At a pause in the plainsong one of the tapers was put out.
2
Worship, plainsong, good liturgy, space and stillness provide solace for body, mind and heart.
3
Instead, he turned to early music; to plainsong; and to the beginnings of polyphony.
4
The definition of plainsong is unaccompanied unison singing in Latin.
5
Then with a surge rose up the plainsong melody.
1
In his residence at Rome, he was delighted with the Gregorianchant.
2
Any minute you expect a Gregorianchant to moan softly in the background.
3
There, she fell in love with the complexities of Gregorianchant.
4
Outside and down that road by St. Patrick's Cathedral I hear the Gregorianchant.
5
It calls on both Gregorianchant and Hebraic elements and is subtitled Poème mystique.
Ús de plainchant en anglès
1
The Christian church's requirement for music of calculated restraint produced foundational works ranging from early plainchant to 16th-century polyphony and beyond.