Gregorian chant is the central tradition of Western plainchant, a form of monophonic, unaccompanied sacred song of the western Roman Catholic Church. Gregorian chant developed mainly in western and central Europe during the 9th and 10th centuries, with later additions and redactions.
Gregorian chant is the central tradition of Western plainchant, a form of monophonic, unaccompanied sacred song of the western Roman Catholic Church. Gregorian chant developed mainly in western and central Europe during the 9th and 10th centuries, with later additions and redactions.
many but i dont know
Gregorian chants were used as a means of group meditation and prayer by monks who sang them together in monasteries.
Latin. Latin is no longer a spoken language, but is still used in music.
* Genre: Classical There are arguments concerning the proper use of the term "Gregorian" in reference to chants. Generally the term refers to any chants written in the church modes, often employing texts from the psalms or the gospels. They developed during the papacy of Gregory the Great (d.604) but generally refer to the Church music of the 11th through 13th centuries. There is a distinction between Roman and Gregorian chants that obfuscates the origin and characterizes true Gregorian chant (that which developed with Gregory I and Gregory II), and Roman chants. There certainly are distinctions that scholars have drawn; however, the distinctions most accurately refer to different styles than to two different types of chants. The Gregorian chant contained phrases that are aesthetically pleasing to the eye often in the form of arches. Musical strains were often related to the text in the context of the contours of the musical line and what the text is addressing. Clearly there was also a balance between melisma and syllabic writing without an over abundance of the former. Though there were exceptions to the eight Church modes, most Gregorian chants were written in that vein. http://www.answers.com/topic/gregorian-chant
cantus firmus
a gregorian chant was used as the base part for the motet and was called the cantus firmus
many but i dont know
Gregorian Chant named after Pope Gregory the Great who compiled all the chants that were being used at the time.
Gregorian chants were used as a means of group meditation and prayer by monks who sang them together in monasteries.
Plane or Gregorian chant.
Latin. Latin is no longer a spoken language, but is still used in music.
Pope St. Gregory the Great is created for inventing the Gregorian chant. This unaccompanied sacred song has been used by the Roman Catholic Church since the 9th and 10th centuries.
Cantus Firmus
Pope Gregory I the Great is the pope you are referring to. He did not write Gregorian Chants. He compiled and cataloged the plain songs that were used in liturgies at the time. Later they became known as Gregorian Chants.
Roman Catholic AnswerCatholic "Church music", if you will, started as Plain Chant, which is rooted in the chant that was used in the Jewish Temple in Jersualem. It is now often called Gregorian Chant as Pope St. Gregory the Great did an awful lot to promote it and codify it when he was Pope in the late 6th century, early 7th century.
The word that contains all the vowels is "euouae." It is a musical term used in medieval music, specifically in Gregorian chant notation.
* Genre: Classical There are arguments concerning the proper use of the term "Gregorian" in reference to chants. Generally the term refers to any chants written in the church modes, often employing texts from the psalms or the gospels. They developed during the papacy of Gregory the Great (d.604) but generally refer to the Church music of the 11th through 13th centuries. There is a distinction between Roman and Gregorian chants that obfuscates the origin and characterizes true Gregorian chant (that which developed with Gregory I and Gregory II), and Roman chants. There certainly are distinctions that scholars have drawn; however, the distinctions most accurately refer to different styles than to two different types of chants. The Gregorian chant contained phrases that are aesthetically pleasing to the eye often in the form of arches. Musical strains were often related to the text in the context of the contours of the musical line and what the text is addressing. Clearly there was also a balance between melisma and syllabic writing without an over abundance of the former. Though there were exceptions to the eight Church modes, most Gregorian chants were written in that vein. http://www.answers.com/topic/gregorian-chant