@thecommentmonster The Extraordinary form is the Roman Rite. The Ambrosian Rite is another variation of the Latin Rites. It seems from these videos that the deacon and subdeacon go to the sedilia whilst the celebrant does the asperges, but with the masters of ceremonies instead of the deacon and subdeacon. The prayers of the foot of the altar seem to be from another psalm as well. And obviously in the high mass like this the notable difference is the Ambrosian chant.
@thecommentmonster Apparently I was wrong, This is not yet the Holy Mass. They are praying one part of the divine office, my guess that it is the office of terce or sext.
Can someone please explain the major differences between the Ambrosian Rite and the Extraordinary Form? thanks!
thecommentmonster 8 months ago
@thecommentmonster The Extraordinary form is the Roman Rite. The Ambrosian Rite is another variation of the Latin Rites. It seems from these videos that the deacon and subdeacon go to the sedilia whilst the celebrant does the asperges, but with the masters of ceremonies instead of the deacon and subdeacon. The prayers of the foot of the altar seem to be from another psalm as well. And obviously in the high mass like this the notable difference is the Ambrosian chant.
AdversusHaereses 4 months ago
@thecommentmonster Apparently I was wrong, This is not yet the Holy Mass. They are praying one part of the divine office, my guess that it is the office of terce or sext.
AdversusHaereses 3 months ago
Comment removed
adelswardfersen 1 year ago
Music has always had a liturgical fonction: to accompany an act, express a theological idea or to "inspire" congregations.
This plainchant is...plain! Equal notes and inexpressive.
The priests seem to just be waiting around for it to end. that's not the way!
The servers (Altar boys) are moving too fast for dignity.
Look at the Sarum Rite from Merton college to get a better idea of all this.
1401JSC 2 years ago
About the plainchant.... this is ambrosian chant that's why it sounds different and "plain". It's very different from gregorian chant.
DanVilAl 2 years ago
I should have known :s
1401JSC 2 years ago
No problem =)
DanVilAl 2 years ago