Sequentia: Lauda Sion
Вставка
- Опубліковано 2 чер 2015
- gp118 The aim of the Graduale project is to record all of the chants contained in the current Graduale Romanum / Graduale Triplex - see gregoriana.sk/graduale/ for description.
If you would like to encourage me to continue this work, please comment, like, subscribe... or follow me: / gradualeproject , / gradualeproject
Look for the chant in Graduale Romanum (1974), p. 379 (SS.MI CORPORIS ET SANGUINIS CHRISTI)
Listen to my recordings:
open.spotify.com/artist/6QYkt...
/ marek-klein
#Graduale1974CorpusChristi
#Graduale1961CorpusChristi
Para quem crê e penetra o sentido pela graça e pelo entendimento, trata-se de um canto simplesmente divino, de ir às lágrimas!
Beautiful rendition, this is the tune I was thought in choir many years back & today I listened to it inspired
Well done! Thank you for this.
I'm astounded at the range of this chant! I think it extends a twelfth. I don't remember seeing such a wide span in the melody in a chant before.
It is not uncommon for Sequences and other younger Chants :)
Beautiful!
Deo gratias! 🌟
Such a lovely rendition
thank you
Me encanta! Muy bien
very good.
Thank you!
There’s an Epiphany chant with pretty much the exact same beggining; it’s called Verbum bonum et suave.
There are others too, Lauda Sion is not the oldest sequence using this melody, it is just the most famous...
GradualeProject I didn’t know, thank you!
2:34 - Corrigendum: "Quod in *carnem* transit panis" instead of "Quod in *carmen* transit panis".
Thank you for the catch! I will make a new video.
Beautiful but what happened to the Amen and Alleluia at the end?
Thank you!
In the current Graduale (1974) there is no "Amen. Alleluia" at the end.
Why ever were they not included? More Novus Ordo tampering with traditional liturgy? Were they dropped from the sequences for Easter and Pentecost as well?
It really doesn't matter anymore as all the sequences are no longer sung in the Novus Ordo. But thank goodness they're still being sung in the extraordinary form.
Yes, they were dropped from all the sequences.As far as I know, their endeavor generally is to restore the chants to their more ancient versions. I have read somewhere, that the "Amen. Alleluia." was added to the sequences in the sixteenth century.
Thank you for the information. I will have to do some research. As far as the Alleluia is concerned, it returns to (Western) liturgy during the Easter cycle having been omitted during the Lenten period. It would seem liturgically counterintuitive to omit it in at least the Easter and Pentecost sequences regardless of when it was added. It's just one (powerful) word and along with the Amen, two powerful words!
Thank you for your uploads. Many of them are in a liturgy playlist I've created for myself on UA-cam.
@@GradualeProject ah i see....that's why there's no Amen and Alleluya in current versions....