Missal Chant Workshop, New York

THE CHURCH OF SAINT CATHERINE OF SIENA
THE NEW ROMAN MISSAL AND GREGORIAN CHANT –
JOIN FR. GABRIEL O’DONNELL, O.P. AND FR. COLUMBA KELLY, O.S.B., FOR A TWO-DAY SEMINAR HOSTED BY THE SIENA FORUM FOR FAITH AND CULTURE ON 7-8 OCTOBER 2011
Contact: Camille St. James
215-715-3896
camille.siena@gmail.com

NEW YORK, NY — Fr. Gabriel O’Donnell, O.P. and Fr. Columba Kelly, O.S.B., will present a seminar, We Lift Up Our Hearts: The Roman Missal and Its Chant on 7 October, followed on 8 October with a Master Chant Workshop led by Fr. Columba Kelly, O.S.B., both events will be held at The Church of Saint Catherine of Siena, 411 E. 68th Street, New York, NY 10065.

Father Gabriel O’Donnell is a spiritual master and a natural and enthusiastic teacher. Father O’ Donnell will bring both of these gifts together as he demonstrates for us the real purpose of the Liturgy: praise of the Triune God and experiencing here on earth what we hope to enjoy forever in Heaven. In his talk, Heaven Wedded to Earth: The Importance of the Roman Missal and Its Implementation, Father O’Donnell will show his listeners what the Third Edition of the Roman Missal will accomplish and how very important it is for all of the faithful to embrace the new Missal with thought, prayer, understanding and without reservation.

Fr. Columba Kelly, O.S.B. shares his expertise in his talk, Liturgical Chant As An Icon In Sound: God Speaks and We Respond. He will discuss how the Church has always been clear about the importance of Gregorian Chant. Both Musicam Sacram of the Second Vatican Council, and more recently Sing to the Lord (USCCB, 2007) speak of the pride of place which is to be given to Gregorian Chant and to its unique suitability for the Liturgy.

“As a Dominican Parish, the Church of Saint Catherine of Siena places the prayerful and reverent celebration of the Church’s Liturgy as its primary mission. Music is an essential part of that prayerfulness, and there is no more prayerful music for the Liturgy than Gregorian Chant,” said Father Jordan Kelly, O.P., Pastor of Saint Catherine’s. “To welcome to Saint Catherine’s Father Gabriel O’Donnell and Father Columba Kelly, is a great privilege. Both priests are highly respected experts and men of prayer. Both their prayer and their expertise will help us understand the theology of the new translation of the Roman Missal and guide us to not merely ‘sing at Mass,’ but ‘to sing the Mass,’” said Father Jordan.

Registration is required by 30 September
Where: St. Dominic’s Hall
The Church of Saint Catherine
411 E. 68th Street, NY, NY 10065
Cost: Event is $30 for either session or $50 for both.
Cost covers lunch and materials.
Reservations and payment in advance by 30 September
Please make checks payable to: The Church of St. Catherine of Siena.
Contact sienafaith@gmail.com or call 212-988-8300×182
For more information contact:
Paul Zalonski
212-988-8300 x182
sienafaith@gmail.com

Paraclete’s Secret Sale

Just spotted on FB: “I have got an unusual set of of varied chant books such as Gregorian Chant – A Guide, Gregorian Semiology – Cardine, and others at 50% off today – also other resources at a 25% discount – end of year sale – give me a call if interested – Jim Jordan 1-800-451-5006, ext. 335 at Paraclete Press.”

Vigor, Energy, Freshness in the Extraordinary Form

Wassim Sarweh plays and conducts from the loft.

Wassim Sarweh must be one of the most brilliantly innovative yet underrated organists and choirmasters in the English-speaking world. I say that because I just heard him play and his choir sing at the Church of the Assumption Latin Mass in Windsor, Ontario. If you have not been, it is worth a trip. It will redefine your understanding of the aesthetic potential of the extraordinary form.It is also a wonderful experience to join this community of happy and liturgically enlightened Catholics in this beautiful parish.

