Jeffrey blew up the model by providing the music for online. He blew up the model by recordings thousands of videos of that music. He blew it up by daring to do it all himself. He didn’t go crawling to the monied big shots. He scraped around and used the new tools of technology to reduce costs, achieve a new form of outreach, to publish composers no one had ever heard of. He did it all just because no one stopped him, and because he couldn’t see any reason not to do it.
Then he went one step further a made a full hymnal for the ordinary form of Mass, using public domain hymns and including all new compositions for the Psalms. The Vatican II Hymnal now has a happy home in many of the nation’s best parishes and cathedrals.
And he has just begun. He has already recorded one-thousand plus practice videos for the Simple English Propers and the Parish Book of Psalms, plus so much much. Oh, and I haven’t mentioned his full music planning website that offers all the propers of the mass in both forms, with sheet music, audio recordings, and videos. That’s right: the full Graduale Romanum, in English and Latin, with videos that take the singers step by step through each note for every chant.
It is mind boggling.
Back to the “just begun” part. He is now working on a new hymnal designed for parishes that use the extraordinary form, complete with an ordo, propers, Latin and English hymns, and devotional materials. Maybe, perhaps, at long at, these parishes will have a complete resource for the older form of the Roman Rite that is not the SSPX’s hymnal that includes a bitter swipe at Vatican II right in the first pages. It’s been the only viable option but now Ostrowski intends to change this.
And how has Jeffrey done all this? He has no staff to speak of. He pretty much works alone in his apartment along with his wife and child. He has computers everywhere and vast archives of books on shelves. And that’s about it. His main asset is his work ethic. Of course he has crazy passion for the task. He works every day to make just a bit of progress. And if you look at what he has done over 5 years, he has pretty much accomplished more than anyone else has in fifty years — as measured by the promotion, pedagogy, publishing, and distribution of sacred music
It’s not only a commentary on his own amazing productivity. It says something about the output of the big publishers in the Catholic world. With all their staff, money, copyright war chests, and markets, why have they produced so little of any lasting value over the last 40 years? Why is it that one guy in an apartment could manage to do so much more? It all comes down the will and inspiration.
Last week I wrote about the Lumen Christi Missal, a book that has introduced me to a liturgical world I did not think could exist. The book makes the ordinary form orderly and beautiful in ways that most Catholics in average parishes could not even imagine. It is a true work of genius. It will have a very long shelf life as a pew book and even as a book that people can take to Mass even if their parishes do not adopt it as their own.
I was telling someone about this on the phone the other day, and the person asked me who publishes the book. I hesitated because the answer seems so implausible. I finally said: Adam Bartlett published it. By himself. He did the composition. He contracted the typesetting. He did the proofing and the composition. He thought through every page. He put together the outstanding organization of the book and oversaw its completion from the indexes to the cover to the ribbons. He has accepted the financial risk. He did it all himself — from soup to nuts, as they say.
How old is Adam? He just turned 30. That’s just exactly the age that old timers tend to dismiss. What does this guy know about music? What does he know about liturgy? Where is his advanced degree from? How much experience can a guy this age really have? Shouldn’t he eat humble pie for the next 20 years until he is socially entitled to put together a book like this?
Well, that’s the way the old world worked. But here’s the thing. We are desperately in need of new kinds of creativity in the Catholic music world. We need people who are willing to bust up old paradigms, try new ways, rethink the status quo, use the new technology. Adam looked around and didn’t see anyone else doing this exact thing. He waited, just as he waited for someone to put together a book of English Propers. No one emerged. He was restless. He knew what was needed. He didn’t bother with worrying about what the establishment or his fuddy-duddy detractors said. He pushed his resource on the market.
It was not easy. He had to fight his way through four or five layers of bureaucracy to get the resource approved. He had to deal with the USCCB, the people who manage the rights to print the words of the Bible (yes!), the owners of the Psalms (true!), the gatekeepers who decide who can distribute the liturgical texts (not making this up!), and also his local Bishop, plus who knows how many other people. He was patience and diligent. Finally it happened.
Again, he did it all alone.
And remember, it is not only about youth. It is about being independent from the prevailing establishment that creates and sustains the status quo. It is about clearly seeing the failure of the current paradigm and believing that it can be changed – and then doing something about it. Consider composer Richard Rice. He has produced massive quantities of music for the Roman Rite. His book is the Parish Book of Chant is the resource that changed everything. A second edition is out in the new year. His Choral Gradual is used in hundreds of parishes. His choral communions are too. He is not only a top composer; he is also an excellent typesetter. Like the others, he unites faith, talent, and a passion for bringing it all to life.
As for independence, the whole of the Church Music Association of America wins the award. Its president William Mahrt has been directing and teaching for nearly fifty years and yet he never signed up with the powers that be. He has led dramatic change in the world of Catholic Music.
As an example of the CMAA work, consider Arlene Oost Zinner’s Parish Book of Psalms. She too is new to this whole field. And yet she has produced what no one else bothered to produce.
In one book we have the complete Responsorial Psalms that can be sung by a cantor alone, with Gregorian tones in a dignified melody. This book alone is enough to fix the whole Psalm problem that has vexed Catholics for decades. It is a work of clarity, simplicity, and accessibility, all of which is backed by another example of genius of vision. It’s a resource that can be introduced into any parish and inspire not only relief from the usual noise but prayer and contemplation.
This is all the work of the young and the restless — people who are striving to recovery what we’ve lost and point the way out of the current mire and toward a bright future. Pray for their work. They are leading us to places we need to be.