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Phemie
Guest
This is what I’d found before on another website.
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I’m in a schola that sings for one Mass a month, plus occasional feast days (last was Assumption) and weddings.Have you ever sung chant as part of a choir?
Same here, about the same frequencies. We also do the Liturgy of the Hours (Vespers) in Advent and Lent, and Lauds on Holy Saturday. Plus we do recitals; our mission is to make Gregorian chant known. As church attendance isn’t so great in Québec, we do a lot of that through recitals, fundraisers, etc.I’m in a schola that sings for one Mass a month, plus occasional feast days (last was Assumption) and weddings.
That is the toughest part of getting a schola going. This can take time…The tough part is blending the voices so that we all sing with one voice, no one voice dominating.
Exactly, and because of that ex-opera singers are not always the best candidates for a schola. The founding principle of blending is humility.That is the toughest part of getting a schola going. This can take time…
Getting rid of the American 'R’s is also an ongoing effort.That is the toughest part of getting a schola going. This can take time…
Oh man is this ever true! Fortunately our schola is made up almost entirely of native French speakers, so we know how to roll our “R’s”, but when I hear a schola made up of anglophones… it can be cringe-worthy.Getting rid of the American 'R’s is also an ongoing effort.
I still go to Southern Gospel singings in the area, but the voice usually shot by the end of the 3rd or 4th song, and I’m reduced to sotto voce for the rest of the event. However, at the most recent one (a week ago yesterday) I was able to sing full-voice for the entire three hours; it’s been a long time since I’ve been able to do that.I hope it isn’t ‘wrecked’ but rather 'recovering!"
I would assume we mean the kind of chant that some members of the faithful would have done at some point in the past? In other words, plainchant?Actually simple tone is easy enough for most people. Full Gregorian chant is complex and difficult for experienced singers and takes an enormous amount of work to accomplish well. As someone who has sung the Latin Mass, I can say that we practiced—a lot. The parish did not sing the chant except for those they knew well. This held true for English hymns as well. As a note I find that for me the Latin Chant adds a pious beauty to mass that hymns do not