Southern Comfort wrote:I don't think it helps the debate to call people names.
I don't think it helps the debate to say that I have called anyone names when I have not. Neither do I think it helps any debate to outline information concerning other people without naming them, which is what you are wont to do, so I would rather call people by their names. Dom André Mocquereau was his name. Neither Mocquereaunics nor tomfoolery are name-calling as I address no one with the term.
Southern Comfort wrote:Mocquereaunics is a pejorative and furthermore inaccurate shorthand jibe at people who hold no brief for Dom André but are interested in the history and performance of Gregorian chant.
How would you know? You've never heard the word before. You got all that from one word? How can it be a 'jibe at people', plural? It can only be a jibe at Mocquereau's theory.
Southern Comfort wrote:(2) However, if we are to use accompaniment, it makes perfectly good sense to use the Solesmes principles of accompaniment, given that we are using the chant as edited by Solesmes. If we were using a different kind of edition, then accompanimental practice could certainly be different.
It does not make sense to move the harmony on '-di' rather than 'mun-' as you proposed in such a haughty manner. Solesmes could produce an equalist edition of Ticket to Ride and it still wouldn't make Mocquereau's theory make sense as far as when to change chords is concerned.
Southern Comfort wrote:(3) It seems clear that you do not accept the tension between verbal and musical accents which is such a feature of the Solesmes school of chant and which lends it its unique character because you do not understand it.
Why is that clear? It may be in your best interests not to waste your time with an answer to that question, because you have no proof. I understand it well enough to know that it is preposterous nonsense in the form in which Dom Mocquereau applied it to the repertoire in the Solesmes publications.
Southern Comfort wrote:(4) This 'theory' is not attributable to Dom Mocquereau alone by any means, and it is quite unfair to caricature it as such. It actually began with Dom Pothier in the 19th century and has continued down the line of Solesmes chant scholars ever since.
Ever since? I refer you to p12 of the article quoted by John Ainslie. Plus précisément, cette théorie rythmique, dans la mesure où elle inflige une distorsion rythmique aux mots et aux phrases chantées, apparaît en contradiction avec les principes élémentaires de composition de la musique liturgique, qui repose fondamentalement sur le service du texte sacré. Dom J H Desrocquettes attributed the development of the theory to Dom Mocquereau, as does Katherine Bergeron.
Southern Comfort wrote:(5) Dom Gregory Murray was a genius, but like many geniuses he was also an eccentric.
Is this name-calling - "eccentric!" - an attempt to discredit his mental acumen?
Southern Comfort wrote:He changed horses in midstream several times in his life.
Is this another attempt to discredit his critical faculties?
Southern Comfort wrote:What he thought in 1947 he later completely repudiated, as a matter of fact.
I refer you to my previous comment, "Dom Murray sagely jettisoned Mocquereaunics when presented with real evidence for how Gregorian rhythm worked."
Southern Comfort wrote:Have you read the later writings, in which he said he was completely mistaken?
I refer you to my previous comment, "Dom Murray sagely jettisoned Mocquereaunics when presented with real evidence for how Gregorian rhythm worked."
Southern Comfort wrote:Later still, he claimed that actually he did not know what he thought about any of this.
And your evidence is ...
Southern Comfort wrote:I had several conversations with him on this very topic.
If you say so.
Southern Comfort wrote:In the course of his repudiations, by the way, he comprehensively debunked Vollaerts, whose book makes very strange reading today.
In the course of his repudiations, Dom Murray debunked Mocquereau and advocated Vollaerts. Perhaps you could furnish us with the source for your assertion that he debunked Vollaerts. Vollaerts' posthumous publication was ground-breaking work which ultimately led to a major change in the perception of the most ancient Gregorian notation in the academic world. Obviously, one doesn't have to agree with every conclusion - one could call this early work - but the general thesis is accepted as far as the academic community is concerned, ie, the chant was essentially proportionalist as per the descriptions of the ancient Latin authorities on chant.
Southern Comfort wrote:(6) Bartolucci is scarcely someone to be given credence in matters of musical sensitivity, when you think that he presided for all those years over the horrendous braying of the Sistine Chapel Choir, and we now know that Willi Apel's work was already out of date at the time it appeared.
Hmm. What an inaccurate generalisation about Willi Apel's work. Makes you wonder why all those scholars felt so inclined to give him a birthday present. As for Mgr Bartolucci, it just does to show that even people as musically insensitive as him know that Mocquereau's theory is invalid, when you don't.