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419
[419]
INDEX
A
- Act of Supremacy, 325, 328, 329.
- Agathon, pope, 110.
- Agnus Dei, 90.
- Ahle, 266.
- Ainsworth, psalm-book of, 376.
- Altenburg, 266.
- Ambrose, St., 58;
- introduces psalm singing into Milan, 66.
- Anerios, the, 133, 168.
- Anthem, Anglican, 346;
- its different forms, 348;
- periods and styles, 353.
- Aria, Italian, origin of, 190;
- its supremacy in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, 191;
- its introduction into church music in Italy, 193, 269;
- influence upon German church music, 267, 269, 318;
- adoption into the cantata, 273;
- into the Passion music, 276, 280.
- Art, Catholic conception of religious, 70, 174;
- Calvinist and Puritan hostility to art in connection with worship, 363, 369, 372.
- Asor, 23.
- Assyrians, religious music among the, 12.
- Attwood, 354.
- Augustine, missionary to England, 117.
- Augustine, St., quoted, 51, 67;
- traditional author, with St. Ambrose, of the Te Deum, 58;
- effect of music upon, 372.
B
- Bach, Johann Sebastian, his relation to German church music, 282, 287, 289;
- the Bach family, 284;
- Bach’s birth, education, and official positions, 286;
- condition of German music in his early days, 287;
- his organ music, 290, 292;
- fugues, 292;
- choral preludes, 295;
- cantatas, 300;
- style of his arias, 304;
- of his choruses, 305;
- Passion according to St. Matthew, 307;
- compared with Händel’s “Messiah,” 307;
- its formal arrangement and style, 308;
- performance by Mendelssohn, 312;
- the Mass in B minor, 204, 211, 312;
- national and individual character of Bach’s genius, 314;
- its universality, 316;
- decline of his influence after his death, 317.
- Bach Society, New, 322.
- Bardi, 188.
- Barnby, 355, 383.
- Battishill, 354.
- Beethoven, his Mass in D, 119, 200, 204, 210.
- Behem, 229.
- Benedictus, 88.
- Bennett, 355.
- Berlioz, his Requiem, 199, 200, 204.
- Beza, 360.
- Bisse, quoted, 338.
- Boleyn, Anne, 326.
- Bonar, 381.
- Boniface, 118.
- Bourgeois, 360.
- Boyce, 354.
- Brethren of the Common Life, 234.
- Bridge, 355.
- Buxtehude, 292.
- Byrd, 350.
[420]
C
- Caccini, 188, 189, 190.
- Calvin, his hostility to forms in worship, 358, 363;
- adopts the psalms of Marot and Beza, 360.
- Canon of the Mass, 89.
- Cantata, German church, 270, 272;
- origin and development, 273.
- See also Bach.
- Cartwright, his attack upon the established Church, 367.
- Cary sisters, 381.
- Cassell, quoted, 45.
- Catherine, wife of Henry VIII., 326.
- Celestine I., pope, 110.
- Chalil, 22.
- Chant, nature of, 40, 97;
- the form of song in antiquity, 40;
- its origin in the early Church, 51;
- its systematic culture in the Roman Church, sixth century, 67.
- Chant, Anglican, 336, 340;
- Gregorian movement in the Church of England, 342;
- first harmonized chants, 345.
- Chant, Catholic ritual, epoch of, 93;
- liturgic importance, 94, 99, 405;
- general character, 95, 104;
- different classes, 103;
- rhythm, 105;
- rules of performance, 105;
- origin and development, 99, 109;
- key system, 113;
- mediaeval embellishment, 115;
- extension over Europe, 117;
- legends connected with, 122;
- later neglect and revived modern study, 126;
- use in the early Lutheran Church, 260;
- “Gregorians” in the Church of England, 337, 341.
- Charlemagne, his service to the Roman liturgy and chant, 118.
- Charles II., king of England, his patronage of church music, 352.
- Cherubini, mass music of, 204, 213.
