). You don't want to give the impression that it's a museum piece.
But what does it even mean? Are there no non-Solesmes performance practices that are "established" for Gregorian chant? Accentualists, semiologists, mensuralists, and equalists would disagree with your assessment. Is the chanting of the Sistine Choir, which doesn't follow the Solesmes method for Papal Masses, somehow non-representative of the living music of the Church? No, I think the situation is quite the opposite. The ones who most give the impression of chant as a museum piece are the ones clinging the most tenaciously to outdated scholarship, frozen since the late 1950s, usually under the pretext of aesthetic preference masquerading as obedience, authenticity, and/or purity. Like it or not, the last ecumenical council called for renewed scholarship, a return to the sources, and a more critical edition of the chant books published since St. Pius X. How many are taking the call seriously and doing their part?Jeffrey, I like your point about performance practice. :)
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