News
Release
For Immediate Release June 7, 2001
Contact: Susan McGourty
Mission San Miguel
Ph: (805) 467-2131
Fx: (805) 467-2141
Health
Benefits Linked to Attending Gregorian Chant Concert
Mission San
Miguel, San Miguel, CA. . – Mission San
Miguel is proud to announce that it will be hosting a Free Will concert Saturday, June 23rd at 4 p.m. that
could actually improve one’s life physically as well as spiritually. The
Gregorian chant consort group, “The Chapel of Charlemagne” will perform in the
Mission’s historic adobe church. This
will be the first time in many decades that the melodious and soothing sounds
of live chant will flow through these hollowed walls.
The program will feature interludes of
Renaissance Lute Music performed on the Lute by Dr. Michael Miranda, Professor
of Early Music History and Lute of Loyola Marymount University.
In this busy, fast paced, “dot-com age” of
“fast everything”, our minds wander in search for something more meaningful and
comforting. We feel we need something
more soothing – especially for our body and soul. Gregorian chant, in addition to mending spiritual illness, may
provide tangible medicinal relief for hypertension, migraine headaches, ulcers
and heart attacks. Chant slows our
metabolism, it steadies our pulse and our breathing, and it quiets the mind.
In
his paper “Gregorian Chant: Archaic Relic or Relevant Revelation?” music
director and researcher Henry Doktorski documents how one researcher in
particular, the French doctor Alfred Tomitas, pioneered research on the
neurophysiological effects of chant on the minds and bodies of its
listeners. According to his theory,
there are two kinds of sound: “discharge” sounds (those that tire, fatigue and
drain the listener) and “charge” sounds (those that give energy and
health). According to Dr. Tomitas,
Gregorian chant may be the most potent “charge” sound to promote strength and
vitality.
In
the mid-1960’s, Dr. Tomitas was called to a monastery in France which had been
taken over by a new abbot. The new
abbot, a young man, was something of a revolutionary and had changed the
internal rule of the abbey by modifying everything in accordance with the
Vatican II reforms. He tried to
eliminate Latin from the monks’ vocabulary and replace it with prayers in their
native language. The new Abbot had
forgotten Saint Benedict’s Rule: “Seven times a day will I sing your praises.”
(The Benedictine monks had normally chanted from 6-8 hours a day.) He succeeded in eliminating chanting from
their daily schedule because he wanted to demonstrate that chanting served no
worthy purpose. Of course the Abbot did
not realize the benefits of what they were doing.
Gradually as the days passed, the monks
started to get bogged down as they became more and more tired. In desperation
the monks called a meeting to discuss what was causing their fatigue. They only
slept a few hours each night; so they decided that they should start sleeping
like other men --- go to bed early and wake up like everyone else did when they
were no longer tired. After several
days, they realized that this didn’t work--- they were more tired than
ever! The monks were so worried that
they decided to call in several medical specialists.
Over a period of several months, they saw a
procession of doctors. They even tried
specialists of the digestive system.
One great French doctor thought they were ill because they were
vegetarian. So they began to eat meat
and heavier foods. The monks became worse!
Finally by the time Dr. Tomitas was called in
June 1967, 70 of the 90 monks were slumping in their cells like limp
dishrags. He examined them and began
the treatment “of reawakening their ears” - he treated them with sound only. Dr. Tomitas understood what no one else did
at the time: that the monks needed to chant in order to “charge” themselves. He
insisted that they immediately return to their schedule of eight hours daily
chanting. Within 5 months, Dr. Tomitas
succeeded in giving back to the monks their health and energy without drugs or
medication. Chant had proven that it
heals the body as it comforts and calms the spirit. If this fast paced world is often stressful to you, why not join
us at this concert and seek some relief?
The 25 member “Chapel of Charlemagne” consort
performs frequently in the greater Los Angeles area as well as tours and
studies summers at the famed Abbey of St. Pierre de Solesmes in France. Their director, Dr. Robert Fowells, founder
of the Gregorian Schola of Los Angeles, is Emeritus Professor of music at CSULA
where he taught choir and music history for 26 years. He is author of the books: “Chant Made Simple” and “Gregorian
Semiology: The New Chant.” The group’s CD as well as Dr. Fowells’ book: ”Chant
Made Simple” will be offered for sale at the concert.
This Free Will concert is scheduled for Saturday, June 23rd, at 4 p.m.
in the Mission church. Donations will
be gratefully accepted for the Mission Parish Building Fund.
For more information, call (805) 467-2131 or
check the Mission’s web site: www.missionsanmiguel.org.