Posted on 07/18/2007 2:19:17 PM PDT by Richard Poe
There are many ways to sing the Rosary. This is just one of them. No single approach is authorized or mandated by the Church. Still, the method set forth below carries a certain weight of tradition, for it draws, wherever possible, on the most venerable customs and practices of our Catholic ancestors. Most of the prayers recited in the Rosary -- the Our Father, the Hail Mary, the Glory Be, the Salve Regina and so on -- have been sung for centuries in the form of Gregorian chants. I do not know if these chants were ever used for the specific purpose of singing the Rosary, but it seems likely. Wherever I could find free audio files on the Internet featuring traditional chants corresponding to the Rosary prayers, I linked to them here. In several instances where I could not find traditional chants -- (or, in the case of Salve Regina, could not find a recorded version which included the necessary coda, "Prayer Concluding the Rosary") -- I commissioned composer David Yeagley to write new chants in the traditional style. A Work in Progress As of this writing, I have not yet found or commissioned a chant for the Apostle's Creed, but will fill this gap when I can. For better or worse, I set a goal of posting this article on July 7, 2007 -- the seventh day of the seventh month of the seventh year of the new millennium -- and so I have, warts and all. This is still a work in progress. If any readers know of free audio links of traditional chants which would help complete or enhance this page, please e-mail your suggestions to me.
To the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary, Queen of the Most Holy Rosary, I dedicate this work. And to my readers, I commend the "Solemn Act of Consecration to the Immaculate Heart of Mary" declared by Pope Pius XII on October 31, 1942, in which he prayed to the Blessed Mother, "Save us from the spreading flood of modern paganism; kindle in our hearts and homes the love of purity, the practice of a virtuous life, an ardent zeal for souls, and a desire to pray the Rosary more faithfully."
For Latin text and MP3 audio links of Latin chants, go here.
Chant the Rosary in 35 Simple Steps Step 1: Make and chant the Sign of the Cross
Step 9: Chant the Our Father
Step 14: Chant the Our Father
Step 19: Chant the Our Father
Step 24: Chant the Our Father
Step 29: Chant the Our Father |
Please let me know if you want ON or OFF of my Traditional Roman Catholic ping list.
add me to your ping list Mr.Poe, if you please
Check the Knights of Columbus web-site for results on The Rosary Bowl.
Thank you so much for this!
How about a ping for the Catholics not on the list that need to learn Latin?
bttt
Nice presentation. Thanks.
http://www.virtualrosary.org/dload.php for Windows, Mac and Palm platforms not only have the Luminous Mysteries, but there are many optional verses and prayers, including Latin.
Please add me too. And make sure to go to
http://www.lumengentleman.com/motucontacts.asp
for the Summorum Pontificum Database!
Thank you!
Unfortunately, the layout looks a little mixed-up when viewed through the Safari browser. I didn't notice this problem until it was too late -- I had already posted it to FreeRepublic.
The layout looks okay when viewed through Firefox, because I coded this post using Firefox. But I shudder to think how it looks in Internet Explorer.
[sigh]
I’ve done a ‘sung’ one and it took forever. I’m sure this does too.
Having one here in Oregon! Pray for us!
bump for later
Wonderful!
Play all of them at once. They are all complementary. Not a discordant note, not one. I guess that is what all the billions of prayers sound like when they reach heaven; one incredible prayer.
Maybe Latin chant is more than just another noise in another language.
It looks fine in Micro$haft Exploder.
I like Firefox as well, but our IT department severely disapproves.
This is a wonderful work Richard.Add me to your ping list.
On your ping list please
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