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Plainsong in the Age of Polyphony

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From at least the eighth century and for about a thousand years the repertory of music known as Georgian chant, or plainsong, formed the largest body of written music AND was the most frequently performed and the most assiduously studied in Western civilisation. But plainsong did not follow rigid conventions. It seems increasingly clear that, whatever may have been intended with respect to uniformity and tradition, the practice of plainsong varied considerably within time and place. It is just this variation, this living quality of plainsong, that these essays address. The contributors have sought information from a wide variety of areas: liturgy, architecture, art history, secular and ecclesiastical history and hagiography, as a step towards reassembling the tesserae of cultural history into the rich mosaic from which they came.

256 pages, Paperback

First published January 31, 1992

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About the author

Thomas Forrest Kelly

25 books10 followers
An American musicologist, musician, and scholar. He is the Morton B. Knafel Professor of Music at Harvard University.

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