Proprium missae                                                                                                                       
1     TEMPUS ADVENTUS introitus Gaudete 3'39"
2 graduale Qui sedes 2'30"
3 lectio Iube Domine à3 5'51"
4 offertorium Ave Maria 1'42"
5 TEMPUS NATIVITATIS introitus Lux fulgebit 2'47"
6 communio Viderunt omnes 2'02"
7 TEMPUS QUADRAGESIMAE tractus Commovisti 3'32"
8 offertorium Meditabor 1'11"
9 RESURRECTIO DOMINI (PASCHA)    antiphona ad processionem
Cum Rex gloriae 2'57"
10 oratio Surrexit Dominus 1'00"
11 antiphona in redeundo Sedit angelus               3'45"
12 introitus Resurrexi 2'24"
13 TEMPUS PASCHALE antiphona Regina caeli cum tropi 2'21"
14 DOMINICA PENTECOSTES alleluia Dum complerentur 2'54"
15 introitus Spiritus Domini 2'53"
16 TEMPUS PER ANNUM alleluia Eripe me 2'42"
17 ASSUMPTIO B. MARIAE VIRGINIS introitus Signum magnum 2'37"
Officium                                                                                                                                    
18 TERTIA                                               Dominica, tempus per annum                             10'18"
 

                                                                                             

Schola Gregoriana Monostorinensis, Cluj–Kolozsvár–Klausenburg
cond. by Tamás Jakabffy
recorded in 2001
Made in Romania

On this recording we offer a modest selection of the Gregorian chant from the European tradition and from the subjects of the codexes revealed on the Hungarian language area. On the one hand it was the Graduale Triplex, a basic work published in Solesmes, 1979 and which nowadays is considered to be a „standard" for the Gregorian chant, that constituted a basis for this recording. On the other hand we used the volume entitled Magyar Gregoriánum [The Hungarian Gregorian Chant] of J. Szendrei, L. Dobszay and B. Rajeczky, published at Budapest. Through this recording we would like to succeed in strengthening as well as in taking care of the listener’s attraction towards the Gregorian chant bending from mediaeval times to the present and wearing the signs both of the centuries’ caring and their carelessness.