tradition and/or saint tradition in the current liturgical chanting of the serbian church
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2015
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Abstract
In the 90s in the liturgical life of the Serbian Church the so-called
Byzantine chant was introduced, which has caused no small earthquakes among
Serbian clerics and believers. This phenomenon was a part of the general
Orthodox renewal movement, both in terms of worship and in theological
thoughts, and in ecclesiastical artistic expression. New - Byzantine or Greek
melos instituted unjustified ethnofiletistic emotions that are often the main
criterion in assessing which melodies can follow worship in the Serbian
church. On one side were the defenders of traditional national Serbian chant.
On the other side were the chantors who, in accordance with the Church
Slavonic text template, have adapted the melodies according to Bulgarian, but
also the Greek neum records. The paper gives an overview of the main trends
in polemics pro et contra mentioned chanting variants. The starting point is
liturgical axioms in order to critically review the non-church, specifically
emotional and ethnofiletistic criteria that in assessing which chanting
variants are suitable for "Serbian" worship guided by advocates of
folk/national religion, national church, and therefore national church
singing.
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Authors | ;Peno Vesna |
Journal | infectious diseases |
Year | 2015 |
DOI | 10.2298/GEI1502433P |
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