- Choral, German, sources of, 260;
- at first not harmonized, 262;
- later rhythmic alterations, 263;
- its occasional adoption by Catholic churches, 264;
- its condition in the seventeenth century, 265;
- decline in the eighteenth century, 266;
- choral tunes in the cantata, 274, 302;
- in the Passion music, 280;
- as an element in organ music, 290, 294;
- use in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, 308, 309, 311.
- Choral, or Cathedral mode of performing the Anglican service, 333.
- Clement of Alexandria, quoted, 54;
- his song to the Logos, 56.
- Clement VII., pope, 326.
- Colet, 327.
- Common Prayer, Book of, 328, 330;
- musical setting by Marbecke, 337, 369.
- Communion, 90.
- Congregational singing, its decline in the early Church, 48;
- vital place in Protestant worship, 223;
- in Germany before the Reformation, 228 et seq.;
- not encouraged in the Catholic Church, 240;
- in the Church of Luther, 242;
- among the Puritans, 376.
- Constantine, edicts of, 62.
- Constitutions of the Apostles, 47.
- Cosmas, St., 60.
- Counterpoint, mediaeval, growth of, 140, 148.
- Counter-Reformation, 156, 264.
- Cowper, 381, 387.
- Coxe, 381.
- Cranmer, 328, 329, 331, 337.
- Credo, 88.
- Croce, 168.
- Cromwell, 369, 371, 372.
- Crotch, 354.
- Crüger, 266.
- Curwen, quoted, 343.
- Cymbals, 24, 26.
[421]
D
- Dance, religious, its prominence in primitive worship, 3;
- twofold purpose, 5;
- among the Egyptians, 6;
- among the Greeks, 6;
- in early Christian worship, 8.
- David, his contribution to the Hebrew ritual, 24.
- Day’s psalter, 345.
- Deutsche Messe, Luther’s, 245, 247.
- Dies Irae, 60.
- Discant, first form of mediaeval part writing, 138.
- Dubois, 217.
- Durante, 213.
- Dvořák, his Requiem, 204, 219;
- Stabat Mater, 219.
- Dykes, 383.
E
- Eccard, 271.
- Eckart, 229, 231.
- Edward VI., king of England, 327, 328.
- Egyptians, religious music among the, 12.
- “Ein’ feste Burg,” 251, 252, 253, 259, 264, 302.
- Ekkehard V., quoted, 121.
- Elizabeth, queen of England, 327, 329, 332, 358.
- Ellerton, 381.
- Ephraem, 57.
- Erasmus, 327.
- Eybler, 207.
F
- Faber, 381.
- Faunce, quoted, 403.
- Female voice not employed in ancient Hebrew worship, 29;
- similar instances of exclusion in the modern Church, 30.
- Festivals, primitive, 4;
- in the early Church, 65.
- Flagellants, 231.
- Folk-song, as possible origin of some of the ancient psalm melodies, 31;
- German religious, before the Reformation, 228 et seq.;
- German secular, transformed into religious, 232;
- folk-tunes as sources of the Lutheran choral, 261.
- Formula Missae, Luther’s, 245.
- Franc, 360.
- Franck, 218.
- Frank, 266.
- Frauenlob, 229.
- Frescobaldi, 292.
- Froberger, 292.
- Fuller, quoted, 375.
G
- Gabrieli, Giovanni, 170.
- Gabrielis, the, 93, 133, 170.
- Galilei, 188.
- Garrett, 355.
- Gerhardt, 266, 311.
- Gevaert, works on the origins of the Gregorian chant, quoted, 109.
- Gibbons, 350, 352.
- Gibbons, Cardinal, quoted, 75, 84.
- Gigout, 217.
- Gloria in excelsis, 58, 87.
- Glossolalia, 44.
- Goss, 355.
- Gottfried von Strassburg, 229.
- Goudimel, 154, 360.
- Gounod, mass music of, 199, 200, 213, 216.
- Gradual, 88.
- Greeks, religious music among the, 14, 19;
- Greek influence upon early Christian worship, 42, 63, 65;
- relation of Greek music to Christian, 52.
