Friday, March 14, 2014

The Lent 2 Gradual: Sciant Gentes ("Let the Gentiles know")

Sciant Gentes ("Let the Gentiles know") is the Gradual for the Second Sunday in Lent.


Gradual • Sciant Gentes Quoniam Nomen Tibi Deus from Corpus Christi Watershed on Vimeo.

The text is taken from Psalm (82/)83, vv 18, then 13; here's an English translation:
Let the Gentiles know that God is Thy Name: Thou alone art the Most High over all the earth.

Vs. O my God, make them like a wheel, and as stubble before the wind.

(Other translations have "whirling dust" or "tumbleweeds" instead of "wheel," in that  second verse!  Interesting.)

Here's the full score:


Sciant Gentes was originally, it seems, the Gradual for Septuagesima Sunday.

Here's a bit about Psalm 83:
Psalm 83 is the last of the Psalms of Asaph, which include Psalms 50 and 73-83. It is also the last of the so-called "Elohist" collection, Psalms 42-83, in which the one of God's titles, Elohim is mainly used.[1]:405[2]:7 It is generally seen as a national lament provoked by the threat of an invasion of Israel by its neighbors. The psalm has been seen by some commentators as being purely cultic in nature. Others have indicated that the fact that particular nations are specifically named indicates that it does refer to a specific historical period, even though the prayer itself would be offered in the Temple in Jerusalem.[3] The dating of the composition of the Psalm is debated, but the reference in verse 9 to Assyria is by many sources seen as an indication that the Psalm was written during the time of Assyrian ascendancy, the ninth to seventh centuries BC.[4] Others have placed the composition of the psalm between the time of Saul to the age of the Maccabees,[3] suggested by Theodore of Mopsuestia.[5]


Here is a page from the Sankt-Gallen, Cantatorium, CH-SGs 359, f. 60, that includes this Gradual:


About that "St. Gall Cantatorium":
The so-called Cantatorium of St. Gall, the earliest complete extant musical manuscript in the world with neume notation. It contains the solo chants of the Mass and constitutes one of the main sources for the reconstruction of Gregorian chant. Written and provided with fine neumes in the monastery of St. Gall between 922 and 926. Bound in a wooden box with an ivory panel on the front cover, most likely Byzantine c. 500, depicting scenes from the fight of Dionysos against the Indians. The ivory panel was once the possession of Charlemagne. (smu)

You can see other images of the chant via links here, at gregorien.info.

It looks like Luigi Cherubini set this text - but it was apparently never recorded until The Kammerchor Stuttgart did it in 2013!   So, no video here.

Here are all of today's chant propers, sung by the Sao Paulo Benedictines:

Hebdomada secunda quadragesimæ
Dominica
Introitus: Ps. 26, 8.9 et 1 Tibi dixit cor meum (cum Gloria Patri) (2m59.6s - 2808 kb)
Graduale: Ps. 82, 19. V. 14 Sciant gentes (3m00.8s - 2828 kb) score
Tractus: Ps. 59, 4.6 Commovisti (2m18.1s - 2160 kb) score
Offertorium: Ps. 118, 47.48 Meditabor (1m16.1s - 1192 kb) score
Communio: Mt. 17, 9 Visionem (2m36.4s - 2446 kb) score

Here are links to Chantblog articles about the propers for today:

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