canonical hours

canonical hours

music
      in music, settings of the public prayer service (divine office) of the Roman Catholic Church (Roman Catholicism), divided into Matins, Lauds, Prime, Terce, Sext, None, Vespers, and Compline. The early monastic communities composed a complete series of hours for morning, noon, and evening; cathedral and parish churches had incorporated all the hours by the 8th century, and by the 9th century the structure was fixed.

      The musical items found in the hours include antiphons (texts usually sung before and after psalms), and psalm tones (formulas for intonation of psalms), responsories (texts usually sung after lessons, or scriptural readings), hymns, and lesson tones. The first musical settings of the hours were sung in plainsong (one voice part, in unmeasured rhythm). As in the case of the mass, the music of the hours absorbed tropes, or musical and textual additions, especially in the responsories of Matins (see trope; Gregorian chant).

      Settings of the hours preserve some of the oldest examples of polyphony, the art of simultaneous combination of melodies. Thus the Winchester Troper, a 10th- or 11th-century manuscript copied for services for Winchester Cathedral, contains one of the largest body of early two-part settings of the responsories for Matins. The Spanish Codex Calixtinus (about the 12th century) also includes two-part polyphony for the Matins responsories.

      The polyphony common at the monastery of Saint-Martial at Limoges in France was expanded by Léonin, a composer at Notre-Dame Cathedral, Paris, c. 1160–80, in his two-part responsories for Matins. His successor, Pérotin, expanded the work of Léonin, composing not only in two parts but also in three and four parts. Both men worked on the Magnus Liber Organi (“Great Book of Organum”), a collection of two-part organums for the entire church year.

      In the 15th century polyphonic settings for Vespers were most common, but there are some settings of responsories for Matins and hymns for Lauds. The Burgundian Guillaume Dufay especially, as well as another Burgundian Gilles Binchois, and the Englishman John Dunstable provided a standard repertoire that survives in manuscripts all over Europe. This repertoire includes Vesper hymns, psalms, antiphons, and Magnificats (settings of the canticle of the Virgin Mary) in three-part treble-dominated style (elaborate top part over two often instrumental, slower moving lower parts). They also used three-part fauxbourdon style, in which the middle voice moves in parallel to the upper part at the interval of a fourth below it, while the lowest part moves in parallel sixths (as in E–C) with the upper part. Psalm settings became more frequent only after 1450. The plainchant psalm-tone formula sometimes alternates with a polyphonic three-part setting, often in fauxbourdon style. By 1475 melodic imitation was increasingly used in all the musical settings, and four-part texture became standard.

      In the 16th century renewed interest arose in the polyphonic settings of the hours. The Lutheran publisher Georg Rhau brought out several Vesper publications between 1538 and 1545. Consequent to the Roman Catholic liturgical reforms promoted by the Council of Trent (1545–63), cycles of hymns and Vesper services as well as settings of Matins, Lauds, and Compline for the major feasts appeared. These were performed in many local churches and newly formed seminaries. The psalms were now set in falsobordone style: a four-part chordal texture having the plainchant psalm tone in the upper part.

      Very important in the 16th century were the settings of Matins and Lauds for Thursday, Friday, and Saturday of Holy Week during the service of Tenebrae (“darkness”), in which 15 candles were individually extinguished until the church was in total darkness. In Matins, there are nine lessons, each concluding with a responsory. The first three lessons are taken from the Book of Lamentations in the Bible. Numerous polyphonic settings were made of Tenebrae texts. Among the most famous are the Spaniard Tomás Luis de Victoria's Lamentations and Responsories (1585). With Claudio Monteverdi's Vespers (1610), a new style emerges. Orchestrally inspired church services revolutionized the polyphonic tradition of ecclesiastical music.

      In the 18th century Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart wrote two Vesper services for soloists, chorus, and orchestra. In the 19th century attempts were made to revive the singing of Vespers by republishing 16th-century settings. Composition in this style was also encouraged by the Cecilian movement (founded 1868), which promoted reform in Roman Catholic church music.

      In the 17th and 18th centuries the Lamentations were set to music for solo voices and musical instruments. In the 20th century settings of the Lamentations and responsories have been composed by Igor Stravinsky (1958), Ernst Krenek (1957), and Francis Poulenc (1962).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Canonical Hours — • Essay on the practice of reciting the Divine Office according to set hours Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Canonical Hours     Canonical Hours      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • canonical hours — plural noun 1. Set hours for prayer or the services prescribed for these times (in the Roman Catholic Church, traditionally listed as matins, lauds, prime, terce, sext, none, vespers and compline) 2. Any time between 8am and 6pm, when marriages… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Canonical hours — Benedictine monks singing Vespers on Holy Saturday. Canonical hours are divisions of time which serve as increments between the prescribed prayers of the daily round. A Book of Hours contains such a set of prayers. In western Catholicism,… …   Wikipedia

  • Canonical hours — canonic ca*non ic (k[.a]*n[o^]n [i^]k), canonical ca*non ic*al (k[.a]*n[o^]n [i^]*kal), a. [L. canonicus, LL. canonicalis, fr. L. canon: cf. F. canonique. See {canon}.] Of or pertaining to a canon; established by, or according to, a canon or… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Canonical hours — Hour Hour, n. [OE. hour, our, hore, ure, OF. hore, ore, ure, F. heure, L. hora, fr. Gr. ?, orig., a definite space of time, fixed by natural laws; hence, a season, the time of the day, an hour. See {Year}, and cf. {Horologe}, {Horoscope}.] 1. The …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Canonical hours — A canonical hour is a fixed part of the office which the Church appointed to be recited at a particular time; all the prayers fixed for a certain day took the name of canonical . This term was then extended to apply to the book containing these… …   Dictionary of Medieval Terms and Phrases

  • Canonical Hours (Agbia) — The book of daily prayers according to certain hours. It includes all the prayers, Psalms, Gospel readings, and petitions to be said at the various hours by day and night, appointed in accordance with analogous points in the life and Passion of… …   Dictionary of church terms

  • Canonical Hours —    Seven stated hours appointed for devotional exercises, viz., Nocturns, Matins with Lauds, Prime, Tierce, Sext, Nones, and Vespers with Compline. Each of the Seven Hours is said to commemorate some point in the Passion of our Lord, as set forth …   American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia

  • canonical hours — noun a) The times of day at which canon law prescribes certain prayers to be said; matins with lauds, prime, tierce, sext, nones, vespers, and complin b) …   Wiktionary

  • Canonical Hours —    See Divine Office …   Historical dictionary of sacred music

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