Crux et Cithara is a 1983 book, completely unavailable, edited by Robert Skeris in honor of the 70th birthday of Johannes Overath. It contains many important pieces that I look forward to reading now that the technical side of things is done. It is right here.
Among the pieces is J. Ratzinger's Theological Problems of Church Music, which has also been completely unavailable (to my knowledge). So it is extracted as a separate file. If anyone wants to extract the text and send it to me in HTML, please do, and we can put it up at MusicSacra.com.
Tuesday, September 11, 2007
Crux et Cithara
Jeffrey TuckerMore recent articles:
NLM Quiz #25: Where Does This Vestment Come From, And How Is It Used? The AnswerGregory DiPippo
Can you guess where and how this vestment is used? I have two hints to offer: 1. It belongs to the current liturgical season. 2. It is not being used in an Eastern rite. (Apologies, but no better image of it is available.)The Answer: As I suspected would be the case, this proved to be a stumper. This vestment is a kind of stole which is used in the...
NLM Quiz #25: Where Does This Vestment Come From, And How Is It Used?Gregory DiPippo
Can you guess where and how this vestment is used? I have two hints to offer: 1. It belongs to the current liturgical season. 2. It is not being used in an Eastern rite. (Apologies, but no better image of it is available.)Please leave your answers in the combox, and feel free to add any details or explanations you think pertinent. It has been a whi...
The Feast of St Gregory the Great 2025Gregory DiPippo
It is reported that some merchants, having just arrived at Rome on a certain day, exposed many things for sale in the marketplace, and an abundance of people resorted thither to buy. Gregory himself went with the rest, and, among other things, some boys were set to sale, their bodies white, their countenances beautiful, and their hair very fine. H...
New “Psalterium Romanum” Presents Pre-Pius X Divine Office with Chant NotationPeter Kwasniewski
For the feast of St. Gregory the Great, there’s more good news on the Gregorian chant front!Pope Saint Pius X’s reform of the Roman Office not only represented an upheaval in the psalter, it also unaccountably changed many of the antiphons of the ferial cursus, replacing them with novel compositions even when the traditional ones could have continu...
The First Bible of Charles the Bald (9th-Century)Gregory DiPippo
On Sunday, I illustrated an excerpt from Durandus with an image taken from a decorated Bible produced in the mid-ninth century, commonly known as the First Bible of Charles the Bald, who received it as a gift from one Vivien, count of Tours; it is also known as the Vivian Bible. (In French, ‘Vivien’, from Latin ‘Vivianus’ or ‘Bibianus’, is a man’s ...
Amalphion - A Documentary about the Benedictine Monastery on Mt AthosGregory DiPippo
I just learned about an interesting documentary which was published two months ago on the YouTube channel of the French-language Catholic television outlet KTO TV, about a Benedictine monastery of the Roman Rite on Mt Athos. (Closed captions are available in English.) When the Athonite peninsula was first settled as a monastic community in the...
The Oratory of the Forty Martyrs in the Roman ForumGregory DiPippo
The original day for the feast of the Forty Martyrs, who were killed at Sebaste in Armenia under the Roman Emperor Licinius, around 320 AD, is March 9th. They were a group of soldiers of the Twelfth Legion who refused to renounce the Faith, and after various tortures, were condemned to die a particularly horrible death, stripped naked and left to f...
Ordo Hebdomadae Maioris & Memoriale Rituum: Useful Books for the Pre-55 Holy WeekPeter Kwasniewski
Saint Anthony Press, established with the mission of publishing rare or otherwise “lost” Catholic liturgical and devotional books, has reprinted the Ordo Hebdomadae Maioris (Order of Holy Week), containing the Holy Week liturgies and Order of Mass with seasonal Prefaces, according to the 1920 typical edition of the Roman Missal (in use un...
Durandus on the First Sunday of LentGregory DiPippo
The following excerpts are taken from the sixth book of William Durandus’ Rationale Divinorum Officiorum, chapter 32, 6-11. There are fewer ellipses than usual, but perhaps a bit more paraphrasing.This is the time of Christian warfare, in which the devil rises up against us more strongly. Therefore, lest anyone despair, the Church sings the introit...
The Station of the First Friday of LentGregory DiPippo
Many of the stories that form the corpus of Lenten Scriptural readings in the traditional Roman Rite are frequently depicted in frescoes in the catacombs, and on early Christian sarcophagi. We may safely assume that such readings were already part of the Roman Church’s lectionary before the end of the persecutions and the building of the earliest ...