E05 • How it works: The Eight Modes
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Description
In this episode, we cross the Atlantic—virtually—to welcome Abbé Raymond Schmidt, an oblate brother of the Institute of Christ the King in Chicago, for a deep yet accessible conversation on the eight modes of Gregorian chant. He explains how these ancient musical “families” each carry a distinct spiritual character, and how intervals, finals and ambitus quietly shape the soul’s affections towards God rather than towards mere emotion or entertainment.
Content
- Gregorian chant is the Church’s model of sacred music, meant above all to draw souls to Christ rather than entertain.
- The eight modes: four basic tones (Protus, Deuterus, Tritus, Tetrardus), each with authentic and plagal forms built on final notes re, mi, fa and sol.
- Each mode has a specific spiritual “colour” (grave, penitential, serene, hopeful, etc.) arising from its particular pattern of intervals.
- These technical elements (final, recitative tone, ambitus) are not abstract theory but shape the affections of the heart and help fit the chant to the Church’s seasons, feasts and prayers through the whole liturgical year.
- Gregorian chant is a shared patrimony of the Church, not the property of performers, and that it forms a cohesive supernatural and family spirit in the Catholic life across the world.
Guest
Abbé Raymond Schmidt
Sponsors
- National Lottery Heritage Fund:
- Global Sound Movement
- University of Lancashire
- Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest
External Links
Available on all podcasts platforms
Watch on YouTube @Beyond_the_Spire
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