- Green, quoted, 117.
- Greene, 354.
- Gregorian Chant, see Chant, Catholic ritual.
- Gregory I., pope, his traditional services to the ritual chant, 107;
- objections to this tradition, 108.
- Gregory II., pope, 113.
- Gregory III., pope, 113.
- Grell, 212, 321.
- Guilmant, 217.
[422]
H
- Händel, 279, 297, 306, 319, 323, 354;
- the “Messiah,” 307.
- Hammerschmidt, 266.
- Harmony, virtually unknown in ancient music, 18;
- beginnings in modern music, 130;
- change from mediaeval to modern, 201.
- Hartmann von Aue, 229.
- Hasler, 271.
- Hauptmann, 321.
- Havert, 212.
- Haydn, mass music of, 205, 208;
- “The Creation” stimulates formation of choral societies in Germany, 319.
- Haves, 354.
- Hazozerah, 22.
- Heber, 381.
- Hebrews, did not assign a superhuman source to music, 14;
- their employment of music, 20;
- nature and uses of instruments, 21;
- ritualistic developments under David and Solomon, 24;
- psalms and the method of singing them, 27.
- Henry VIII., king of England,
- declares himself head of the English Church, 325;
- not the originator of the Reformation in England, 316;
- changes in policy, 328.
- Hervé, 122.
- Hezekiah, restoration of the temple worship by, 25.
- Holmes, 381.
- Hooker, author of The Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity,
- his defence of the music and art of the established Church, 367, 404.
- Hooper, 329.
- Hopkins, 355, 383.
- Horder, author of The Hymn Lover, 381 n.
- Hucbald, 136.
- Hus, founder of Bohemian hymnody, 233.
- Hymn-books, early Bohemian, 233;
- first Lutheran, 249;
- Catholic German, 264;
- recent American, 385.
- See also Psalmody.
- Hymns, their first appearance in Christian literature and worship, 42, 46;
- Greek hymns in the early Christian Church, 56.
- Hymns, Bohemian, 233.
- Hymns, English and American, 379 et seq.;
- “uninspired” hymns not permitted by Calvin and the Puritans, 361, 373;
- hymns of Watts and the Wesleys, 379;
- beauty and range of the later English and American hymnody, 380.
- Hymns, Latin, 60, 235.
- Hymns, Lutheran, historic importance of, 225, 303;
- introduction into the liturgy, 247;
- first hymn-books, 249.
- See also Luther.
- Hymns, pre-Reformation German, their history and character, 228;
- not liturgic, 240.
- Hymns, Syrian, 57.
- Hymn-tunes, English, 382.
- Hymn-tunes, German, see Choral.
[423]
I
- Ignatius, St., traditional introduction of chanting into the Church by, 48.
- Ildefonso, St, 118.
- Instruments, how first used in worship, 3, 10;
- their use in Egyptian ceremonies, 12;
- among the Greeks, 14;
- among the Hebrews, 21, 32;
- not used in the early Church, 54.
J
- Jakob, quoted, 77, 175.
- James, St., liturgy of, 49.
- Jean de Muris, quoted, 146.
- Jebb, quoted, 333, 335, 339.
- Jews, see Hebrews.
- John Damascene, St., 60.
- John the Deacon, author of a life of Gregory I., 108.
- Jomelli, 213.
- Joaquin des Prés, 133, 154.
K
- Kahle, 376, 381.
- Kiel, 212, 321.
- Kinnor, 21.
- Kretzschmar, quoted, 306.
- Kunrad der Marner, 229.
- Kyrie eleison, 57, 87;
- popular use in Germany, 229.
L
- Lanciani, quoted, 63.
- Lang, Andrew, quoted, 7.
- Laodicea, injunction in regard to singing by council of, 50, 51.
- Lassus, 93, 133, 154, 167, 172.
- Latimer, 329.
- Lemaire, quoted, 116.
- Leo I., pope, 110.
- Lesueur, 214.
- “Lining out,” 370.
