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Oral and Written Transmission in Chant

  • Editor: Kelly, Thomas Forrest
the introductions to each volume are excellent

Book

$228.75

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Contents

  • Contents: Introduction
  • Part I Music Writing: The early history of music writing in the West, Leo Treitler
  • De accentibus toni oritur nota quae dicitur neuma: prosodic accents, the accent theory, and the Paleofrankish script, Charles M. Atkinson. Part II Notation and Performance: Gregorian chant: the restoration of the chant and 75 years of recording, Mary Ber
  • The Pontificio Istituto di Musica Sacra in Rome and the semiological school of Dom Eugene Cardine, Nino Albarosa
  • The performance of plainchant: some preliminary observations of the new era, Lance W. Brunner. Part III Oral and Written Transmission: Homer and Gregory: the transmission of epic poetry and plainchant, Leo Treitler
  • 'Centonate' chant: Aoebles Flickwerk or E pluribus unus?, Leo Treitler
  • Evidence for the traditional view of the transmission of Gregorian chant, David G. Hughes
  • Charlemagne's archetype of Gregorian chant, Kenneth Levy
  • 'Communications', concerning Levy and Hughes, above, Leo Treitler
  • Levy's response
  • Hughes's response
  • The debate about the oral and written transmission of chant, LA!szlA(3) Dobszay
  • On Gregorian orality, Kenneth Levy
  • The transmission of Western chant in the 8th and 9th centuries: evaluating Kenneth Levy's reading of the evidence, Emma Hornby
  • Chant research at the turn of the century and the analytical programme of Helmut Hucke, Edward Nowacki
  • Ways of telling stories, Susan Rankin
  • Interrelationships among Gregorian chants: an alternative view of creativity in early chant, Theodore Karp
  • Index.