Skip to content
You are not logged in |Login  
     
Limit search to available items
Record:   Prev Next
Resources
More Information
book
BookPrinted Material
Author Maloy, Rebecca.

Title Inside the offertory : aspects of chronology and transmission / Rebecca Maloy.

Publication Info. New York : Oxford University Press, 2010.

Item Status

Location Call No. Status OPAC Message Public Note Gift Note
 Talbott Circulating Collection  ML3082 .M298 2010    Available  ---
Description viii, 449 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 424-440) and indexes.
Summary The offertory has played a crucial role in recent vigorous debates about the origins of Gregorian chant. Its elaborate solo verses are among the most splendid of chant melodies, yet the verses ceased to be performed in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, making them among the least known and studied members of the repertory. Rebecca Maloy now offers the first comprehensive investigation of the offertory, drawing upon its music, texts, and liturgical history to shed new light on its origins and chronology. Maloy addresses issues that are at the very heart of chant scholarship, such as the relationship between the Gregorian and Old Roman melodies, the nature of oral transmission, the presence of non-Roman pieces in the Gregorian repertory, and the influence of theoretical thought on the transmission of the melodies. Although the Old Roman chant versions were not recorded in writing until the eleventh century, it has long been assumed that they closely reflect the eighth-century state of the melodies. Maloy illustrates, however, that rather than preserving a pristine earlier version of the melodies, the prolonged period of oral transmission from the eighth to the eleventh centuries instead enforced a formulaic trend. Demonstrating that certain musical and textual traits of the offertory are distributed in distinct patterns by liturgical season, she outlines new chronological layers within the repertory, and along the way, explores the presence and implications of foreign imports into the Roman and Gregorian repertories. Carefully weighing questions surrounding the origins of elaborate verse melodies, Maloy deftly establishes that these melodies reached their final form at a relatively late date [Publisher description].
Contents Introduction -- The texts of the offertories -- The Gregorian and Roman offertories -- The Milanese melodic witness and the question of "Italianate" style -- Origin and chronology -- The offertories in manuscripts : an introduction to the edition.
Subject Offertories (Music) -- History and criticism.
Offertories (Music)
Gregorian chants -- History and criticism.
Gregorian chants.
Offertorium.
Gregorianischer Gesang.
Offertorium.
Quelle.
Gregorianischer Gesang.
Chronological Term Geschichte 700-1200
Geschichte
Geschichte 700-1200.
Geschichte.
Genre/Form Criticism, interpretation, etc.
Verzeichnis.
ISBN 9780195315172 (alkaline paper)
0195315170 (alkaline paper)