enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Antiphon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiphon

    When a chant consists of alternating verses (usually sung by a cantor) and responses (usually sung by the congregation), a refrain is needed. The looser term antiphony is generally used for any call and response style of singing, such as the kirtan or the sea shanty and other work songs, and songs and worship in African and African-American ...

  3. Antiphonary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiphonary

    Printed antiphonary (ca. 1700) open to Vespers of Easter Sunday. (Musée de l'Assistance Publique – Hôpitaux de Paris)An antiphonary or antiphonal is one of the liturgical books intended for use in choro (i.e. in the liturgical choir), and originally characterized, as its name implies, by the assignment to it principally of the antiphons used in various parts of the Latin liturgical rites.

  4. Gregorian Antiphonary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregorian_Antiphonary

    The Gregorian Antiphonary was an early Christian antiphonary, i.e. book of choral music to be sung antiphonally in services; it is associated traditionally with Pope Gregory I. Background [ edit ]

  5. Improperia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Improperia

    The second couplet is sung antiphonally by two cantors of the second choir, and the third couplet by two cantors of the first choir; after each the two choirs respond as above. The nine following reproaches are sung alternately by the cantors of each choir, beginning with the second, with the full choir responding after each reproach with the ...

  6. Anglican chant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglican_chant

    This distinctive type of chant is a significant element of Anglican church music. Anglican chant was formerly in widespread use in Anglican and Episcopal churches, but today, Anglican chant is sung primarily in Anglican cathedrals and parish churches that have retained a choral liturgical tradition.

  7. Chant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chant

    Chants may range from a simple melody involving a limited set of notes to highly complex musical structures, often including a great deal of repetition of musical subphrases, such as Great Responsories and Offertories of Gregorian chant. Chant may be considered speech, music, or a heightened or stylized form of speech.

  8. Gregorian chant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregorian_chant

    Gregorian chant is sung in the Office during the canonical hours and in the liturgy of the Mass. Texts known as accentus are intoned by bishops, priests, and deacons, mostly on a single reciting tone with simple melodic formulae at certain places in each sentence. More complex chants are sung by trained soloists and choirs.

  9. Call and response (music) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call_and_response_(music)

    It has influenced popular music singing styles. [10] Presentinge line was characterized a slow, drawn-out heterophonic and often profusely ornamented melody, while a clerk or precentor (song leader) chanted the text line by line before it was sung by the congregation. Scottish Gaelic psalm-singing by prepresentinge line was the earliest form of ...