Sarum Chant: Missa In Gallicantu

Tallis Scholars Directed By Peter Phillips

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The Tallis Scholars were founded in 1973 by their director, Peter Phillips. Through their recordings and concert performances, they have established themselves throughout the world as the leading exponents of Renaissance sacred music. Peter Phillips has worked with the ensemble to create, through good tuning and blend, the purity and clarity of sound which he feels best serve the Renaissance repertoire, allowing every detail of the musical lines to be heard. It is the resulting beauty of sound for which the Tallis Scholars have become so widely renowned.

A carefully stored Teldec DMM LP 33 1/3 rpm 130 gram Stereo Record manufactured in the early 1990s with a gate-fold sleeve and supplied in the original shrink-wrapping.

Chant for the First Mass of Christmas according to the Salisbury Rite. It would have been celebrated after midnight on Christmas Eve, and was known as the Missa in gallicantu – the Mass at Cockcrow.

“The Church of Salisbury shines as the sun in its orb among the Churches of the whole world in its divine service and those who minister it, and by spreading its rays everywhere makes up for the defects of others.”
Thus wrote the Bishop Giles de Bridport, in about 1256, of what has come to be called the ‘Sarum Rite’. The liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church had crystallized, during its travels abroad from the 7th Century onwards, into distinct ‘uses’ – variations upon the fundamentally Roman ritual, according to country, region, or province (1). The use of Salisbury early became pre-eminent among the various rites of England.
The See of Salisbury was moved to the present cathedral site in 1218, and under a succession of efficient and zealous bishops, its liturgy became the envy of the rest of the country. Indeed, it all but usurped many other rites (such as those of York and Hereford), and its statutes and rules were copied by monastic and secular foundations all over Great Britain. One strand of this liturgical web even reached Portugal – 1385 saw the introduction of the Salisbury Rite at Braga.

The music recorded here is from the First Mass of Christmas according to the Salisbury Rite. It would have been celebrated after midnight on Christmas Eve, and was known as the Missa in gallicantu – the Mass at Cockcrow. The chant has been taken from printed sources which would have been in use when composers such as Tallis and Tye were at the height of their powers (2).

Mass begins with the Introit (which was called Officium at Salisbury), Dominus dixit ad me. The chant is begun by the ‘rulers’ (leaders) of the choir, and is composed of an antiphon surrounding a psalm verse and the doxology. The Kyrie follows immediately, here in a troped version called Kyrie cum versibus. Tropes were extra sections of texts inserted into a liturgical composition in order to expand and amplify its meaning, and make it relevant to particular occasions. In this example, the inserted texts actually replace the original words; thus, instead of simply ‘Kyrie, eleison’ (Lord, have mercy), we hear ‘Deus Creator omnium, Tu Theos ymon nostri pie eleison’ (O God, Creator of all things and our God, be gracious and have mercy on us). This procedure occurs in all of the Kyrie’s nine invocations, and the text retains a few words of Greek amongst the Latin.

The Gloria is intoned by the celebrant from the altar. Like the Kyrie, it is very syllabic, and moves within a fairly restricted range, never straying further than an octave above its first note. The Collect would then have followed, and then a lesson from the Book of Isaiah. This lesson is sung here in a special troped form, known as the Laudes Deo from its opening words. It is sung by two clerks, one having the lesson itself, the other interpolating the troped sections. Both singers join together to proclaim the final sentence. The Epistle would then have been read by the subdeacon.

Tecum principium, the Gradual, is intoned by three clerks. It is the most florid chant so far heard, several words having extensive melismata. The range is also large – a tenth in all. Similarly elaborate is the Alleluia, which follows immediately. Its verse is ‘Dominus dixit’, the same text as the Introit antiphon.

Quite different in style is the Sequence. This is a genre that arose from greatly lengthening the final syllable of the preceding Alleluia, a practice which seems to have developed in the eighth and ninth centuries. Texts became attached to these huge melismatic passages, and they later acquired separate status as Sequences. As with many other examples, Nato canunt omnia is constructed of pairs of rhyming stanzas in the same metre. This poetic structure is reflected in the musical material. It is sung antiphonally, and bells are rung to emphasize the festal nature of the chant.

After the Gospel, which would have been read by the deacon (here omitted), the Credo (the Nicene Creed) is intoned by the celebrant. The Sarum Rite had only one melody for the Creed, in contrast to the Roman, which has several. This is succeeded by the celebrant’s salutation to the congregation, and the Offertory, during which the bread and wine would have been offered at the altar. The Offertory was originally a lengthy example of antiphonal psalmody, but was made shorter when the practice of omitting verses became standard. The Secret would then have followed: a prayer read by the celebrant in a low voice.

The Preface begins with the Sursum corda (Lift up your hearts), and ends with the words ‘…we sing the hymn of your glory as we ceaselessly proclaim:’ as the introduction to the Sanctus (Holy, holy, holy), which is intoned by rulers and continued by full choir. The eucharistic prayer would then have been continued by the celebrant, the elevation of the Host occurring during the Canon. The Pater noster and the fraction would have followed, with the Pax, or Kiss of Peace. Agnus Dei, the threefold invocation of the Lamb of God, is the final item of the Mass Ordinary. (The Ordinary today consists of the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei – the items of the Mass which do not change – in contrast with the Proper – items with texts changing according to occasion. Due to the practice of troping according to feast, the Kyrie in England during the Middle Age effectively became part of the Proper.)

The Communion is In splendoribus sanctorum, a short chant sung during the reception of the Host. After communion the celebrant would again have saluted the congregation and said the post-communion prayer. The dismissal is sung by the deacon: ‘Go, the Mass is ended’ – the people reply ‘thanks be to God!’, and the Mass ends.

The four hymns recorded here are from the Divine Offices of Christmas Day: Christe redemptor omnium is from Matins, Veni, redemptor gentium from Vespers, Salvator mundi, Domine from Compline, and A solis ortus cardine from Lauds. These are some of the best known plainchant hymn tunes, and are often used today, whether in Latin or in the vernacular. They possess an immediacy of melodic appeal and a memorable rhythmic character. Hymn tunes at this time were often used again with different sets of words; Veni, redemptor, for example, also appears as Iesu Salvator saeculi, for First Vespers of the Feast of All Saints.

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Track Listings

Side 1
Missa in gallicantu
Introitus
Kyrie: Deus Creator Omnium
Gloria
Laudes Deo
Graduale: Tecum principium
Alleluia: Dominus dixit
Sequentia: Nato canut omnia

Side 2
Missa in gallicantu continued
Credo
Offertorium: Laetentur
Praefatio
Sanctus
Agnus Dei
Communio: In splendoribus sanctorum
Dimissio

Four Hyms:
Christe Redemptor omnium
Veni, Redemptor gentium
Salvator mundi, Domine
A solis ortus cardine

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