H
Hesychios
Guest
The Carpatho-Rusyns are noted for the chanting of the congregation in worship.I was a little surprised there wasn’t a choir - that I could tell - and no organ. There was much singing of course.
Just as in the Latin church for about 1400 years (I am not sure of the dates), musical instruments are not the norm, the singing voice is preferred. Polyphony got it’s start around the 12th or 13th century. The pipe organ in the Mass probably dates from the early Renaissance era and horn and wind instruments about the same time or perhaps a bit later.
Plainchant connects us with an earlier age in worship, when both the east and the west relied on the human voice alone, so it is nice to experience that at least occasionally. The Carpatho-Rusyns began to chant as a congregation in the late 1900’s, before that (in a parish setting) the cantors alone chanted, much as cantors in a synagog would sing solo.
That was an interesting comment.All the beauty and reverence of the old Latin mass, but in English.
Well, bloom where you are planted then.I hope to go again, but I’m too attached to the Latin Mass (available to me every weekend) to make a change at my age :byzsoc: Praised be Jesus Christ!