Ut queant laxis: Difference between revisions
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**[[Ut queant laxis (tr92) I (Anonymous)|Trent 92 I]] SAT | **[[Ut queant laxis (tr92) I (Anonymous)|Trent 92 I]] SAT | ||
**[[Ut queant laxis (tr92) II (Anonymous)|Trent 92 II]] SAT | **[[Ut queant laxis (tr92) II (Anonymous)|Trent 92 II]] SAT | ||
**[[Ut queant laxis (Responsoria hebdomadae sanctae) (Anonymous)|''Responsoria hebdomadae sanctae'']] SATB.SATB | |||
*[[Nuntius celso (Sixt Dietrich)|Sixt Dietrich]] ATTB (v.2, but incorporates solfege from v.1) | *[[Nuntius celso (Sixt Dietrich)|Sixt Dietrich]] ATTB (v.2, but incorporates solfege from v.1) | ||
*[[Ut queant laxis (Elzear Genet)|Elzear Genet (Carpentras)]] SATB (odd, "Gloria Patri genitoque…") | *[[Ut queant laxis (Elzear Genet)|Elzear Genet (Carpentras)]] SATB (odd, "Gloria Patri genitoque…") |
Latest revision as of 06:18, 19 January 2024
Ut queant laxis is the Office hymn for second Vespers of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist (June 24). The more famous of the two Gregorian melodies is attributed to Guido d'Arezzo and begins each phrase on a higher scale degree: hence the naming of the solfeggio notes after the first syllable of each line of the first verse.
External links
- guidonian tune (from Liber Usualis, p. 1342) and translation
- Catholic Encyclopedia article
- Wikipedia article
Settings by composers
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Other settings possibly not included in the manual list above
- Hernando Franco — Ut queant laxis
- Jacobus Vaet — Ut queant laxis
Text and translations
Latin text Ut queant laxis resonare fibris |
English translation For thy spirit, holy John, to chasten
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