The Schola Cantorum was the trained papal choir during the Middle Ages, specializing in the performance of plainchant for the purpose of rendering the music in church. In the fourth century, Pope Sylvester I was said to have inaugurated the first Schola Cantorum, but it was Pope Gregory I who established the school on a firm basis and endowed it.[1] The choir ranged anywhere from twenty to thirty boys or men. Only the most skilled in singing were selected to participate in the Schola Cantorum.[2]
Ancient heritage
editDue to the lack of a system of notation and theoretical writings, there is very little known about the musical systems prior to the Greeks.[3] Musicians of the middle age did not have a single example of Greek or Roman music. It was not until the Renaissance that historians discovered only a few ancient songs and hymns of the classical era.[4] From these surviving specimens, we can see that primitive music developed in two major ways. The first was that singing was primarily monophonic – that is, melody without harmony or counterpoint. The soloist would sing based on the repetition of two neighboring tones with no accompaniment. The second was of an improvisatory style where the melody and rhythm were intimately bound up with the melody and rhythm of poetry.[5]
To the west, the Romans left very few traces of musical development partly because it was deliberately suppressed during the persecution of Christians during the first two centuries.[6] Leaders of the early Christian church wanted to exterminate music which had memories associated with the revels and rituals with Roman music.[7] However, it was during this period that art, architecture, music, philosophy, new religious rites, and many other aspects of Greek culture were brought in from the Hellenistic world.[8] It is uncertain whether or not Romans made any significant contributions to the theory or practice of music, but historians are certain that their music was derived from the Greeks.[9]
Singing is so basic to man that its origins are long lost in antiquity and predate the development of the spoken language. We do know however, that music of the early Middle Ages in Western Europe was derived from the ancient Greeks in terms of form and concept. The singer would sing improvised or monophonic melodies with the rhythm, accent, and movement according to the text. This ancient heritage would greatly influence development of music in Western Europe through the Christian Church.[10]
Early Christian Church
editPeace between the Church and the Roman Empire greatly effected the liturgical life and musical practice of Christians. In the fourth century AD, Constantine became the first Roman emperor to convert to Christianity. This conversion led to the proclamation of the Edict of Milan, which decreed religious tolerance throughout the empire. With more and more converts, it was clear that services could no longer be conducted in the informal manner of the early days. This freedom in religion allowed the church to build for large basilicas which made it possible for public worship and for Christians to finally assume a new dignity.[11] Music, in particular had its own place in these newly constructed basilicas. As the early church of Jerusalem spread westward to Western Europe, it brought along musical elements from diverse areas.[12] It was during this time that the Schola Cantorum made its first appearance at the service of liturgical celebration.[13]
Schools of singers
editThe Lombards, Franks, and Goths dominated the face of Western Europe in the seventh and early eighth centuries. The idea of unity and centralization was simply unknown during this time so local churches were relatively independent.[14] Each region of the West probably received the Eastern heritage of musical elements in a slightly different form. This caused each region to produce several distinct liturgies and bodies of liturgical music of its own.[15] Although each region shared the same language of Latin, they had different texts and music. We know for certain that there existed Beneventan chant, Roman Chant, Ambrosian chant, Hispanic chant, and several types of Gallican chant. Each of these political divisions developed their own repertory of melodies for singing sacred texts.[16]
Papal choir
editThe first Schola Cantorum of Rome was said to be founded by Pope Sylvester in the year of 314.[17] Music evolved from a simple unison chant to a highly developed polyphonic choral style. Singing was usually performed by the clergy, however in 367, the Council of Laodicea banned congregational singing and placed the musical service in the hands of the trained choir.[18] With trained singers for the musical part of the liturgy, the clergy could focus their attention to what was most important, and that was their office.
Pope Sylvester’s Schola Cantorum of Rome was instituted for the study of chants, not for the vocal technique.[19] Chanting in unity was an obvious and a must, but it did not take long for Sylvester to realize that they needed to impart some sort of style onto it. In this, the subject of uniformity was taken up and this inevitably led to the management of breath, which led to the discovery of the fundamental elements of vocal technique.[20] The school of Sylvester demanded that chants were to be sung in a perfectly smooth, flowing kind of melody. Instructors often pushed their pupils to their limits, as they recognized that pure legato was essential in perfecting the chant.[21]
The employment of professional singers in the church played a prominent role in the development of the simple plain chant. The singers had mastered a style united with a technical finish of elegance and began to flourish their singing with ornamentation which had existed during classical times.[22] These chants were not easy, nor sung in a dull and monotonous manner. The singers filled them with great richness and variety. This employment of trained singers acted as a precursor to the institution which was later reorganized by Pope Gregory I.[23] The purpose of the schola was to teach both singing techniques and the plainsong repertory learned by the oral tradition. However, it was Pope Gregory I who standardized the liturgical repertory on a firm basis. This Roman school lasted a period of nine years which furnished the choir at most of the papal functions and was facilitated by the cantor.
Schola Cantorum
editWhen Pope Gregory I was elected pope of the Roman Catholic Church in 590, he founded the Schola Cantorum. This was the school of singers which established the authoritative delivery of the musical liturgy for all of Europe.[24] Of the schools that were directed by the church, pupils with the best voices were chosen for training in the Schola Cantorum. The most talented pupil was called paraphonist and was responsible for singing the solos of the “alleluia”.[25] The studies of the Schola Cantorum lasted a total of nine years. It was a long period because the school made it mandatory for pupils to memorize the chants. During service, only the director or the paraphonists was permitted to have a book.
