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On Delerium’s Semantic Spaces album, there are a few songs that use samples of Gregorian chants.

I'd like to identify the following samples, so that I can find and listen to the full Gregorian chant songs:

Flatlands:

Metaphor:

I don't know Latin though, so I'm at a loss as to how to identify those Gregorian chants. Does anyone know what Gregorian chant pieces/songs the samples are from?

Bebs
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  • you can check this list of samples although there's no specific mention of the three samples at this time: http://www.enigma-music.com/reviews/delerium/semantic-spaces – Herr_Schwabullek Sep 09 '15 at 07:39
  • Notwithstanding the answer already given ("B. Monks of S. D. de S.), I think this is a really hard question to answer if you go off of just the aural evidence (i.e., you'd have to resort to interviews, album liner notes, etc.). The reasons why:
    • samples very short
    • samples very muffled; makes it hard to catch the latin, because you hear mostly vowels, few consonants
    • samples aren't necessarily continuous or even from the same chant
    • most gregorian chant groups sound pretty similar
    • most gregorian chant songs/melodies sound very similar
    – mlibby Nov 16 '15 at 04:32

1 Answers1

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I can't tell you the recordings or performers, but I recognize the chants.

The first is the incipit (beginning) of the Introit Roráte caeli de super, "Drop down, ye heavens, from above" (Isaiah 45:8), sung during the pre-Christmas season.

The second sounds like a mash of two samples. I can't make out the first ("oooh"), but the second ("aaah") is a clip from the opening word of the Offertory Ave María, "Hail, Mary". (Luke 1:28).

The third is from the Offertory De profúndis, sung in the requiem mass for the dead: "De profúndis clamávi ad te, Dómine", "Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord." (Psalm 129:1 Septuagint / Psalm 130:1 Hebrew)

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