A liturgical chant of the Roman Catholic Church.
1In his residence at Rome, he was delighted with the Gregorian chant.
2Any minute you expect a Gregorian chant to moan softly in the background.
3There, she fell in love with the complexities of Gregorian chant.
4Outside and down that road by St. Patrick's Cathedral I hear the Gregorian chant.
5It calls on both Gregorian chant and Hebraic elements and is subtitled Poème mystique.
6That of the Gregorian chant: a cadence concluding on the dominant instead of the key-note.
7Midnight Mass follows, with a mixture of Gregorian chant in Latin and traditional Christmas carols.
8He took great pains to introduce the Gregorian chant.
9He said he wanted to see more Latin and more Gregorian chant used in Church services.
10It had an odd, musical quality, like Gregorian chant slowed to a fraction of its normal speed.
11Switching to Gregorian chant for the chorus:
12The Emperor was obeyed, and the Gregorian chant was taught, both in France and Germany, by Italian choristers.
13Sometimes a sense of devotion was an aesthetic response to the beauty of the Gregorian chant and the liturgy.
14His style is made up of all styles, and ranges from the Gregorian chant to the most modern modulations.
15Bonizzi has heard of them and compared heavy metal with Gregorian chant, one of the oldest known forms of written music.
16A Gregorian chant fills the building with its solemn tones and the smoke of a swinging censer ascends in the shadowy chancel.
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Translations for Gregorian chant