Mass for Artists

Mass for Obtaining the Grace of the Holy Spirit
Sunday, 15 May 2011
Church of Our Saviour, NYC
Prelude: Pièce d’Orgue, BWV 572: Très Vitement; Gravement; Lentement (J.S. Bach, 1685-1750)
Missa super Credidi propter (Orlando di Lasso, c.1532-1594)
Introit: Spiritus Domini (plainsong, mode viii)
Alleluia: Emitte Spiritum tuum (plainsong, mode iv)
Alleluia: Veni Sancte Spiritus (plainsong, mode ii)
Credo: Kyriale: III (plainsong, mode v)
Motet at the Offertory: Tibi laus, tibi gloria (Peter Philips, 1561-1628)
Offertory: Confirma hoc Deus (plainsong, mode iv)
Communion: Factus est repente (plainsong, mode vii)
Motet at the Communion: Veni Creator Spiritus (G.P. da Palestrina, c.1525-1594)
Hymn at the retiring procession: Come Down, O Love Divine (Down Ampney)
Postlude: Apparition de l’Église éternelle (Olivier Messiaen, 1908-1992)

The Idea of a National Mass Setting

The Catholic parish people know best is their own. It’s always complicated: musician burrowed in at certain times slots, demographic allocations that are never announced but everyone understands, compromises made for big players in parish life, accommodations granted for financial or political reasons. It takes time to get the lay of the land, and change always happens slowly.

But how much do we really know about national trends and the modal parish experience? Sometimes people do find themselves travelling on Sunday and experience other parishes. Mostly people tend to go to places attended by friends or famous local parishes that fit with their own view of what constitutes good Catholic liturgy.

The trouble with this approach is that we do not tend go to places that fall outside our comfort zone, and hence David Haas is not likely to attend an extraordinary form Mass where the people loudly sing Regina Caeli as the recessional, and I’m not likely to find myself in a college ministry liturgy that features a locally famous rock band. The upshot is that our perception of what constitutes the convention in American Catholic liturgy is unavoidably biased by our experience.

Most of us do assume that the Catholic experience considered on a national level is profoundly heterogeneous. There probably good aspects to that but there are limits. If it is not possible for Catholics to attend a random parish and recognize the sound and feel of at least the ordinary chants of the Mass, and those ordinary settings that are sung have nothing to do with the sensibility that is historically embedded in the ritual itself, there is a serious problem.

There is plenty of evidence that this is the case, and, truly, there is something strangely unCatholic about this reality. We should be able to travel and go into most any parish and have some sense that we are home away from home. There should be some familiarity. There should not be as many experiences of the Roman Rite as there are pastors and parishes. There really does need to be some standard, commonly sung setting of the Mass ordinary that people can point to with some sense of common experience.

Five years ago, if someone had suggested that the Bishops make it a priority to have some standard national setting, and that this setting should necessarily be English chant, I would have thought: give it up. It will never happen. There is no means to impose such a thing. People will resent it and refuse. In any case, music doesn’t work this way. It has to come from the heart, not from some bureaucracy above. The idea of a unified national Mass setting? Those worms long ago crawled away from the can.

Well, I guess I lack imagination because it turns out that this is precisely what is happening, and the means by which it is happening is absolutely fascinating. The new chants for the ordinary form of Mass are embedded in the new Missal that is being published for required use starting on the first Sunday of Advent this year.

In addition to that, the Bishops and the International Commission on English in the Liturgy are requiring of publishers that they print the full Mass setting from the Missal in all pew liturgical aids. And there has been an effort made to ensure that these chants are printed exactly as they appear in the Missal, not change or distorted by, for example, contorting them into a 6/8 metric or adding barlines or changing the text. Not even the punctuation can change. This rule has been applied uniformly with no exceptions.

(In any case, the text does not lend itself to being crammed into a metrical model. The attempt can even create absurdities.)

Now, in a draft of one GIA publication I saw, these chants were labeled as ICEL chants, which is highly unfortunate. I hope that by the time these are printed, the chants will be labelled as Missal chants. In any case, we can be fairly certain that the entire body of chants for the people as they appear in the Missal — which itself contains more music than any Missal printed in modern times — will also be in the pew books that are printed for Mass.

This is a dramatic change and a great cause for hope. For example, I’m unaware of any publisher that reprints the chants in the current, lame-duck Missal. We actually use them in my own parish (when we are not singing Latin) but I’ve been told that we might be one of the only parishes in the country that does this.

This is for a reason: the Missal pertains to the clergy. The choir feels free to ignore it, and so too the people. By requiring that the chants be printed for the choir and people, this change will take a gigantic leap toward unifying liturgical action – plus it provides the energy that is necessary to actually achieve what seems otherwise unachievable: a national Mass setting.

In addition, ICEL has taken the wonderful step of actually publishing all the music for the Missal on its website, in easy downloads for sharing and spreading. This is strategically brilliant, and represents a big shift from the ways of the past. I’m still not entirely sure who was responsible for this decision, but the choice is progressive and thrilling in ever way. Openness and liberality in the distribution of music is the first step toward really making a difference.

Now, among my friends, I hear the objection that these chants are not in Latin, so this would suggest that English has become standard in the ordinary form. I would just respond: look at the reality at it exists today and consider that English chant takes us a long way toward where we need to go. We have forty years of experience to know that the leap from praise music to Latin chant is a leap too large for most parishes – and how much more evidence do we need? Singing English chant is by itself a gigantic improvement, and it points the way toward the ideal.

Another objection is that the imposition of a national setting might actually pose a danger to those parishes that are current singing music from the Gregorian Kyriale. It is not an improvement but rather a regressive step to stop singing Gloria VIII or XV, or Credo I or III, and start singing English chant from the new Missal. I would certainly agree with this point, but we have to ask: under what circumstances would this scenario actually apply?

