Missa cantata

E146628

Missa cantata is a form of the traditional Latin Mass that is sung with chant and music but celebrated without the full ceremonial of a Solemn High Mass.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Missa cantata canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf form of the Roman Rite Mass
liturgical celebration
celebratedAccordingTo Missale Romanum
surface form: Roman Missal of 1962

Missale Romanum
surface form: Tridentine Missal
celebratedBy priest
celebratedIn Roman Catholicism
surface form: Roman Catholic Church
contrastedWith Missa lecta
Missa solemnis in D major, Op. 123
surface form: Missa solemnis

Tridentine Mass
surface form: Solemn High Mass
developedIn 19th century
20th century
follows traditional Roman Rite ceremonial
hasCharacteristic celebrated without deacon and subdeacon
choir or schola sings responses and chants
includes incense in many cases
includes processional chants
includes sung Ordinary
includes sung Propers
less ceremonially complex than Solemn High Mass
more elaborate than Low Mass
priest sings the liturgical texts
sung throughout
hasForm with incense
without incense
hasLanguage Latin
hasLiturgicalElement Agnus Dei
Alleluia or Tract
Communion chant
Credo
Gloria
Gradual
Introit
Kyrie
Offertory chant
Sanctus
hasMusic a cappella chant
organ accompaniment
partOf Tridentine Mass
surface form: traditional Latin Mass
regulatedBy rubrics of the Roman Missal
requires choir
servers
usedIn extraordinary form of the Roman Rite
usedOn Sundays
feast days
uses Gregorian chant
Latin liturgical texts
sacred polyphony

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Low Mass differsFrom Missa cantata