Chant : the origins, form, practice, and healing power of Gregorian chant

by Katharine W. Le Mée

Hardcover, 1994

Publication

New York : Bell Tower, c1994.

Call number

Aesthetics / LeMee

Barcode

BK-06880

ISBN

0517700379 / 9780517700372

Physical description

169 p.; 16 cm

Description

Canto Gregoriana, a collection of recordings of Spanish monks singing Gregorian chant, has appeared in the pop-music charts. This companion volume discusses why this music has such a calming effect on both singers and listeners, how it is sung, and how it originated and developed.

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member drbubbles
Buh-leh. Maybe 20% of this book is interesting information about the history & musicality of chant and its role in liturgy. The rest is new-age–ified nonsense about how chant can save the world. Lots of assertion and a few anecdotes about how chant evens out bodily energy and sound connects one
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organ with another and resonates us with the world and much other feebleminded nonsense of that sort. Granted, the interesting information is interesting, but it was scattered piecemeal through the nonsense, and I'm peed off that I had to slog through so much garbage to get to the gems.

If you want to acquire actual information about chant, you'd be better off finding another book. The only reason to bother with this one is that it has, in the back, the Latin text and English translations of the chants from the CD on the popularity of which this waste of trees was trying to piggyback.
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LibraryThing member PollyMoore3
I'd rather sing it than listen to it. Singing it is like vocal yoga, and this book explains why.
LibraryThing member Farree
If you don't have a copy of the 'Liber Usualis' and many recordings of chant to sing along with, or (preferably) a church where you can join the 'Schola Cantorum,' and sing chant throughout the year, don't bother with this. It will only frustrate you and cause you to feel like you can't relate to
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the music on the CDs. Most of the chants (on the CDs) were recorded in the 1950s and early '60s (before Vatican II), and released on vinyl. Most Catholic churches don't sing these chants anymore. It is unfortunate that this is the case, since these chants are some of the most spiritual and moving music of western civilization.
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Rating

½ (11 ratings; 3)
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