Nota de aplicación
The official monophonic unison chants, originally unaccompanied, of Christian liturgies. Music was developed for voice, based on a system of modes and performed in free rhythm corresponding at least in part to the accentuation of the words, though often with considerable elaboration of the melody. In usuage, often applied chiefly to the music of the Western Church, particularly chants of the 4th-century St. Ambrose and in the 6th-century by St. Gregory the Great.
Ubicación jerarquía
- Faceta Objetos
- .. comunicación verbal y visual
- .... Obras literarias y de las artes escénicas (nombre jerárquico)
- ...... composición musical
- ........ canción
- .......... cántico (géneros de documentos para música)
- ............ Ambrosian chants
- ............ Anglican chants
- ............ Armenian chants
- ............ Beneventan chants
- ............ Buddhist chants
- ............ Byzantine chants
- ............ Chaldean chants
- ............ Coptic chants
- ............ Ethiopian chants
- ............ canto gregoriano
- ............ Hawaiian chants
- ............ Hindu chants
- ............ Jewish chants
- ............ Maori chants
- ............ Mozarabic chants
- ............ Navajo chants
- ............ plainsong
- ............ Sufi chants
- ............ Syrian chants