Inclina Domine (CD)
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Description
Description
From St. Joseph's Abbey
INCLINA DOMINE (CD)
Medieval & Renaissance
Chants & Motets
Sung by Saint Joseph's Abbey Schola directed by Br. Emmanuel Morinelli, OSCO and the Anna Maria College Bel Canto Choir directed by Prof. Mary Lynn Ritchey, the program of this CD is intended to present a brief overview of the development of the influence of chant on liturgical music from some of the earliest Christian monophonic chants, the Ambrosian chant of Milan, to the late Renaissance five-voice polyphony based on Gregorian chant.
A monk engages in many kinds of prayer: meditation, contemplation, spiritual reading. Indeed, his whole life is prayer. But most sacred to the monk are the hours he spends with his brothers in choir when they pray the psalms and hymns of the Divine Office and celebrate the Eucharistic Liturgy.
12 selections
Total time 32:10
# | Track | Sample |
---|---|---|
1 | Inclina Domine | Sample |
2 | O Gloriosa Domina (Motet) | Sample |
3 | O Gloriosa Domina (Hymn) | Sample |
4 | A Madre Do Que Livrov | Sample |
5 | Psallite Alleluia | |
6 | A Solis Ortus Cardine (Hymn) | |
7 | A Solis Ortus Cardine (Motet) | |
8 | Beatus Vir | |
9 | Ave Vera Virginitas | |
10 | Jesu Rex Admirabilis | |
11 | Magnificat In C | |
12 | Laudate Nomen Domini |
Monastery Info:
St. Joseph's Abbey: Spencer, Massachusetts
St. Joseph's Abbey is a monastery of the Catholic Order of Cistercians of the Strict Observance (O.C.S.O.), popularly known as the "Trappists", located in Spencer, Massachusetts.
The Abbey was founded in 1950 by Belgian and French Trappist monks from the Monastery of Our Lady of the Valley in Valley Falls, Rhode Island, which had burned to the ground. In the rustic hills of central New England, they established a new home in which to follow an age-old contemplative way of life.
The monastery became known internationally as the origin of the Centering Prayer movement, whose leading proponents were monks at the monastery: Fr. William Meninger, Fr. M. Basil Pennington and Fr. Thomas Keating.
Work has always been greatly esteemed in the Cistercian tradition, since it gives the monks the opportunity to follow in Christ' footsteps and share in His Divine work of creation and restoration. The monks produce products whose sale provides for their livelihood and for the care of the poor. Since the 1950s, they have produced Trappist Preserves, their popular line of jams and jellies. Since 1949, The Holy Rood Guild has created beautiful, finely-tailored liturgical vestments to enhance the dignity of the Sacred Liturgy.