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Explore the evolution of Catholic worship practices, from Gregorian chant to liturgical drama, delving into the significance of key ceremonies and musical styles. Discover the origins and development of liturgical elements such as Psalms, Mass components, and medieval musical notation. Uncover the transformation of chant into vibrant storytelling through liturgical drama.
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The Establishment of a Catholic Tradition from ca. 800
Liturgy Content and form of Christian worship
The liturgical year (some major festivals) • Fixed date — Christmas • preceded by Advent (four Sundays) • Christmastide (twelve days) • Epiphany • Movable date — Easter • preceded by Lent (forty days, beginning on Ash Wednesday) • Followed by Eastertide (fifty days) • Pentecost
The monastic liturgical day — the Divine Office • Matins • Lauds (sunrise) • Lesser Hours • Prime • Terce • Sext • None • Vespers (sunset) • Compline
The liturgy of the Divine Office (except Matins) • Verse (and Hymn) • Psalms (3–5) and their antiphons • Scripture reading • Responsory • Hymn • Verse • Canticle with its antiphon • Benediction
The Mass (from about 1000) – some aspects of its design • Two parts • Fore-Mass • Eucharist • Two relationships of movements to the day • Proper • Ordinary • Two types of performance • spoken, or intoned • sung
Fore-Mass (teaching service) • Introit — Psalm verse framed by antiphon • Kyrie — Lord, have mercy • Gloria — Glory to God in the Highest • Collect — prayer of the day • Epistle — reading • Gradual • Alleluia • Sequence • Gospel — reading • Credo — Nicene Creed
Eucharist (Holy Communion) • Offertory Psalm — presentation of bread and wine • Eucharistic prayers • SANCTUS — Holy, holy, holy • Canon • Pater Noster — the Lord’s Prayer • Agnus Dei — Lamb of God • Communion Psalm — during the supper • Postcommunion — prayer • Ite Missa Est — dismissal
Chant The music of the liturgy
Musical style of the chant • Scoring — a cappella male voices • direct • responsorial • antiphonal • Dynamics — follow phrase contour, text • Rhythm — unmeasured • Melody — vocal, phrase-based • Recitation tones • Psalm tones • Free chant • Harmony — modal • Texture — monophony • Form — strophic (psalms, hymn), free forms
Music theory of the chant • Eight (+ one) Psalm tones — identified by • tenor • melodic inflections — intonation, mediant, termination • Eight ecclesiastical modes (to coordinate antiphons to Psalm tones) — identified by • final • dominant • ambsitus
Chant notation • Daseian — words in spaces on “staff” • Neumes — indicate melodic gestures • written above words — from eighth century • heighted • Staff • single line • lines for F and C — indicated by clefs or colors • four-line staff — from eleventh century
Developments from the chant • Melody (not single notes) as unit for creativity • Need for creativity within restrictions of the fixed body of liturgical music • Medieval idea of creation — principle of gloss, i.e., to elaborate given idea • Examples • manuscript illumination • literary gloss • church architecture
Trope — addition of words and/or music to existing chant • To glorify worship and interpret the liturgy • Began ca. ninth century, continued to 12th • Usually applied to • Mass — antiphonal chants, Ordinary • Office — antiphons, responsories, versicles, Benedicamus • soloists' passages (more likely to be troped than choir sections) • Addition of words to melisma — prosula • common in Kyries • probably prehistory of Sequence • Addition of melismatic music • Addition of entirely new segments of words and music • preludes to existing chants • interpolations
Sequence — originated as trope to melismatic jubilus at end of Alleluia • Addition of “free” jubilus as optional replacement or extension • Prosula principle applied to jubilus — prosa • Sequence — independent movement of Mass after Alleluia • poetic use of meter and eventually rhyme • form usually paired strophes — a bb cc dd - - - n
Important Sequences — after reforms of sixteenth century • Victimae paschali laudes (Easter) • Wipo (early eleventh century) • Veni sancte spiritus (Pentecost) • (eleventh century) • Lauda Sion (Corpus Christi) • Thomas Aquinas? (thirteenth century) • Dies irae (Requiem) • Thomas of Celano (thirteenth century) • Stabat Mater (restored in eighteenth century) • Jacopone da Todi (ca. 1230–1306)
Development of liturgical drama • First stage — action added to liturgical observance • Second stage — trope to provide new dialogue • Easter play — from Mass Introit or Matins — ca. tenth century • dialogue performance — Quem quaeritis, etc. • action — stage directions from Winchester 965–975 • Other subjects • Christmas (eleventh century), Fleury Herod (twelfth century) • other biblical stories — Beauvais Daniel (twelfth century) • stories of saints • Removed from church — mystery and miracle plays • nonclerical actors and musicians • vernacular or macaronic (polyglot)