The Rosary, sung in chant
Gregorian chant is the oldest music of the Roman Church — a sung form of prayer that has carried the words of Scripture and the liturgy for more than a thousand years. Praying the Rosary with chant is a gentle way to slow down, breathe, and let the prayer wash over you.
You don’t need to follow the Latin to pray well. Let the melody hold you while you keep your hands on the beads and your heart on the mystery.

A sung rosary in the Gregorian tradition — chant carrying the prayers of the Church across centuries. Quiet, slow, and healing.
A second Gregorian version — gentle and steady. A good companion at the end of an anxious day.
The complete Holy Rosary sung in Gregorian chant — the full prayer, start to finish, in the ancient tradition.
The Rosary sung by Harpa Dei in Latin and many languages — a chanted prayer that gathers the nations before Our Lady.
The Sorrowful Mysteries sung in Gregorian chant, offered as a rosary to Our Lady of Guadalupe — meditative and reverent.
A sacred sung rosary to Our Lady of Guadalupe — chant offered for comfort, protection, and hope.
A sung rosary for the anxious night — chant to quiet a restless mind and carry you gently toward sleep.
Chant to pray with Mary, Undoer of Knots — let the ancient melody carry the one knot you are bringing her. Also featured on the Undoer of Knots devotion.
Sacred music given to Catholic Mexico through the intercession of Our Lady — a heavenly accompaniment to prayer.
A note on chant
The Second Vatican Council, in Sacrosanctum Concilium (1963), recognized Gregorian chant as “specially suited to the Roman liturgy” and gave it “pride of place” among forms of sacred music. To pray with chant is to pray with the Church across the centuries.