ࡱ> HJGU@  bjbj .>J J J 8 L $       $RP:  :  O         0dm9J p4e0,/Hj//   Z   ::d J XJ Roger Bowers LITURGY AND MUSICIANS IN THE ENGLISH PARISH CHURCH, 1450-1575 This volume will investigate the general manner of observance of, participation in, and attendance at, the authorised liturgy within parish churches in both the late pre-Reformation and the inaugural Reformation periods, with particular emphasis on the musical component of the services. Of three principal sections, Section (A) will offer an analysis of the observance of the Latin liturgy of the late-medieval universal church an observance which constituted every parishioners most fundamental exposure to religious experience and practice, calling each one to church for attendance at three substantial services on about one day in every four throughout every year of their lives. Section (B) will consider the implementation and observance of the reformed Books of Common Prayer, of 1549, 1552, and 1559, and of the return to Catholic practice in 1553-9. Concentrating on liturgy and music, this will amplify (and refrain from duplicating) such existing scholarship as Eamon Duffy, The Stripping of the Altars (New Haven and London, 1992). Section (C) will offer eight particular studies of the best-documented churches and of cognate liturgical bodies founded in parish and kindred churches. The time-frame applied is determined by the subject-matter, and by the survival of sources. Only from c.1450 do churchwardens record-books and accounts, records of archdeaconry visitations, and (to some extent) wills, survive in profusion sufficient to make this study possible; moreover, it was from about this date that there began the cultivation of ensembles provided to sing polyphonic music. After 1549/1559 the Reformation supplied a new liturgy, and with it a new theological aesthetic to which, at least in the short term, the cultivation of music was largely repugnant. By 1575 the extinction of musical contribution to liturgical observance in the parish church, though not quite total, was as complete as it was going to become; this year therefore supplies an appropriate terminus for this study. CONTENTS A. The practice of the Latin liturgy in the English parish church at the end of the Middle Ages The parish priest in his church: the daily service of matins, Mass and vespers; the Sunday and feast-day procession; the occasional services. The priests assisting servant: the parish clerk and his role in church; the clerks boys (trainees and assistants). The parish liturgy and its collegiate antecedents: the rite, plainsong, and ceremony of the service; the authorised service-books. The embroidering of the parish church liturgy with unauthorised accretions. The associate clergy in the greater parish church: the plainsong chorus of chantry, guild and stipendiary priests; the installation of choirstalls; the cultivation of the musically competent parish clerk as rector chori. The lay volunteers singing-boys and men of the plainsong chorus. The organ in the parish church: its role in liturgy and local prestige. 7. The wealthier church, and its introduction of an ensemble to sing polyphonic music. 8. Repertories and performance of polyphony (organ and vocal). 9. The parish penumbra: fraternity and guild observances; the remembrance of the dead. 10. The parishioners experience of the Latin liturgy and its music: strengths and vulnerabilities. Roger Bowers, Liturgy and Musicians in the English Parish Church, c.1450-1575 B. The scrutiny of liturgy from 1536 onward, and its overhaul and revision in content and practice, 1547-c.1575: the divination and refinement of perceived aboriginal priorities and values, and the progressive stages of approval, commendation, endorsement, and enforcement whereby their implementation supplanted former values and practices in parish church usage 11. 