The mystery of the Incarnation of the Word lies at the heart of the Christian faith. It is celebrated just after the longest night of the year, when (in the northern hemisphere) the days begin to lengthen until we reach the summer solstice, which is associated with the figure of John the Baptist. To celebrate this moment, the Church deploys an exceptional virtually uninterrupted liturgical cycle in which the usual Offices are interspersed with four Masses.
The music is that of the ancient chant of the Church of Rome, one of the oldest repertories of which traces have remained in the collective memory of mankind. Up to the thirteenth century this repertory accompanied the papal liturgy. It disappeared with the installation of the papacy in Avignon, and sank into oblivion. Rediscovered in the early twentieth century, it aroused little enthusiasm among musicians, and only began to be studied properly, first from the liturgical, then from the musicological perspective, in the second half of the century. At this time, to distinguish it from Gregorian chant, it was named Old Roman chant.
Old Roman chant occupies a central position in the history of music. It is the keystone which gives meaning and coherence to what ought to be the musical consciousness of Western Europe and far beyond. For, looking back to the period before, it gives us the key to the filiation between the chant of the Temple of Jerusalem and the heritage of Greek music. Through the magic of music, sung texts become icons. Time is deployed with sovereign slowness confers on the sound a hieratic immanence in which time and space are united in a single vibrant truth.
Thanks so much for posting!!! Merry Christmas!
MissBarrett07 2 years ago
ALLELUIA. Dies sanctificatus illuxit nobis: venite gentes et adorate Dominum quia hodie descendit lux magna super terram.
ALLELUIA. Un día santo amaneció para nosotros. Vengan naciones y adoren al Señor porque hoy descendió una gran luz sobre la tierra. (Alleluia de la Misa del Día de Navidad)
MissBarrett07 2 years ago
Fantastik, I love to sing the gregorian version. This one seems so much older. I think I can hear som 1/4 tones? like in folkmusic?
Flopmajec 2 years ago