- Liszt, criticisms upon Paris church music, 206;
- imagines a new style of religious music, 214.
- Liturgy, Anglican, 329;
- modes of rendering, 333 et seq.;
- intoning of prayers, 337.
- Liturgy, Catholic, origin of, 81, 83;
- language of, 82;
- outline and components of, 87;
- a musical liturgy, 92.
- Liturgy, Luther’s, see Formula Missae, and Deutsche Messe.
- Liturgy of St. James, 49, 50;
- of St. Mark, 49.
- Longfellow, translation of “O gladsome light,” 58.
- Lotti, 133.
- Louis IX., king of France, 148.
- Luther, his service to German hymnody, 226, 243, 248;
- his reform of the liturgy, 244;
- his theory of worship, 245;
- origin of his hymns, 250;
- their spirit and literary style, 251;
- nature of his work for congregational music, 258;
- Luther not a composer of tunes, 259;
- quoted, 260.
- Lyric poetry, two forms of, 27.
- Lyte, 381.
[424]
M
- Mackenzie, 355.
- Marbecke, his musical setting of the English Prayer Book, 337.
- Marot, psalm translations of, 359.
- Martin, 355.
- Mary, queen of England, reaction under, 329, 332.
- Mass, theory of, 83, 91, 240;
- different kinds of, 85;
- in England, 328, 332.
- See also Liturgy, Catholic.
- Milman, 381.
- Milton, 365.
- Mixed mode of performing the Anglican service, 335.
- Monk, 355, 383.
- Montgomery, 381.
N
- Naninis, the, 168.
- Neale, quoted on the Greek hymns, 59.
- Nebel, 22.
- Netherlanders, age of the, 149.
- Neukomm, 207.
- Newman, 381.
- Newton, 381, 387.
- Nicholas I., pope, 122.
- Notker Balbulus, reputed founder of the Sequence, 121.
O
- Oblation of the Host, 88.
- Offertory, 88.
- Opera, invention of, 186, 188;
- ideal and form of early Italian, 190;
- opera and church, 193.
- Oratorio, its rise in Germany and effect on church music, 319.
- Organ music, its beginnings in Venice, 169, 171;
- in the German Protestant Church, 269, 270, 290;
- Bach’s organ works, see Bach.
- Organs, Puritan hatred of, 365, 370;
- destroyed by the Puritans, 371.
- Organum, 136.
- Osmund, bishop of Salisbury, 331.
P
- Pachelbel, 292.
- Palestrina, 93, 133, 151;
- the Mass of Pope Marcellus, 152, 154;
- myth of the rescue of church music by Palestrina, 152;
- compared with Lassus, 173.
- “Palestrina style,” 158;
- tonality, 158;
- construction, 159;
- tone color, how produced, 166;
- aesthetic and religious effect, 173, 177;
- limits of characterization, 178.
- Palmer, 381.
- Parallelism in Hebrew poetry, 28.
- Parochial mode of performing the Anglican service, 335.
- Passion music, German, 270, 272;
- origin and early development, 274;
- from Schütz to Bach, Hamburg Passions, 280.
- Passion play, 274.
- Pater, quoted, 400.
- Paul, St., his injunction in regard to song, 42;
- allusion to the glossolalia, 44.
- Pergolesi, 213.
- Philo, 48.
- Pietism, its effect on church music, 266, 319.
- Plain Song, see Chant, Catholic ritual; also Chant, Anglican.
- Plato, his opinion of the purpose of music, 14.
- Pliny, his report to Trajan concerning Christian singing, 47.
- Plutarch on the function of music, 15.
- “Pointing,” 341.
- Post-Communion, 90.
- Prayer Book, see Common Prayer, Book of.
- Preface, 88.
- Psalmody, Puritan, 369, 373;
- methods of singing, 377, 405.
- Psalms, how sung in the ancient Hebrew worship, 27;
- adopted by the Christians, 41;
- antiphonal psalmody in Milan in the fourth century, 66;
- in Rome in the fifth century, 67;
- in the Church of England, see Chant, Anglican;
- metrical psalm versions, see Psalmody.
