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plainsong |
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plainsong or plainchant, the unharmonized chant of the medieval Christian liturgies in Europe and the Middle East; usually synonymous with Gregorian chant, the liturgical music of the Roman Catholic Church.
In the Western church four main dialects of plainsong developed—Ambrosian, Roman, Mozarabic and Gallican—that seem to have been derived from similar sources. Gregorian chant is named for Pope Gregory I Gregory I, Saint (Saint Gregory the Great), c.540–604, pope (590–604), a Roman; successor of Pelagius II. A Doctor of the Church, he was distinguished for his spiritual and temporal leadership. His feast is celebrated on Mar. 12. The origins of the chant go back to early Christian times, and it seems to have derived from musical practice in the Jewish synagogue and Greek musical theory. During the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance, and also in later times, the chant melodies were used as the basis for polyphonic composition. In the 19th cent. the Benedictine monks of Solesmes sought to restore the Gregorian chant to its original form and their published editions from 1889 onward became the official music of the Catholic Church. The texts of plainsong are the words of the Mass, the Psalms, canticles, and certain verse hymns. The tonality of Gregorian chant is based on the system of eight modes (see mode mode, in music. BibliographySee W. Apel, Gregorian Chant (1958); J. R. Bryden and D. G. Hughes, ed., An Index of Gregorian Chant (2 vol., 1969). |
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While the latter work's smooth prose immerses the reader in an oddly mystical world, the former is the plainsong of a good and holy man, an aging preacher in 1950s Iowa, who selflessly renders his history in an epistle to the young son who will soon outlive him. Standing in her tiny studio, surrounded by these peculiarly arresting works while what sounds like plainsong issues from a small portable audio box in a corner, it isn't hard to grasp the connection Byrnes draws between her art and Tantric practice. The High Plains are the backdrop for Plainsong and Eventide (Knopf), two novels by Kent Haruf. |
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