“Novus Quodlibet: The New Whatever Liturgy”

A most interesting piece by the great Anthony Esolen, in Crisis Magazine .
This kind of discussion of music and the Catholic liturgy from someone whose main area of expertise is NOT music thrills me, the way the more “inside baseball” of the CMAA sometimes fails to, (the literal “preaching to the choir.”)
It reminds me of when another noted Catholic writer, blogger Amy Welborn, “discovered” the existence of the Propers.
Heck, it remind me of when I “discovered” the propers, the GIRM, the actual Church legislation on music, what VCII actually said about liturgy; as an adult, I’d always, to my shame, thought it was simply a matter of Taste/No Taste, Good Music/Bad Music, that was all that needed to be imparted to TPTB.
And of course that’s not it at all.
And this is crazy important. That other voices, not just those who are also raised in liturgical song, be added to the movement, that we find allies who realize the crisis in the Church is a crisis in the Liturgy, and the crisis in the Liturgy is a crisis most clearly demonstrated in the way most Catholics think about music in the Liturgy.

Then comes the hymn.
Here I am three and four times cursed.
I have read and taught poetry all my adult life. This is one curse. I know English grammar. That is a second curse. My family and I are versed in the long tradition of Christian hymnody; we collect hymnals from all traditions, and we have sung one or two thousand of them, sometimes in languages other than English. This is a third and most terrible curse. And we know our Scripture. Cursed a fourth time, cursed and damned to writhe in eternal pain. Well, not eternal. The pain is transient but real—pain mingled with frustration and disappointment, that well-meaning people should give their talents and energies to stuff that is so worthless, and sometimes worse than worthless. For sometimes it is flat-out heresy.
Well, I won’t sing heresy, and I won’t sing chloroform for the brain, and this means that I hardly ever sing at such Masses…What strikes me, though, is the general liturgical lassitude. I don’t mean that there is not often a lot of energy, with drums, verses projected on the wall, and sometimes applause. I mean that there’s no plan to it, no aim. You are as likely to sing the peculiarly awful “Gather Us In”—well, that’s an onion, sorry—during Advent as in the middle of the summer, and if the choristers, or the lady at the piano, or the tenor at the organ likes it, you may be singing it twenty times a year. The hymns are chosen by the musicians for the same reason as the cartoon-like banners on the wall. Somebody who has wangled his way into the works likes them.
If you go to Mass every Sunday and every holy day during the year, and if four hymns are sung at each Mass, this gives you the opportunity to sing over two hundred different hymns. Need I say that, outside of the Christmas carols and three or four old Easter hymns, the typical Novus Quodlibet church boasts a repertoire of eight or nine? The same, the same, the same, like the drip, drip, drip of cold rain, without meaning, without artistic coherence, and without any feint toward the whole of the liturgical year and the history of salvation.
Many of them are narcissistic, rather like “I Feel Pretty” from West Side Story. “Let us build the City of God,” really? I cannot build the City of God. I can be made, by God, into a stone for the building of that spiritual city, but the action is his, not mine. “We have been sung throughout all of history”? I haven’t been sung even once in my whole life

Somebody, get him to Philly for the Colloquium next year.

Deadline Extended: Musica Sacra Florida 2018

There’s still time! The registration deadline for Musica Sacra Florida 2018 has now been extended to Tuesday, July 24th. To register online, please visit musicasacraflorida.com. Please invite all your friends and anyone you know who has an interest in chant and sacred music. All are welcome; we hope to see you at the conference!

