Well - I would take anything Wikipedia said with a large pinch of salt. I have just finished reading Hywel Williams study of Charlemagne and the Carolingian Empire which has a couple of pages on the subject of spread of Roman chant northwards. He says nothing about the clergy being forced to use it on pain of death.

I can't quote the whole section in the book but needless to say it was much more complicated than that. Among other things chant as performed in Rome did not remain static. There were significant changes to it during the period in question.

What Williams concludes by saying is -

"A uniform chant remained the Carolingian goal and a New Hymnal was issued during the reign of Louis the Pious (Charlemagne's son). But Gregorian chant as it evolved during the next two centuries was a synthesis of Carolingian, ancient Roman and the Gallican plainchant which had prevailed under the Merovingians".

Monica


----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Wheeler" <[email protected]>
To: "Tony" <[email protected]>
Cc: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 14, 2012 1:11 AM
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Nazi rules for jazz performers


Ironically fitting for this thread, the domination of Gregorian Chant over other forms of chant came through the use of extremely draconian methods...

"Gregorian chant appeared in a remarkably uniform state across Europe within a short time. Charlemagne, once elevated to Holy Roman Emperor, aggressively spread Gregorian chant throughout his empire to consolidate religious and secular power, requiring the clergy to use the new repertory on pain of death."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregorian_chant

Mark




On Mar 14, 2012, at 12:01 AM, Tony wrote:


  Thanks Gary
  I tried to find information about  what the church prohibited in
  medieval and renaissance Europe( some of you here may have some useful
  links) While searching for the Council of Trent I came across this
  list, a summary of approved  music

  The Church's doctrine on liturgical music can be summarized in seven
  points ....

  1 Types of Music Appropriate for the Mass. The music of the Mass and
  the Sacred Liturgy of the must be either Gregorian Chant, or must be
  similar to Gregorian Chant. The primary example of music similar to
  Gregorian Chant is Sacred Polyphony, exemplified by the compositions of
  Palestrina.

  2 Characteristics of Music Appropriate for the Mass. The music of the
  Mass must have "grandeur yet simplicity; solemnity and majesty," and
  must have "dignity," and "gravity," should be "exalted" and "sublime,"
  should bring "splendor and devotion" to the liturgy, and must be
  conducive to prayer and liturgical participation, rather than
  distracting the listener from prayer. It must be music that befits the
  profound nature of the Mass, which is the Sacrifice of Jesus Christ. As
  Pope Paul VI put it: "The primary purpose of sacred music is to evoke
  God's majesty and to honor it. But at the same time music is meant to
  be a solemn affirmation of the most genuine nobility of the human
  person, that of prayer."

  3 Types of Musical Instruments Appropriate for the Mass. The instrument
  that is most "directly" fitted for the Mass is the classical pipe
  organ. Other instruments, however, can be adapted to the Mass,
  including wind instruments, and smaller bowed instruments.

  4 Types of Music Prohibited in the Mass. All secular and entertainment
  styles of music are utterly prohibited in the Mass. The introduction of
  inappropriate music into the liturgy is regarded as "deplorable
  conduct."

  5 Types of Instruments Prohibited in the Mass. All "noisy or frivolous"
  instruments are prohibited for use in the Mass.The specific instruments
  named by the Popes have included guitars, pianos, drums, cymbals, and
  tambourines. "Bands" also are prohibited, as are all automated forms of
  music (recordings, automatic instruments, etc).

  6 Adapting Musical Traditions of Indigenous Cultures, and
  "Universality." The musical traditions of particular cultures can and
  should be incorporated into the Sacred Liturgy, but only in such a way
  that they will be recognized as sacred ("good" in the words of Pope St.
  Pius X) by people of all cultures. That is, all such music must have
  the characteristic of "universality."

  7 Preserving the Church's Musical Tradition. The treasury of the
  Church's sacred music is to be carefully preserved, rather than
  discarded

  aEUR|written in 2002 ..... [1]http://www.matthewhoffman.net/music/

  I guess compiled by a traditionalist - I know people who go to churches
  in the UK and Latin America where these rules are vigorously flouted

  And resumably the lute is a  'noisy' instrument associated with
  thedreadful  frivolities of pianos and guitars
  Tony

  ---

  --

References

  1. http://www.matthewhoffman.net/music/


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