The question is: how many ordinary form parishes routinely use Latin chant at Mass? What would your guess be? Now, I might have thought that it would be 15 to 20 percent of parishes. I put the question to a Church official in the English-speaking world who would be very much in the know on this issue. And do you know what he said? He said that only one percent were doing this. Again, one percent!

What’s more, among those parishes where Latin chant is sung year round, it often happens in only one Mass of five or six on Sunday and usually in an outlying Mass time, like the vigil Mass or a very early morning Mass on Sunday. The idea here is to draw in (and get rid of) those dozen or so people in the parish who are otherwise confrontational about the need for solemn liturgy. The Latin chant in these parishes is thrown as a fish into the mouths of these dolphins so that they will swim away.

The tragedy is that millions and millions of people are being denied the spiritual experience of praying through the plainsong of the Church’s history – music that has stood the test of time and is organic to the liturgy itself. This has gone on for forty years – and the carnage that has resulted is essentially unspeakable.

There is a tendency of all Catholics to find their niche and stick with it, not looking outside the window to see what is going on elsewhere and then getting into the habit of mind that says “I really don’t care about what others are doing, so long as I’m taken care of.” This attitude is as true of people who prefer rock at Mass as it is of those who demand only Latin chant. This is a time to realize that the fate of all of us as Catholics is at stake. We need to take the necessary steps to make this happen – and this might even involve some degree of personal sacrifice for the greater good.

It is liturgically and even morally obligatory that something be done to fix the problem of deep disunity in the Catholic musical world. The approach being taken by the Bishops and ICEL are wholly defensible for this reason. It is even heroic. This could be the moment when history turns and the Roman Rite as experienced by the majority of Catholics starts being true to itself. Do what you can to make this happen. This is the moment, and we are all being called to do make a difference.

Cafe Readers need to know this

There are only a few spots remaining at the Sacred Music Colloquium. Readers of this site need to understand that sending a musician or priest to this conference is that surest guarantee that he or she will come back home ready to do the right thing for a parish music program.

And just to deal with a common worry here, it is not the case that anyone is hit over the head with a big copy of the Graduale Triplex while here. There are many people who come from a Praise and Worship, or Glory and Praise, background. These people will not be ridiculed or put down for their views. There is no fundamentalist attitude on display. The goal of the Colloquium is to expose people to the full tradition of liturgical music – and I’ve never seen a case where there aren’t great results.

Even if a person doubts that pastoral merit of chant, doesn’t it make sense to learn about the tradition, even if only from the point of view of history and musical competence? There really is no good reason for any Catholic musician not to understand and be enlightened.

I say all of this because there is no question that the colloquium will be filled to capacity, and readers of this site need to be aware of the opportunity here. If he means volunteering to pay the way of someone else, that would be a good thing to do. This conference offers the greatest hope for fundamental, long-lasting change in your parish. It is a much better way to use resources than grumbling ever week or otherwise railing in private. Let’s bring more light and less heat to this issue.

Send this link today: http://musicasacra.com/colloquium

Current and Forthcoming: Fourth Sunday in Easter (plus Third)

COLLECT

Current

Almighty and ever-living God,
give us new strength
from the courage of Christ our shepherd,
and lead us to join the saints in heaven.

Forthcoming

Almighty ever-living God,
lead us to a share in the joys of heaven,
so that the humble flock may reach
where the brave Shepherd has gone before.

AFTER COMMUNION

Current
Father, eternal shepher,
watch over the flock redeemed by the blood of Christ
and lead us to the promised land.

Forthcoming

Look upon your flock, kind Shepherd,
and be pleased to settle in eternal pastures
the sheep you have redeemed
by the Precious Blood of your Son.
Who lives and reigns for ever and ever.

_____________

Because I missed this last week:

3rd Sunday in Easter

COLLECT

Current

God our Father,
may we look forward with hope to our resurrection,
for you have made us your sons and daughters,
and restored the joy of our youth.

Forthcoming

May your people exult for ever, O God,
in renewed youthfulness of spirit,
so that, rejoicing now in the restored glory of our adoption,
we may look forward in confident hope
to the rejoicing of the day of resurrection.

AFTER COMMUNION

Current

Lord, look on your people with kindness
and by these Easter mysteries
brings us to the glory of the resurrection.

Forthcoming

Look with kindness upon your people, O Lord,
and grant, we pray,
that those you were pleased to renew by eternal mysteries
may attain in their flesh
the incorruptible glory of the resurrection.

Tradition and Progress

The Catholic News Agency offers a nice summary of Benedict XVI’s remarks at an international liturgical conference in Rome. The Pope once again explained that tradition and progress do not need to be in conflict. “Actually, though, the two concepts are interwoven: tradition is a living reality that, in itself, includes the principle of development, of progress.”

Sometimes I wonder if Americans who read these sorts of statements just gloss over them and don’t think about the radical implications. If the Pope’s words were taken seriously, the prevailing parameters that govern liturgical discourse in the United States would completely fall away. He is saying that tradition need not be frozen in time, and progress cannot be unhinged from its past. Tradition needs development in order to speak to new times, while true progress cannot occur without a firm foundation in what has been. It strikes me that everyone could learn from this approach. If it were taken seriously, we would have a basis for going forward.

If the news story is accurate, the Pope apparently mentioned Latin and Gregorian chant in particular as institutions that provide for the continuing between the past and the future, and he therefore urged more diligence in adhering to the clear wishes of Vatican II in this regard. He goes further to say that the purpose of the Second Vatican Council was to urge a new way of thinking about the liturgy and its purpose; it never set out to be a mandate for wholesale reconstruction and upheaval.