Misplaced Pages

Roman Gradual

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Liturgical book of the Roman Catholic Church

Gradual of King John I Albert of Poland in the Sacristy of Wawel Cathedral.

The Roman Gradual (Latin: Graduale Romanum) is an official liturgical book of the Roman Rite of the Roman Catholic Church containing chants, including the proper and many more, for use in Mass.

The editio typica dates from 1908. The latest edition of 1974 takes account of the 1970 revision of the Roman Missal.

In 1979, the Graduale Triplex: The Roman Gradual With the Addition of Neums from Ancient Manuscripts (ISBN 978-2852740440 in English (1985), ISBN 978-2-85274-094-5 in Latin) was published. It added reproductions of the neumes from ancient manuscripts placed above and below the later notation.

Description

Sanctissimus namque Gregorius, from the 1908 edition of the Roman Gradual.

The Roman Gradual includes the

It includes a selection of chants that are also published in a companion volume known as the Kyriale, a collection of chants for the Order of Mass: the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei.

There have been and are other Graduals, apart from the Roman Gradual. For instance, the Dominican Order had its own rite of Mass and its own Gradual: "Graduale juxta ritum sacri Ordinis Praedicatorum" (Gradual according to the rite of the Sacred Order of Preachers).

Structure of the 1974 edition

The 1974 Roman Gradual is arranged into 8 major sections:

  1. Praenotanda (Rubrics)
  2. Proprium de Tempore (Proper of Seasons)
  3. Communia (Commons)
  4. Proprium de Sanctis (Proper of Saints)
  5. Missae Rituales ad Diversa et Votivae (Ritual and Votive Masses)
  6. Cantus in Ordine Missae Occurrentes (Chants Occurring in Order of Mass, including the Kyriale).
  7. Appendix (Containing hymns and litanies)
  8. Missae Propriae Ordinis Sancti Benedicti (Mass Propers of the Order of Saint Benedict)

History

Originally the book was called an antiphonale missarum ("Antiphonal of the Mass"). Graduals, like the later Cantatory, may have originally included only the responsorial items, the Gradual, Alleluia, and Tract.

In 1908 a revised edition of the Roman Gradual was published. In it Pope Pius X gave official approval to the work of the monastery of Solesmes, founded in the 1830s by Dom Guéranger, was done by Dom Pothier in restoring Gregorian chant to its purity by removing the alterations it had undergone in the centuries immediately preceding. The work had involved much research and study.

That edition of the Roman Gradual was the basis also of a more general compilation of chants known as the Liber Usualis. This was not an official liturgical book, but it contained a large part of the chants of the Roman Gradual, as well as other chants and hymns and instructions on the proper way to sing them.

In 1974, after the Second Vatican Council an edition of the Roman Gradual based on that of 1908 was issued. While the melodies remained unchanged, there was a relocation of pieces to fit the revised Roman Missal and calendar. Some chants were replaced by ancient ones rediscovered after 1908. A simpler gradual for small churches or inexperienced choirs was published in 1967 and 1975, as the Graduale Simplex.

In 2011 (Part 1 De dominicis et festis) and 2018 (Part 2 De feriis et sanctis) the Graduale novum was published by Christian Dostal, Johannes Berchmans Göschl, Cornelius Pouderoijen, Franz Karl Praßl, Heinrich Rumphorst, and Stephan Zippe, members of the melodic restitution group of AISCGre (International Society for the Study of Gregorian Chant). It claims to be “a more critical edition” according to SC 117, but is not a critical edition.

Despite an initial disappearance of the use of the Roman Gradual from many parishes following the Second Vatican Council, often done out of a misunderstanding that Gregorian Chant had been abrogated or otherwise discouraged, its use has become increasingly popular in recent years. Parishes which celebrate the Mass according to the 1970 Roman Missal, whether fully in Latin or a vernacular language, have begun to utilize the chants of the Gradual. This has been encouraged by the most recent Popes, including Pope Francis who has encouraged the presence of a Schola Cantorum in every parish so that at least one Mass might be celebrated with the Church's official music.

Bibliography and external links

References

  1. Graduale sacrosanctae Romanae Ecclesiae de Tempore et de Sanctis SS. D. N. Pii X. Pontificis Maximi jussu restitutum et editum (PDF). Romae: Typis Vaticanis. 1908.
  2. Ordo Fratrum Praedicatorum (1928). "Graduale juxta ritum Sacri Ordinis Praedicatorum". Fundacja Dominikański Ośrodek Liturgiczny - Sylwia Fołta. Romae.
  3. Apel, Willi, ed (1972). Harvard Dictionary of Music, 2nd edition. Cambridge, Harvard University Press. Page 350
  4. Jeffrey Tucker, The Real Catholic Songbook
  5. Gregorian Chant for the Choir
  6. GRADUALE NOVUM DE DOMINICIS ET FESTIS (in German), retrieved 2021-04-06
  7. Es handelt sich hier weder um eine Editio authentica noch um eine Editio critica, sondern lediglich um begründete Vorschläge. (…) Es geht auch im keinem Weise um eine Herabwürdigung der Editio Vaticana. Luigi Agustoni, Rupert Fischer, Johannes Berchmans Göschl, Godehard Joppich, Liobgid Koch & Heinrich Rumphorst: Vorschläge zur Restitution von Melodien des Graduale Romanum. Teil 1. Beiträge für Gregorianik, 21: 7–41 (1996)
  8. "Pope Francis: "Promote the Presence of the Schola Cantorum in Every Parish Community!"". 3 October 2019.
Tridentine Mass of the Catholic Church
Types
Order
Pre-Mass
Vesting prayers
Asperges me
Vidi aquam in Eastertide
Processional hymn
Mass of the Catechumens
Iudica me
Confiteor
mea culpa
Introit
Kyrie
Gloria in excelsis Deo
Collect
Lection
Gradual
Alleluia or Tract
Sequentia
Gospel
Homily
Mass of the Faithful
Credo
Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed
Offertory
Lavabo
Orate fratres
Secret
Preface
Sursum corda
Sanctus
Hosanna
Roman Canon
Oblation
Epiclesis
Words of Institution
Anamnesis
Elevation
Doxology
Pater Noster
Embolism
Pax
Agnus Dei
Dona nobis pacem
Fraction
Holy Communion
Communion antiphon
Ablutions
Postcommunio
Dismissal
Ite, missa est or Benedicamus Domino
Last Gospel
Post-Mass
Leonine prayers
Recessional hymn
For funeral Mass
Dies irae
Pie Iesu
Libera Me
Requiescant in pace
Absolution of the dead
In paradisum
De profundis
Participants
Altar
Altar cloths
Illumination
Liturgical
objects
Literature
Vestments
(Pontifical/Papal)
Music
Liturgical year
Calendar
(1954/1955/1960)
Discipline
Theology
Concepts
Related
Mass of the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church
Forms and uses
Orders
Types
Ritual Masses
Language
Order of Mass
Pre-Mass
Liturgy of
the Word
Liturgy of
the Eucharist
Post-Mass
Participants
Altar
Liturgical
objects
Liturgical books
Vestments
Liturgical year
Calendars
Periods
Eucharistic
discipline
Eucharistic
theology
Regulations
and concepts
Related
Categories:
Roman Gradual Add topic