Milanese chant is the only non-Gregorian chant tradition to survive in the West.
In the developed chant traditions, they took on more functional characteristics.
However, early Christian rites did incorporate elements of Jewish worship that survived in later chant tradition.
Gregorian chant eventually replaced the local chant tradition of Rome itself, which is now known as Old Roman chant.
Later sources of these other chant traditions show an increasing Gregorian influence, such as occasional efforts to categorize their chants into the Gregorian modes.
Other chant traditions, such as the Ambrosian or Visigothic, may lack some of the types listed, and may have other types not listed.
Even as the northern chant traditions were displacing indigenous Italian chant, displaced musicians from the north contributed to a new thriving musical culture in 12th-century Italy.
Unlike most other chant traditions, they occasionally repeat words within a text, and the two traditions repeat such words in the same places.
David Newman's music embodies a devotional mysticism, distinctive musicality, poetic intimacy and a deep respect for India's ancient chant tradition.
They also showed a fundamental difference between the written transmission of Latin and Greek chant traditions, as it had developed between the 10th and 12th centuries.