Mary Berry
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Mary Berry, CBE (in religion Sister Thomas More) (born 1917) is an Augustinian canoness who is a noted choral conductor and musicologist. She is an authority on the performance of Gregorian chant.
Berry studied at the University of Cambridge with Thurston Dart as well going to Paris to study with Nadia Boulanger. In 1970 she received her doctorate from Cambridge after submitting a thesis on the performance of plainsong in the late middle ages and the 16th century, and afterwards became a Fellow at Newnham College.
In 1975 she founded the Schola Gregoriana of Cambridge for the study and performance of Gregorian chant. The Cantors of the Schola are a group of young, largely professional singers and have performed and recorded extensively under her direction, often working from primary sources. The Schola was one of the first ensembles to perform (and certainly the first to record) music from the Winchester troper after research by Mary Berry and others made the music accessible from the manuscripts.
She has travelled widely to promote the teaching and singing of Gregorian chant, and she has organised and participated in many workshops and courses, including Spode Music Week, of which she is a patron. She is a particularly keen advocate for the use of Gregorian chant in its proper liturgical context. Her two introductory books, Plainchant for everyone and Cantors: A collection of Gregorian chants, encourage people to learn the chant, and are often recommended to beginners in the field.
In 2000 she was awarded the Papal Cross Pro Ecclesia et Pontifice, and in the 2002 New Year Honours she was awarded the CBE.
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[edit] Select Bibliography
- Plainchant for everyone: An introduction to plainsong (1979) ISBN 0-85402-076-4
- Cantors: a collection of Gregorian chants (1979) ISBN 0-521-22149-8