Can someone get me some good

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Pope_Noah_I

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…Ukrainian or Ruthenian Chant? I’m making a music video for school with clips from “Shoes of the Fisherman.”
 
You might try MCI

That would be Carpatho-Rusyn (Ruthenian).

That’s all I can think of in a hot fast second.

Michael
 
You might try MCI

That would be Carpatho-Rusyn (Ruthenian).

That’s all I can think of in a hot fast second.

Michael
MCI isn’t a terribly good site for hearing “prostopinie as it is done” since the recordings there are mostly tols for teaching cantors, done slowly, almost excruciatingly so, for cantors to learn the melodies from.
 
…Ukrainian or Ruthenian Chant? I’m making a music video for school with clips from “Shoes of the Fisherman.”
Noah,

See the very recent thread on resources for Eastern and Oriental chant - it contains links to a significant number of sites.

Many years,

Neil
 
Noah,

See the very recent thread on resources for Eastern and Oriental chant - it contains links to a significant number of sites.

Many years,

Neil
Neil,

A number of those links are now broken, or lead to a page where subsequent links no longer work. If I get the chance later on today, I will post which ones in the thread, or if you have time around Divine Liturgy, perhaps you can check.

In Jesus Christ,
 
A number of those links are now broken, or lead to a page where subsequent links no longer work. If I get the chance later on today, I will post which ones in the thread, or if you have time around Divine Liturgy, perhaps you can check.
Andre,

Thank you - I just checked and the Georgian (beautiful but extraordinarily difficult - almost impossible - to find), Copt, and Ethiopian links are broken, as is the link to Ivan Moody’s site (and one other, eluding me at the moment). The remainder would still provide links to the particular types of chant in which Noah is interested. Meanwhile, I’ll try to find replacements for those I mentioned and post them to the other thread.

Many years,

Neil
 
MCI isn’t a terribly good site for hearing “prostopinie as it is done” since the recordings there are mostly tols for teaching cantors, done slowly, almost excruciatingly so, for cantors to learn the melodies from.
That is very true about most of the recorded music there.
There are, however, some recorded harmonized pieces that are nicely executed, but still not “as it is done” in congregational style. Here are two links that give a better sense of how it’s done:

youtube.com/watch?v=zFI8NULHhHU
byzcath.org/fortpierce/SoundBlox/Liturgical_Music.html
 
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