The ensemble consisted of anywhere between twenty and thirty boys or men. Women were not allowed to be a part of the Schola Cantorum. This group of boys and men had to have their head shaved and wore chasubles. The choir, clergy, and congregation, sang the ensembles of the service, leaving the most important parts of the service for the trained vocalists. The chant maintained its dominance in ecclesiastic music up until the rise of polyphony in the eleventh century.[26] The idea of two or more simultaneous lines of independent melody accompanied by high and low pitched voices seemed more suitable for ecclesiastic music in the eleventh century. The polyphonic composition was constantly developing up until the seventeenth century when opera began to dominate the musical world of the church.[27]
Influence
editFrom Rome, the institution spread to other parts of the Church. When the pope visited France with his court, the Frankish King Pepin the Short could not help but admire the customs of Roman liturgy. Pepin realized that these customs could help to ensure religious unity throughout his territories and thus strengthen their political unity.[28] The King therefore adopted the Roman liturgy and mixed it with the Gallican chant repertory. The overall structure of the Roman chant was accepted by the Gallican musicians, but they covered it with a completely different style of ornamentation. The fusion of Roman and Gallican chant evolved into what we now know as Gregorian chant.[29]
Charlemagne, the son of Pepin, was also impressed by the superiority of the Roman chanters.[30] He begged Pope Adrian I to assign him two cantors of the Gregorian school. Peter and Romanus were sent out to Francia in 789. Unfortunately, Romanus fell sick and remained behind, but Peter was able to make it to Metz and established a school of Gregorian chant.[31] Nonetheless, the Schola Cantorum played a significant role in the transmission of Roman chant to the Carolingian court of Charlemagne. Several schools were also established in England shortly after the fusion of Roman and Gallican chant.
Between the years 876 and 1073, the prior of the Schola is recorded to have performed a curious dance with clearly pagan origins known as Cornomania, on the Saturday following Easter, on the Lateran Square in Rome. He would wear a wreath with horns on his head, swing a rattle with bells, scatter laurel leaves, and cry out in an unknown language, "Iaritan, iaritan, iariariasti; raphayn, iercoin, iariariasti".[32]
Several institutions today have modeled themselves after the medieval Schola, including Schola Cantorum Basiliensis of Basel and the Schola Cantorum de Paris. They aim to interpret classical, old popular, sacred, and of course Gregorian music with absolute purity of style and tone.[33]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Giulio Cattin, Music of the Middle Ages I (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984), 51.
- ^ W.J. Henderson, Early History of Singing (Longsman, Green: New York 1921) 31.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 1.
- ^ Donald Jay Grout and Claude Palisca, A History of Western Music (New York: W.W. Norton & Company Inc, 1996), 1.
- ^ Harold Gleason, Music Literature Outlines, Series I: Music in the Middle Ages and Renaissance (Rochester, New York: Levi Music Stores, 1951), I-3.
- ^ Cattin, Music of the Middle Ages I, 1.
- ^ Cattin, Music of the Middle Ages I, 2.
- ^ Grout, Palisca, A History of Western Music, 16.
- ^ Palisca, A History of Western Music, 15.
- ^ Palisca, A History of Western Music, 16.
- ^ Daniel Saulnier, Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy (Paraclete Press: Massachusetts 2010), p 3.
- ^ Grout, Palisca, A History of Western Music, 18.
- ^ Grout, Palisca, A History of Western Music, 18.
- ^ Saulnier, Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy, 3.
- ^ Saulneir, Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy, 3.
- ^ Saulnier, "Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy", 2.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 20.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 21.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 27.
- ^ Cattin, Music of the Middle Ages I, 8.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 18.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 22.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 30.
- ^ Cattin, Music of the Middle Ages I, 51.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 32.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 39.
- ^ Grout, Palisca, A History of Western Music, 74.
- ^ Saulnier, Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy, 5.
- ^ Saulnier, Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy, 5.
- ^ Rosamond McKitterick, Carolingian Culture: Emulation and Innovation edited by Rosamond McKitterick (Cambridge University Press: New York 1993), 277.
- ^ Henderson, Early History of Singing, 27.
- ^ F. Schneider, Rom und Romgedanke im Mittelalter (Munich, 1926), cited in H. St. L. B. Moss, The Birth of the Middle Ages (Oxford, 1935), p. 263.
- ^ I, C De, The Schola Cantorum, The Monthly Musical Record, (Jan 1900): 269.
References
edit- Cattin, Giulio. Music of the Middle Ages I, trans. By Steven Botterill. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1984.
- C De, I. The Schola Cantorum. The Monthly Musical Record 360 (Jan 1900): 269.
- Gleason, Harold. Music Literature Outlines, Series I: Music in the Middle Ages and Renaissance. Levi Music Stores: Rochester, New York, 1951.
- Grout, Donald Jay, and Claude Palisca. A History of Western Music. W.W. Norton & Company Inc: New York, 1996.
- Henderson, W.J. Early History of Singing. Longsman, Green: Massachusetts, 1921.
- McKitterick, Rosamond. Carolingian Culture: Emulation and Innovation edited by Rosamond McKitterick. Cambridge University Press: New York, 1993.
- Saulnier, Daniel. Gregorian Chant: A Guide to the History and Liturgy. Paraclete Press: Massachusetts.