Ce groupe est un lieu d’échange sur la modalité du chant grégorien et des répertoires apparentés à ce chant.
Catalogues formules de centonisation - Tonaires
Bonjour, Je suis à la recherche de catalogues des formules de centonisation. Je ne sais pas s'ils existent de tels catalogues pour le répertoire grégorien. Je sais qu'ils existent pour le répertoire byzantin. Si non, est-qu'ils existent des tonaires musicales? J'aimerais comparer surtout les formules cadencielles du répertoire que j'analyse (mss du Saint Sépulcre) avec le répertoire "européen". Merci beaucoup!
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Message from Svetlana Kujumdzieva
Dear Colleagues and Friends,
This is just to inform you that my last book has just been published by the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. The title of the book is: "THE EARLY OKTOECHOI: SOURCES, LITURGY AND CHANT REPERTORY (BASED ON SOURCES UNTIL THE 13TH CENTURY)", 288 pages, ISBN 978-954-9787-21-4.
In the book are studied more than 90 primary sources from the 4th/5th to the 13th century in Greek, Syriac, Georgian and Armenian in order to find out when exactly the book of the Oktoechos was compiled and what kind of repertory like was included in the earliest sources.
The book could be ordered at the following e mail address: kmnc@kmnc.bg kmnc@bas.bg
All the best,
Svetlana Kujumdzieva
C'est très intéressant.
New Article: Byzantinische Zeitschrift. Volume 106, Issue 1, pages 65–82.
Altrömische Offertoriums-Gesänge in medialen Tonarten. Zum Verhältnis des byzantinischen zum altrömischen und gregorianischen Choral
Neil K. Moran
Abstract
The present study should be understood as a contribution to the disputed relationship of Byzantine to Old Roman and Gregorian chant. It is based on a study of offertory chants in the relatively little-known medial modes. The author discusses four Old Roman offertories in the second medial mode in the recently published book Inside the Offertory by Rebecca Maloy: In die sollemnitatis, Erit vobis, Confirma hoc and Oravi deum meum. Comparisons are made with chants based on Crucem tuam of the Old Roman repertory. In a previous article in Plainsong and Medieval Music the author demonstrated that the medial characteristics disappeared in the same texts in the Gregorian repertoire. In her comparisons of Old Roman and Gregorian sources Rebecca Maloy comes to a completely different conclusion. She argues that the so-called „Old Roman“ melodies are late medieval creations and she characterizes them with the negative term ‘formulaicism’. In this article her conclusions are called into question.