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Studien zu den deutsch-evangelischen Psalmen-dichtungen des 16. JahrhundertsLerche, Helmut, January 1936 (has links)
Thesis--Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Breslau. / Bibliography: p. 81-82.
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Studien zu den deutsch-evangelischen Psalmen-dichtungen des 16. JahrhundertsLerche, Helmut, January 1936 (has links)
Thesis--Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Breslau. / Bibliography: p. 81-82.
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Frankish psalmody : the evidence of the commemoratio brevisKitson, John Richard January 1973 (has links)
This thesis is a study of the Frankish psalmody of the early medieval period. The most important source of this practice in existence today is the tenth-century treatise, the Commemoratio Brevis de Tonis et Psalmis Modulandis. During the last fifty years there have been several attempts by musicologists to come to terms with the evidence of this source but these, unfortunately, were based on a faulty eighteenth-century edition of an incomplete manuscript. The present study, however, is based on a new edition of the only complete source: the Wolfenbuttel Ms.Gud. lat. 2° 72 (4376).
The method has been to reconstruct the evidence of this treatise—the musical examples of psalm tones and the commentary of the text—and to compare it to the standard practice of the late Middle Ages. Errors perpetuated unwittingly by the eighteenth-century edition have been corrected. The introduction summarizes the methods and origins of psalmody; the role of the Franks in the formation of the Gregorian repertoire; the subsequent decay and reform of the chant; and the role of the psalms in the liturgy. The first four chapters consider the many inflections of the psalm tone individually:
the first intonation, the termination, the tenor and the mediant melody. The final chapter is devoted to a study of the special tones which were probably the remains of a practice even earlier than that of the tenth century.
The Gregorian psalm tones appear at first sight to be sterile ground for historical investigation—almost featureless in their simplicity. Closer inspection reveals, however, a number of discernable strata belonging to quite different epochs.
The earliest portion of the psalm tone is the tenor. There can be little argument that the most primitive usage involved the recitation of liturgical texts on a single pitch (hardly a musical phenomenon, more properly described as a method of public address). The next stage involved—for the purpose of articulating the verses of psalms—the affixing of intonations and terminations. In the earliest epoch, before the Carolingian reforms, it would seem that a psalmody of intonations, tenors and terminations was not yet formed into a coherent system. It is generally believed that the system of the eight modes was itself only introduced into the West at the time of the great Emperor. It would be difficult therefore to argue that the practice prior to this introduction had any connection with the eight-mode system. It would seem, rather, that local usages involving many patterns, some of them made venerable by great antiquity, were in force.
The next stage in the evolution was to provide a correlation between the new system of the octoëchos and the psalmody. At this point most of the older free practice was abandoned. Some remnants, however, have remained—we have suggested that this is an explanation for the special tones in the Commemoratio Brevis--either owing to the force of tradition or the difficulty of making indisputable modal assignments.
The attitude to the text of the psalm did not remain unchanged throughout this long period of evolution. In the earliest period the text accent was treated quite casually, as an examination of the intonations and the terminations shows clearly. At a later stage, however,--and here the mediant portions of the psalms with their quite different attitude toward text accent are instructive—the musicians approached the problem quite differently, taking extraordinary care that the correct inflections of the words were projected. It is tempting to associate this new approach, which reminds one so much of the Renaissance, with the well known Carolingian rebirth of knowledge.
The history of the psalm tones subsequent to the Commemoratio Brevis is one of progressive refinement: a reduction to a practice both supple and logical, the last stage of which is represented by the Vatican Edition of 1908. / Arts, Faculty of / Music, School of / Graduate
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Compiling and implementing a metrical psalter that reflects the Reformed heritage for the First Presbyterian Church, Lake Wales, Fl.Statom, Gabriel C. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (D.W.S.)--Institute for Worship Studies, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Musical settings of the penitential psalm cycle c. 1560-1620Armstrong, Kerchal Foss, January 1974 (has links)
Thesis--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. / Vita. Photocopy of typescript. Ann Arbor, Mich. : University Microfilms, 1976. -- 21 cm. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 324-330).
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German Protestant psalm adaptation c. 1517 - 1675 : A study in functional literatureLong, J. T. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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The Souterliedekens and its relation to psalmody in the Netherlands,Bruinsma, Henry Allen, Zuylen van Nyevelt, Willem van, January 1948 (has links)
H. A. Bruinsma's thesis--University of Michigan. / The Souterliedekens contains paraphrases of the Psalms by W. Zuylen van Nyevelt, set to folk tunes. "Transcription of the Souterliedekens [3d ed., 1540]" (with unacc. melodies): leaves 129-568. Includes bibliography.
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Christe eleison! : the invocation of Christ in eastern monastic psalmody, c.350-450Wellington, James F. January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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For God and Country: Scriptural Exegesis, Editorial Intervention, and Revolutionary Politics in First New England School AnthemsWilliams, Molly K. January 2017 (has links)
No description available.
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Tudor metrical psalmody and the English ReformationsBider, Noreen Jane. January 1998 (has links)
This work is a study of Tudor metrical psalmody, an historical genre or literary kind that emerged and flourished during the sixteenth century, consonant with the emergence and progress of the English Reformation(s). Working from the premise that Tudor metrical psalms were at once prayer, "poesie," and polemic, I examine the ways in which these texts participated in the social discourse of the period. / After establishing that Tudor metrical psalmody is a historical genre or literary kind whose five essential characteristics bind its constituent members together, I provide two additional interpretive readings of Tudor psalmody. The second is radically materialist, arguing that the corpus of Tudor psalmody should be deciphered "as a progression of 'symbolic resolutions' of the social contradictions which initially engendered them." In other words, metrical psalm translations of the period are fantasized resolutions of the material and doctrinal struggles of the Reformation. / The third reading approaches Tudor psalmody as a body of devotional works and Confessions of Faith. My point of departure is George Steiner's declaration in Real Presences that "any coherent understanding of what language is and how language performs, that any coherent account of the capacity of human speech to communicate meaning and feeling is, in the final analysis, underwritten by the assumption of God's presence." Conceived and nurtured on the front lines and, indeed, in the midst of the Reformation(s)' bloody altercations, early Tudor psalmody declared itself the vanguard in the struggle to maintain God's presence in the semiotic "prayingfield" by approaching the rite of psalm-translation as one of transubstantiation. Later psalmists of the century mediated the aesthetic demands of "poesie" and the theological priorities of strict Calvinism, thereby establishing a realm of prayer within which we now include works by devotional poets such as Donne and Herbert. / This study is the first comprehensive examination of Tudor metrical psalmody as a literary kind, in addition to being the first sustained exploration of the kind's complicity in Reformation polemics. It also demonstrates that Tudor metrical psalmody underwent an evolution during the course of the sixteenth century fully consonant with the theological and aesthetic developments of the Age. / For ease of reference, I have transcribed and appended to this thesis several psalms to which reference is made within the body of the thesis. / Finally, I acknowledge my indebtedness to Rivkah Zim's ground-breaking volume, English Metrical Psalms: Poetry as Praise and Prayer, 1535--1601 . Considerable inspiration was gained from her work.
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