Explore every episode of the podcast Beyond the Spire
Dive into the complete episode list for Beyond the Spire. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
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Title
Pub. Date
Duration
E04 • History of music: The Rise of Written Music
07 Mar 2026
00:09:17
A bridge between two worlds: the world of melodies known by heart and shared through practice and listening, and the world of books, handwriting and then printing. In this engaging dialogue, Canon Cristofoli explains how notation preserved the Gregorian tradition, while also slightly flattening it and opening the door to authorship and fame for composers. This led to a new relationship between the music and the Church.
Content
Cluny represents a “golden age” of monastic life, during which countless monks worship God with a solemn liturgy that feels like heaven on earth.
Until the 11th century, Gregorian chant is largely transmitted orally and notated only with “adiastematic” neumes, which indicate contour but not exact pitch.
Step by step, thanks to Guido d’Arezzo, lines are added above the text (first a C line, then an F line), paving the way for a four‑line staff where every note has a precise pitch.
This new staff notation enables chant to be read without first hearing it and, with the advent of printing, to spread widely, while also revealing and enabling small regional variants.
Written notation and printing promote musical authorship: composers can sign, share, and sell their own works. This marks a transition from the anonymous, universal chant of the Church to named compositions and a new musical culture.
Modern notation makes chant easier to learn and unify, but it risks losing some of the subtle interpretative tradition that was once handed down directly from elder monks to novices.
GuestCanon Gwenaël CristofoliResources
Gradual from Abbey of St. Gall, St. Gallen (Switzerland), Stiftsbibliothek, ca. 1135, Cod. Sang. 375, p. 38 - https://www.e-codices.unifr.ch/en/searchresult/list/one/csg/0375
E03 • History of music: A Day in the Cloister
03 Mar 2026
00:15:10
The Christian life spreads across Europe, covered by the white cloak of monasteries, mainly shaped and governed by the rule of St. Benedict. Canon Cristofoli tells how monks understand their chant as prayer turned into music, joining the angels’ song, and how every part of the liturgy – from the altar and ministers to the nave and the schola – reflects the ordered worship of heaven.
Content
Benedictine monasteries, shaped by the rule of St Benedict, spread across Europe and carry the Church’s liturgy and chant with them.
The monastery is a community under an abbot, ordered to continual praise of God through prayer and work, as an anticipation of heavenly life.
The hierarchical structure of the Mass – altar, ministers, schola and faithful – mirrors the ordered worship of heaven.
Gregorian chant is “prayer becoming music”, by which monks truly join the saints and angels’ hymn before the throne of God.
The Church entrusts the ordinary parts to the whole community and reserves the more ornate pieces for the schola cantorum. Certain texts belong specifically to the ministers, others to the cantors, so the sacred liturgy leaves no room for approximation.
Guest Canon Gwenaël Cristofoli
Resources
Gradual from Abbey of St. Gall, St. Gallen (Switzerland), Stiftsbibliothek, ca. 1135, Cod. Sang. 375, p. 38 — Link
Starting with the meticulously recorded historical details in the Bible, Canon Cristofoli traces the origins of Gregorian chant right back to its roots in Israel’s worship, the Psalms and the sacred ceremonies. He shows how chant slowly took shape as the Church’s own voice in Greek and then Latin, from the Jewish temple to the first Christian vigils in Rome, then on through Constantine, Pope Gregory and Charlemagne.
Content
Sacred music begins in the Bible: Israel transmits Scripture orally with simple, repetitive chant and rhythm, especially in the Psalms and temple worship.
The Church’s liturgy and Gregorian chant grow out of Jewish temple and synagogue rites: Christ fulfils this worship rather than abolishing it, so the sung psalms and their spirit remain at the heart of Christian prayer.
From the beginning, early Christian communities celebrated long, sung liturgies, rich in hymns and psalms, even before persecution ends under Constantine.
With peace and the spread of Christianity in the Roman Empire, chant develops first in Greek and then in a high, sacred Latin, distinct from everyday speech and reserved for addressing God.
Pope Gregory’s reform, later strengthened by Charlemagne and Alcuin, gives clear norms for chant and helps spread one Roman liturgy and Gregorian chant across the West, while still allowing genuine local traditions to enrich the Roman rite.
Guest Canon Gwenaël Cristofoli
Sponsors National Lottery Heritage Fund: https://www.tnlcommunityfund.org.uk/ Global Sound Movement: https://www.globalsoundmovement.com/ University of Lancashire: https://www.lancashire.ac.uk/ Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest: https://icksp.org.uk/ & https://www.icrsp.org/
External Links Available on all podcasts platforms Watch on YouTube @Beyond_the_Spire — More about St Walburge’s Shrine Website: https://icksp.org.uk/preston/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@ICKSPPrestonSt.Walburge Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/st_walburge_s_preston/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/icksp.preston TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/search?q=stwalburge.icksp
E01 • What is Gregorian Chant?
21 Feb 2026
00:10:52
This opening episode draws you into the world of Gregorian chant, the Church’s own voice, a living breath of prayer. Through candid conversation, two young parishioners explore the sacred stillness of chant, and describe how, in their own experience, this sacred song rises out of silence, unites many voices into one, and gently pulls the soul out of noise back to God.
Content
Gregorian chant is the Church’s sacred music. Rising from silence, it expresses interior prayer and returns to silence.
It is monophonic and unified, with many voices blending into one, leaving no room for performance or showmanship.
It is integral to the liturgy, with the melody shaped by sacred Latin text that is distinct from everyday, informal speech.
Its free rhythm and eight modes offer a deeper spiritual 'colour' than standardised major/minor music.
Thanks to Guido of Arezzo, a benedictine monk, the authentic melody was transmitted from oral tradition to written notation. This notation is still in use today.
It is a living prayer that orients the soul towards God, setting it apart from the noisy, shallow music of the secular world.