- Psalter, Geneva, origin of, 359.
- Psaltery, 23.
- Purcell, 347, 352.
- Puritanism, 324, 327, 358, 364 et seq.
- Puritans, their hostility to artistic music, 365 et seq.;
- their attacks upon episcopacy and ritualism, 366, 369;
- their ravages in the churches, 371;
- their tenets and usages maintained after the Restoration, 372;
- Puritan music in America, 390.
[425]
R
- Recitative, 188.
- Reformation in England, its nature, causes, and progress, 325 et seq.
- Reinken, 295.
- Reinmar der Zweter, 229.
- Renaissance, its influence upon musical development, 185, 187, 272;
- parallel between Renaissance religious painting and Catholic Church music, 194.
- Requiem Mass, 85.
- Rheinberger, 212.
- Richter, 321.
- Ridley, 329.
- Robert, king of France, 147.
- Romanus, 119.
- Rossini, religious music of, 207, 213.
S
- Sachs, 229.
- St. Cecilia Society, 180, 212.
- St. Gall, convent of, as a musical centre, 118.
- Saint-Säens, 217.
- Sanctus, 88.
- Savages, religious sentiment among, 2;
- methods of religious expression, 3.
- Schaff, quoted, 44.
- Scheidt, 292.
- Schleiermacher, 321.
- Schola Cantorum, 181, 288 n.
- Schop, 266.
- Schubert, masses of, 199, 200, 211.
- Schubiger, quoted, 119.
- Schütz, greatest German composer before Bach and Händel, 277;
- his education and musical methods, 277;
- Symphoniae sacrae, 278;
- dramatic religious works, 278;
- Passion settings, 278;
- his isolated musical position, 279.
- Sechter, 207.
- Seminaries, theological, and church music, 406.
- Senfl, 264.
- Sequence, 88;
- origin and early character, 121.
- “Service,” Anglican, 345.
- Shairp, quoted, 398.
- Shophar, 22.
- Sistrum, 23.
- Six Articles, 328.
- Smart, 355, 383.
- Spencer, Herbert, quoted, 5, 15.
- Speratus, 249.
- Spitta, quoted, 322.
- Stainer, 355;
- quoted, 342.
- Stanford, 355.
- Sternhold and Hopkins, psalm version of, 375, 377.
- Stile famigliare, 151, 158, 159.
- Sullivan, 355, 383.
- Swelinck, 292.
- Symbolism, in ancient music, 11, 14.
- Synagogue, worship in the ancient, 33;
- modified by the Christians, 41.
- Synesius, 57.
[426]
T
- Tallis, 168, 345, 350.
- Tate and Brady, psalm version of, 376.
- Tauler, 229, 231, 238.
- Taylor, Bayard, quoted, 254.
- Te Deum, 58.
- Therapeutae, 48.
- Thirty Years’ War, 264, 265, 285.
- Thomas à Kempis, 224.
- Tones, Gregorian, 100.
- Tones, psalm, see Tones, Gregorian.
- Toph, 22.
- Tours, 355.
- Tractus, 88.
U
- Ugab, 22.
V
- Van Laun, quoted, 359.
- Vehe, 264.
- Venice, church music in, 168.
- Verdi, his Requiem, 199, 200, 213, 218.
- Vittoria, 133, 168.
W
- Wackernagel’s collection of German pre-Reformation hymns, 228.
- Wagner, P., quoted, 104.
- Walther, Johann, 249, 259, 260, 264.
- Walther von der Vogelweide, 229.
- Watts, psalm version of, 376;
- hymns, 379, 380, 387.
- Wesley, Charles, 379, 381.
- Wesley, John, 379.
- Wesleyan movement, revival of hymn singing in the, 379.
- Whittier, 381.
- Wiclif, 327.
- Willaert, 133, 168, 169.
- Winterfeld, quoted, 170.
- Wiseman, quoted, 76.
- Witt, founder of St. Cecilia Society, 180.
- Wrangham, 376.
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