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MUSIC, MEMORY, AND FAITH: HOW DID SINGING IN LATIN AND THE VERNACULAR INFLUENCE WHAT PEOPLE KNEW ABOUT THEIR FAITH IN EARLY MODERN ROME?

This study examines some of the ways in which the post-Tridentine Catholic Church harnessed music's reiterative and suggestive powers to promulgate its message. In particular music could stimulate memory and, in Christian Doctrine classes for the young, singing was used widely to sweeten the pi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Italianist 2014-10, Vol.34 (3), p.437-448
Main Author: O'Regan, Noel
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:This study examines some of the ways in which the post-Tridentine Catholic Church harnessed music's reiterative and suggestive powers to promulgate its message. In particular music could stimulate memory and, in Christian Doctrine classes for the young, singing was used widely to sweeten the pill and to aid the memorizing of items like the Creed, Pater noster, and Ave Maria. Singing laude spirituali in Italian could impart more subtle devotional knowledge. In later life members of lay confraternities sang hymns, canticles, psalms, and Marian antiphons in Latin, as well as laude spirituali. All of this meant that people from all classes in society became familiar with the official texts and chants of the Church and, as a consequence, were susceptible to indoctrination, while being encouraged to memorize the tenets of their faith through music.
ISSN:0261-4340
1748-619X
DOI:10.1179/0261434014Z.000000000101