10th Annual Gregorian Chant Conference
Friday, July 27 & Saturday, July 28, 2018
Royal Palm Academy and Saint Agnes Chapel, Naples, FL
Keynote Lecture
Dr. Edward Schaefer (University of Florida)
“The Place of Gregorian Chant in Western History and Its Importance Today” 
Gregorian Chant Conference Faculty
Larry Kent, D.M.A., Director of Florida Pro Musica, Tampa
Edward Schaefer, D.M.A., University of Florida College of Fine Arts
Susan Treacy, Ph.D., Ave Maria University
Workshops
“What Came before the Square Notes” 
Edward Schaefer, D.M.A.
Learn the fascinating history of pre-square-note notation.
“A Plain and Easy Guide to Square Notation” 
Susan Treacy, Ph.D.
 Are you mystified or intimidated by those little square notes?  Fear not!  In this workshop you will receive basic instruction on how to read Gregorian chant notation.  Likewise, if you need a refresher course, come join us.  
“Gregorian Chant as the Basis for Choral Excellence” 
Larry Kent, D.M.A.
This workshop will examine various ways that correct chant technique is an essential element in mixed choral ensembles, especially with regard to sacred music of the sixteenth century.  Participants will work with excerpts of works by Byrd, Victoria, Tallis, and Palestrina.
Chant Choirs (Scholæ)
Beginning/intermediate (men & women)
Advanced men
Advanced women
Masses
Opening Mass in the Extraordinary Form on Friday evening
Closing Mass in the Extraordinary Form on Saturday evening  with Gregorian chants sung by conference participants
Registration Fees
Adults: $60.00 (including materials & instruction)
Students (full-time with ID) and Clergy/Religious: $15.00
For more information please contact Susan Treacy, Ph.D., at cantatedomino@icloud.com

Register online at:  musicasacraflorida.com

Video of Church Music Association of America (CMAA) Annual Requiem Mass

Last week the Church Music Association’s annual Colloquium, held in Chicago on the banks of Lake Michigan, featured the annual Requiem Mass for deceased CMAA members. Francisco Elias Duran of the Dominican Republic graciously recorded the week’s liturgies and is making them available as they are produced and edited. This is the first of several that will be seen on these pages.


The musicians for the Mass are those who attend the Colloquium, conducted by Faculty members. Indeed, the greater part of the week’s events are rehearsals for the beautiful liturgies, with many added-value lectures, workshops, and tutorials. The Colloquium has a great feeling of community and is a refreshing week for musicians working to promote sacred liturgy in their local situations.

Details about membership in the Church Music Association may be found here.

An enormous library of absolutely free sacred music resources, including music for printing and fine books on the Liturgy, may be found here, here, and here.

And the archives of the Association’s beautiful journal, Sacred Music, may be found here.

The Really New Evangelization: Learning How to Lead a Chant Camp

Whenever I teach children Gregorian chant, I make a point of mentioning that back when I was their age, there was no one to teach me how to sing Gregorian chant. Their eyes widen: to these privileged few, having chant teachers is something to take for granted.

In an ideal world, every Catholic child could say the same.

Gregorian chant is native territory for children. It’s simple rather than harmonic–nothing but one melodic line. It’s beautiful. Every once in a while I will hear an absence of singing, and look over to catch one of my students looking off into the distance, absorbed in contemplation. And, it is united to the sacred text, with a power to speak to the Christian soul the song of salvation.

I suggest to the children that maybe when they grow up, they can teach chant too.

For those who would like to pass on this art to children, there is an opportunity to learn from an expert. Under the patronage of the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship, Mary Ann Carr Wilson will be presenting a four-day workshop that trains music teachers and choir directors to conduct chant camps.

A chant camp is a multi-day learning experience, something like a choir rehearsal, and something like a musical Vacation Bible School. This intensive learning experience, which includes plenty of recreational time as well, is a way to instantly form a children’s choir for a parish or school.

Putting on a Chant Camp, or any week-long event, is a daunting prospect, which is why this workshop is such a brilliant idea. Mary Ann, who has masterminded chant camps in several cities for nearly a decade, will teach people how to hold these revolutionary events in their own settings.

Children remember everything. The other day I saw a child whom I’d last taught a year ago, and he began singing this Alleluia for me–and then we sang it together. Just like the Church should be.