Old Roman Chant, a musical palimpsest.
We have used a photograph of a wall
of one of the most fascinating churches in Rome -Santa Maria Antiqua- as an
illustration for the announcement of the course about Old Roman Chant. This is no coincidence. Not
only is it one of the oldest churches in the eternal city, but its walls bear
witness to the first centuries of Roman liturgy and the various influences and
changes of the Rome of the first millennium. It also reflects the time of the
Greek influence in Rome and its liturgy, as well as the subsequent stages that
followed.
This changing vitality comes to an
abrupt halt in 847 when an earthquake seriously damages the church which ceases
to be used and, from the 11th century, is buried for more than a millennium.
When it was discovered in the 20th century, one of the most striking aspects
which attracts the attention is the image that we reproduce, in which we can
see the superimposed remains of different layers of paintings from the
different periods that have been overlapped, which is why this wall is called
the ‘palimpsest’: in reference to the manuscripts of antiquity in which we find
texts overwritten over others.
Old Roman Chant in a sense has a
parallel history to this palimpsest, recording different stages in the
development of liturgical music in Rome and at one point being ‘frozen’ in
time. In the case of chant, due to its immaterial character, we cannot have an
observable testimony such as this wall, the challenge is therefore to be able
to revive its fundamental features through the traces that it has left us.
As this is
a theoretical and practical introductory course, no previous knowledge is
necessary, although it is advisable to read the documents that can be
downloaded from this links.
Here you can read an article by Marcel Pérès on the Old Roman Chant.
https://www.dropbox.com/t/aoOqET1xJScHnnoT
And here you can read a more generic article explaining the fundamentals of Marcel Pérès' interpretation of early liturgical music.
https://www.dropbox.com/t/AzVNLpSJY4aW0rgp
And a full discography of Marcel Pérès and his Ensemble Organum.
https://www.dropbox.com/t/G9BKdNWn0oRiUAt9
There is not obligatory to attend both days.
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