Affiliation:
1. University of Belgrade, Faculty of Orthodox Theology, Belgrade, Serbia
Abstract
Church singing, which was created due to the circumstances that arose after
the Great Migration, is better known as the Karlovac chant. It was named
after the place where it was transcribed and represents our national way of
interpreting liturgical music, characterized by accepted influences of
Western European musical practice, manifested first in music transcription,
notation, metrics, and Western European tonality. Those were necessary
conditions for its further artistic transposition into a complex polyphonic
choral facture, intended primarily for church music elite. Permeated with
the standard authoritative Western European musical tradition, it succumbed
to the influence of superior musical achievements. However, when exposed to
Western European creative practices, it did not prove to be a harmonized
expression of artistic subordination, but an example of an unpredictable
musical achievement based on the synthesis of our rich musical heritage
imbued with a unique confessional and national self-determination. Its basic
characteristics go back to the traditional musical heritage of the Balkans
and Byzantium, enriched by Western European influences.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
1 articles.
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