Wassim’s singers are all first rate, and his approach to playing the organ was like nothing I’ve heard before in this context. Forget nostalgia and dated sentimentalism This is something completed different. The celebrant’s voice is clear and his Latin diction is perfect. The singing is as precise as it is effervescent. If you attend on the right day, you can even hear the Gradual chant sung in organum with middle eastern musical accents.

Many people know that I’m no fan of accompanied chant, but Wassim took an approach that was enough to make me a new believer at least as regards the people’s chants. He didn’t use organ on the Mass propers — all sung from the Graduale Romanum – but rather on the ordinary of the Mass and the credo in particular, since the rest of the Mass ordinary was sung according to a setting by Orlando di Lasso.

Wassim Sarweh with his books

When I first saw Credo III listed, my thought was: too bad that this parish uses this too familiar setting as a fallback. Accompaniment surely can’t help. I was completely wrong. Wassim took off following the celebrant’s intonation. The speed was vigorous and the text very clear. The harmonies he chose were not like anything I had heard. There unusual modal shifts. There were dramatic volume changes and interesting articulations that heavily informed the singing. There was real word painting going on. The drama ebbed and flowed throughout. As we approached the end, the intensity grew and grew, and my heart began to race. As we finished, I was left with a wild feeling of exuberance, and I wanted to look around and shout: don’t we all share a fantastic faith?! I know it sounds silly but music is capable of inspiring such feelings. I never imagined that Credo III could do that.

I asked Wassim where he found such an amazing version. I should have known: he wrote it himself. It is not published. It should be. It should also be on youtube. It would be a revelation for many.

Wassim has an interesting life and history. He immigrated from Syria as a young man, and he fell in love with music, studying it formally for a good part of his life. He is a wonderful singer with a brilliant tenor voice that is capable of singing most alto parts it full voice, which he uses to read any chant in the Gradual right there on the spot. His organ playing is not romantic (there is no “19th century” in any aspect of this liturgical event) but edgy in medieval sort of way. It is confident and vigorous. Incredibly, he is not actually a full-time musician but rather a banker.

I’m equally impressed by the support community that has done so much to make this a wonderful place. The pastor is Fr. Peter Hrytsyk and he is clearly the driving force. But the community is otherwise packed with talent. You know the giant book of sung readings for the extraordinary form? It originated right here with the work of Mr. Michel Ozorak.

It was a great privilege for me and for Arlene Oost-Zinner to sing with the choir on the Sunday when we happened to be there following a parish workshop in Lansing, Michigan. I can’t imagine what it would be like to have access to such a glorious liturgical event week after week. If you live anywhere near this parish, it is worth a drive just to see what is possible. More than any “old Mass” I’ve attended, this convinced me that this really could be the Mass of the future.

Congratulations to everyone involved!

Proper Attire and the Marvels of Option Four

Let’s say I have a restaurant and I hope for people to be dressed properly so I establish a rule.

To eat here, you can wear: 1) black tie and traditional evening wear, 2) a suit and tie or long party dress, 3) a very nice sport coat and tie or cocktail dress or suitable woolen pants, or 4) some other neat clothing that is suitable to the atmosphere and culture of this restaurant.

A couple shows up. He is wearing torn jeans and flip flops. She is wearing a bikini and sandals. They both claim option 4. The argument ensues. You can imagine the rest.

Now have a look at the description of the entrance rite for Catholic Mass from the General Instruction. Please read carefully.

When the people are gathered, and as the Priest enters with the Deacon and ministers, the Entrance Chant begins…. This chant is sung alternately by the choir and the people or similarly by a cantor and the people, or entirely by the people, or by the choir alone. In the Dioceses of the United States of America, there are four options for the Entrance Chant: (1) the antiphon from the Missal or the antiphon with its Psalm from the Graduale Romanum, as set to music there or in another setting; (2) the antiphon and Psalm of the Graduale Simplex for the liturgical time; (3) a chant from another collection of Psalms and antiphons, approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop, including Psalms arranged in responsorial or metrical forms; (4) another liturgical chant that is suited to the sacred action, the day, or the time of year, similarly approved by the Conference of Bishops or the Diocesan Bishop.

Now think of what happened this past week in your parish. Do you recognize any similarities between that and the description above? Oh yes, option 4.