Full Description
This text uses detailed analysis of the eigth-mode tracts in addressing some of the still unresolved questions of chant scholarship. The first question is that of the nature of the relationship between Old Roman and Gregorian chant, the second, of the relationship between oral and written modes of transmission in the ecclesiastical culture of the Middle Ages. Also, the Middle Ages saw a transition to a culture more dependent on writing. The book investigates the effect this transition had on the way eighth-mode tracts were understood by those who performed and notated them.
Contents
The primary evidence; analysis of the eighth-mode tracts; methods of transmissions of the early chant tradition; the Mediaeval understanding of the eighth-mode tracts 1 -characteristics of the notated sources and theoretical writing; the Mediaeval understanding of the eighth-mode tracts 2 - tract composition in the 10th and 11th centuries; questions of chronology.