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Church Music and the Council of Trent 577 November 1563, a new formulation was devised and the task of carrying out the provisions for church music was entrusted to the Provincial Synods.3 The Council confined itself to a few principles which were designed to delimit the scope of church music.
Trent John W. O'Malley,2013-01-15 Winner of the John Gilmary Shea Prize The Council of Trent (1545–1563), the Catholic Church’s attempt to put its house in order in response to the Protestant Reformation, has long been praised and blamed for things it never did.
Church Music and the Council of Trent - Free download as PDF File (.pdf), Text File (.txt) or read online for free. The Council of Trent addressed church music in the 16th century to curb abuses and establish fundamental principles.
The Council of Trent played a significant role in establishing the Catholic Church’s response to the Protestant Reformation, but its importance in the history of sacred musical practice has at times been overstated.
The council’s principal ruling on sacred music, its condemnation of the “intermingling of anything wanton or impure,” took aim at immoderate practices such as self-indulgent virtuosity, complex counterpoint that obscured verbal texts, and the incorporation of music originally associated with lascivious lyrics.
The article then provides a summary of the three main periods of the Council of Trent: 1545–1547; 1551–1552; and 1562–1563 along with the 1547–1549 Bologna period. This is followed by a detailed overview of the reforms of the council, which were both doctrinal and disciplinary.
The Council of Trent: Doctrine and Reform in Early Modern Catholicism. Wim François. This article will show how, only after long hesitations, the Catholic Church was able to convene a council in Trent, which would go through twenty-five sessions over three periods between 1545 and 1563.