Friday, December 4, 2015

Folk Music Instead of Choral --- Milan's Schola Gregoriana Mediolanensis Shown the Door

Schola Gregoriana Mediolanensis
(Milan) The famous Schola Gregoriana Mediolanensis of Milan, which is dedicated to the care of Gregorian and Ambrosian chant, has been removed from the Basilica of San Vittore al Corpo from Milan to make room for folk singing.
The Choral Schola founded in 1980 by the famous musician Giovanni Vianini and since then,  choral schola director, consists of a men and a women's schola, which currently includes 20 singers each. Together they form a mixed choir. Vianini is internationally recognized as a choral expert.
For 35 years, the Schola serves the dual founding mission: the liturgical choir service and the care and preservation of Gregorian and Ambrosian chant. In Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milan, as well as in the Basilica of San Vittore, remains true to the Ambrosian Rite of the Catholic Church. It goes back to the Church Father Ambrose, who was archbishop of Milan from 374-397. The first church of San Vittore is dated to the fourth century according to tradition. Today's Baroque edifice comes from the 16th century.

School of the Ambrosian Chant

The schola has  introduced  more than a thousand students from around the world to choral singing in the past 35 years. The Schola can refer to numerous recordings. 23 CD's are currently commercially available. In addition to radio and television appearances, the Schola sang in numerous cathedrals and monastery churches in Italy, but also abroad, such as Fontgombault, Chartres, Rouen, Paray le Monial, Poitiers, Citeaux, Senanque,  in Metz, Einsiedeln, Disentis, Engelberg, Müstair, Uznach , St. Gallen, just to name a few.
In its care of Gregorian Chant, the schola follows the school of the Benedictine monks of Solesmes. In the care of  Ambrosian chant, it forms its own school, which is based on the publications and studies commissioned by Cardinal Ildefons Schuster (archbishop of Milan from 1929 to 1954) and his own studies of the medieval codices.

"Choral's Prayer, is the sung word of God in the sacred liturgy"

"The singers are not professionals, but devote themselves seriously to the study and care of this important repertoire of sacred music. It's a musical treasure that is carried forward especially in the sacred liturgy, because this music is prayer,it  is the sung word of God, the language of the ineffable," it says on the website of Schola Gregoriana Mediolanensis." Gregorian chant is for the sacred music like the sunlight is for the trees, " with these words Schola Master Vianni explained the importance of choral singing to his students. "Gregorian chant rises literally to Heaven."
However, in the Basilica of San Vittore, where the Schola has done their volunteer service for 35 years, there is no room for the chant. "The Choral must make room for shallow singing with guitar accompaniment and electronic organ. The tradition of folk singing is not to be underestimated, however, to distinguish it from the sacred music. What is today but offered as contemporary folk singing, is neither liturgical either in its   music or its lyrics. The melodies often have nothing to do with the Church music and the lyrics are sometimes at best merely religiously inspired," said a disappointed member Schola.

"The verticality of choral singing must yield the horizontality of a flat folk song"

The expulsion of the Schola Gregoriana Mediolanensis is no single case. "The verticality of choral singing must give way to the horizontality of a flat, modern folk singing. This involves a misunderstanding of the active participation of the faithful. In Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Milan there  is unfortunately a systematic rejection of the Ambrosian and Gregorian chant under way," said Messa in Latino.
A Sample of Schola director Giovanni Vianini. One of many recordings, with whom he recorded songs of the Ambrosian chant.



Text: Giuseppe Nardi
Bild: MiL
Trans: Tancred vekron99@hotmail.com
Link to Katholisches...
AMDG

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's the "Francis Effect" in action. We've been thru this before. I wasn;t around yet, but I;ve been told that when the Tridentine Latin Mass, Gregorian Chant and classic Catholic hynms were replaced with contemporary Christian music, folk tunes etc, Mass attendance and priestly and religious vocations plummeted to nearly rock bottom. TYhey've inched up in some places under John Paul II and especially Benedict XVI, but look for them to crash again under this imbecile heretic Francis.
Our family has been Catholic for years, both in India (300 yrs),and here in the USA. The last Hindu relatives we had converted to the Catholic faith in 2009, under the great Benedict XVI !
But now, my cousin in Mumbai has left the Catholic faith, and converted to the Greek Orthodox Church (or the branch of Orthodoxy that is popular and well established in India...Greek or Syrian Orthodox...I don't know). But they are in union with the Eastern Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople. My cousin quit the Catholic Church because he hates Pope Francis and his radical agenda.
The "Francis Effect" will be a disaster for the Church, and the next pope will ry to reverse it.....but it'll take his reign and the next to BEGIN to restore the Church.
Damian Malliapalli

Sandpiper said...

How utterly, utterly sad. No room for beauty under this shabby papacy.

Unknown said...

Heartbroken!

Marie said...

I suppose this means the Basilica of San Vittore al Corpo has also gotten rid of the traditional Latin Mass?

Augustine Thomas said...

In Bergoglio Church, beauty is not allowed, only kitsch. Truth and beauty make Jorge uncomfortable! It mind offend his anti-Catholic, leftist friends..