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Description

Anglican chant is a method of singing the prose psalms and canticles of the Anglican liturgy to simple, harmonized formulas. Rather than strict meter, it follows the natural rhythm and accent of the spoken English text.

Each text verse is fitted to a short SATB (soprano–alto–tenor–bass) harmonic pattern called a "chant" (single, double, triple, or quadruple), typically accompanied by organ. The musical flow alternates between a free recitation on a single note and brief measured cadential figures, allowing the words to lead while still providing a clear tonal framework.

Anglican chant is heard most often in services of Morning Prayer and Evensong, where choirs—often divided antiphonally into Decani and Cantoris—alternate verses. Its sound world is diatonic, dignified, and speech-shaped, bridging medieval chant practice with English cathedral harmony.

History
Origins (Reformation to Restoration)
•   Anglican chant arose in the Church of England after the Reformation, when English replaced Latin in public worship. Early English psalm singing drew on plainchant practice (especially Sarum chant) but needed a flexible way to carry prose texts rather than metrical paraphrases. •   By the later 1600s, cathedral musicians adapted chant recitation into harmonized, speech-following formulas. This practice allied medieval chant recitation with the emerging English choral style and organ accompaniment.
Formalization (18th–19th centuries)
•   During the 18th century, the now-familiar single and double chant forms were codified, and influential psalters appeared with "pointed" text to guide underlay. Composers such as Thomas Attwood, John Goss, James Turle, Thomas Ebdon, and James Nares supplied widely adopted chants. •   The 19th century—an era of cathedral and collegiate choir revival—saw further consolidation. Figures like Samuel Sebastian Wesley, Joseph Barnby, and Sir John Stainer fostered a broad, dignified harmonic idiom well suited to English prose and to organ-led worship.
20th century to Present
•   The Anglican choral renaissance (with choirs at King’s College, Cambridge; St Paul’s Cathedral; and others) carried the tradition worldwide, shaping the sound of Evensong and influencing English sacred composition. Later composers (e.g., Stanford, Parry, and Howells) extended or interacted with the idiom through service music and psalm chants. •   Today, Anglican chant remains a living practice in Anglican and Anglican-influenced churches across the UK, Commonwealth, and beyond, sustained by choir schools, published psalters, and broadcast services of choral Evensong.
How to make a track in this genre
Choose and prepare the text
•   Select a prose psalm or canticle (e.g., from the Book of Common Prayer). •   Point the text: mark where the choir leaves the reciting note and sings the cadential figure (often indicated by bolding, slashes, or acute accents). Align natural speech stresses with strong harmonic moments.
Select chant type and key
•   Pick a single chant (covers one verse), double (two verses; the standard), triple, or quadruple (for longer sequences). •   Choose a key that suits your choir’s range; Anglican chants are diatonic and typically avoid extreme chromaticism.
Compose the chant formula (SATB + organ)
•   Structure: Each half-verse begins with a recitation on a single note (tenor/"chant note"), followed by a brief measured cadence. In a single chant, the two half-verses each have their own cadential figure; in a double chant, four cadential phrases cover two full verses. •   Harmony: Write clear four-part voicing with mostly stepwise motion and good voice-leading. Use functional harmony with persuasive mediant (mid-verse) and final cadences; keep inner parts smooth and avoid vocal leaps that obscure text. •   Melody: Keep the top line singable and dignified, with limited range and contour shaped by the language’s prosody. Let the reciting note sit comfortably for sustained syllabic delivery.
Underlay and rhythm
•   Recitation is in free, speech-like rhythm; measured notes occur only in the cadences. Notation often shows equal note values, but performance follows text accents and punctuation. •   Fit syllables cleanly: avoid cramming too many syllables into short cadential figures; redistribute by extending the recitation.
Performance practice
•   Use organ to support pitch, sustain harmony, and shape dynamics; registrations should be transparent and supportive rather than soloistic. •   Consider antiphonal delivery (Decani vs. Cantoris) and dynamic shading to reflect text meaning. •   Maintain clear diction, unified vowel color, and balanced parts; let the words lead phrasing and tempo throughout.
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