Tag: “Church Music Association of America” (40 posts)
The CMAA Colloquium XIX Documentary
January 24, 2010 by — 1 comment.
SACRED, BEAUTIFUL, & UNIVERSAL: Colloquium XIX from Corpus Christi Watershed on Vimeo.
See also the Sacred Music Colloquium FAQ.
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Sound files from the 2010 CMAA Winter Chant Intensive
January 9, 2010 by — 1 comment.
On the MusicaSacra Forum, Richard Chonak shared the following files from yesterday’s Missa Cantata in the Ordinary Form, celebrated in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Charleston, S.C., at the conclusion of the Church Music Association’s 2010 Winter Chant Intensive. The Intensive was led by Scott Turkington, organist and choirmaster of the Basilica [...]
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Dr. Mahrt’s CMAA Gregorian Chant Pilgrimage lecture
September 29, 2009 by — 0 comments.
Below is a reduced-filesize MP3 of Dr. Bill Mahrt’s lecture, “Active Participation and Listening to Chant,” given at last weekend’s Gregorian Chant Pilgrimage to the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, given on Saturday, September 26, 2009 in the auditorium of the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center. The original recording is provided courtesy of [...]
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Gregorian chant and polyphony from the CMAA Pilgrimage to the National Shrine
September 27, 2009 by — 21 comments.
Below are the chant and polyphony files from yesterday evening’s Solemn High Mass according to the Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite, celebrated in honor of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the Crypt Church of the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C. at the conclusion of the CMAA Fall [...]
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SMTV Vol. II, No. 7.3 – Sicut in holocausto (Gregorian chant)
July 17, 2009 by — 0 comments.
Sicut in holocáusto aríetum et taurórum,
et sicut in míllibus agnórum pínguium:
sic fiat sacrifícium nostrum in conspéctu tuo hódie,
ut pláceat tibi:
quia non est confúsio confidéntibus in te, Dómine.
As a holocaust of rams and bullocks,
and of thousands of fatted lambs,
so let our sacrifice be in your sight on this day,
that it may be pleasing unto you.
For there [...]
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SMTV Vol. II, no. 7.2 – Alleluia: Omnes gentes (Gregorian chant)
July 10, 2009 by — 2 comments.
Allelúia.[1]
Omnes gentes pláudite mánibus:
jubiláte Deo in voce exsultatiónis.
Allelúia.
Alleluia.
All nations, clap your hands:
shout unto God with a voice of joy.
Alleluia.
Scripture Verse: Psalm 46(47):2
Conductor: Arlene Oost-Zinner, St. Cecilia Schola Cantorum, Auburn, Alabama
Choir: CMAA Sacred Music Colloquium XIX Intermediate Women’s Choir
Cantrix: Mary Ann Carr-Wilson, St. Anne’s Choir, San Diego
Camera: Peter Kim, Regina Caeli Schola Cantorum, Memphis, Tennessee
Date: June [...]
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Selected audio from the CMAA Colloquium Ordinary-form Mass, June 23, 2009
June 30, 2009 by — 2 comments.
Below are ten MP3s of last Tuesday’s Ordinary-form Sung Mass celebrated by Fr. Jeffrey Keyes, CPPS. Other than the instances of Amen, Alleluia, and Hosanna, the entire Mass was sung in the English language.
Introit[1]
Introductory Rite; Penitential Rite; Opening Prayer[2]
Liturgy of the Word
Offertory[3]
Motet, Interlude
Orate fratres; Preface; Eucharistic Prayer I; Great Amen[4]
Lord’s Prayer; Agnus Dei; Domine, non [...]
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Preview Video of Colloquium XIX
June 26, 2009 by — 0 comments.
(Courtesy of Corpus Christi Watershed, who is filming and editing on location.)
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Liveblogging the CMAA Sacred Music Colloquium XIX
June 22, 2009 by — 1 comment.
This week, starting now, I will be writing from the Sacred Music Colloquium of the Church Music Association of America, held at Loyola University Chicago’s Lake Shore Campus for the second consecutive year. The schedule is rather tight, as you can see from the calendar, so you may also wish to follow me on my [...]
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Worship, unplugged: three items for consideration
May 4, 2009 by — 1 comment.
Dr. William Mahrt of Stanford University, in his latest editorial for the Church Music Association’s Sacred Music quarterly journal, writes: “In the 1940s Marshall McLuhan said that the microphone would be the death of the Latin Mass, a very astute and prophetic observation.”[1] While he is talking about the practical necessity before the era of [...]
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