1536-48. The parish liturgy and its executants largely untroubled. The maintenance of liturgical and musical integrity, mostly undiluted other than by inaugural piecemeal address made to certain unauthorised and theologically suspect accretions. Initial perceptions, 1536-43, especially the adoration of saints. The Henrician Settlement of Religion of 1542- 43, and the liturgy under the settlement, 1543-47. The vernacular Litany of 1544 (non-liturgical, for implementation only as replacement for the extra-cyclic processio causa necessitatis). Identification, 1547-8, of further practices perceived to be theologically unsound or spiritually pernicious, with attrition of those most readily amenable to address. 12. 1548-59. March 1548: the dispersal of clerical ensembles. The first Book of Common Prayer 1549, and its formalisation of a reduced but positive role for optional musical contribution. The second Book (1552), and its abrupt extinction of all role for music and musicians. The restoration of the Latin liturgy, 1553-59, and of the values and practices informing it. 13. 1559-75. The third Book of Common Prayer (1559), its exclusion of all formal role for music, and the consequent progressive erosion of all parish liturgical music-making toward extinction, by c.1575 not quite total but as complete as it was going to become. C. Eight individual case studies: (a) All Saints, Bristol (b) St Mary at Hill, London (c) St Lawrence, Reading (d) St James, Louth (e) St Margaret, Westminster (f) fraternity of St Mary, church of St Botolph, Boston (g) gild of Palmers, church of St Lawrence, Ludlow (h) fraternity of Name of Jesus, St Pauls cathedral, London      PAGE 2 +,34:;BCLNR]mnr t       } ɸ}}}}oh:3CJOJQJ^JaJ hh CJOJQJ^JaJh CJOJQJ^JaJh*1CJOJQJ^JaJhrsCJOJQJ^JaJ hhrsCJOJQJ^JaJhzL5CJOJQJaJhoiCJOJQJaJhjhMCJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJ+ CMN./01:;Aj ^gd8^8gd & F ^`gd$a$gdN'gdM$a$gdoi$a$gdM$a$gd9n  0 K j k   m n -01:;ӳӥӥӳӘ{n^Rh3CJOJQJaJhhM5CJOJQJaJhN'5CJOJQJaJhN'hN'>*CJOJQJaJhzL5CJOJQJaJhB5CJOJQJaJh3uCJOJQJ^JaJh CJOJQJ^JaJ#hhrs6CJOJQJ^JaJ hhrsCJOJQJ^JaJhrsCJOJQJ^JaJh*1CJOJQJ^JaJ&@ !Wiuw  Wab57LOPW\ٙshY CJOJQJaJhQVCJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJ^JaJh3CJOJQJaJhhM6CJOJQJaJh^gCJOJQJaJh?sCJOJQJaJhICJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJaJhCJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJ(X8 `|CDE] ^gdTV}gdMn^ngdM^gdI gdnt & F ^`gd8^8gd\_`f   #)]fmn|~yh:3CJOJQJaJh?sCJOJQJaJh(CJOJQJaJhSCJOJQJaJhCJOJQJaJhICJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJaJhQVCJOJQJaJhntCJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJhp^LCJOJQJaJ/BCDE >EZg(*+Va~ɹ؜ssh CCJOJQJaJhhA]g5CJOJQJaJhM5CJOJQJaJhhM5CJOJQJaJhS6CJOJQJaJhShS6CJOJQJaJhShSCJOJQJaJhS5CJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJaJ-]WSD>.=kgdoigdM^gdTV} ^gdTV}125O]  CN$+=H-8V彮h_CJOJQJaJh{CJOJQJaJhh7CJOJQJaJh7CJOJQJaJh%?5CJOJQJaJhhM6CJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJaJ8VW~-.<=GHI`ajkwʻ֌teVtJtJeVth&XsCJOJQJaJhoih+CJOJQJaJhh+CJOJQJaJh+CJOJQJaJhoiCJOJQJaJhh5CJOJQJaJh+h+CJOJQJaJhhM5CJOJQJaJhhoiCJOJQJaJhXCJOJQJaJhMCJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJhYFhMCJOJQJaJw.?Jijwʾ֯ʏtttetttaYUYUYUYhl_jhl_Uh^hg5khg5kCJOJQJaJhhg5kCJOJQJaJhg5kCJOJQJaJ hhMCJOJQJ^JaJhoih+CJOJQJaJhh+CJOJQJaJh&XsCJOJQJaJh+CJOJQJaJhoiCJOJQJaJhoihoiCJOJQJaJhhMCJOJQJaJ!/kZ [ gdIyO P V W X Y Z h^h hIyhh<0JmHnHujh0JU h0Jhl_ ,1h. 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