Liturgical Year Latin Motets – St. Joseph Cappella

I recently received a copy of the St. Joseph Capella’s CD that they released this year, and I’ve been enjoying it. It’s entitled “Liturgical Year Latin Motets.” I appreciate the nice variety from Easter titles like Sicut Cervus and Regina Coeli, or O Magnum Mysterium from Christmastide, and even the pentecost specific Factus Est Repente. Finally, it also includes an ordinary by the Italian composer Baldassare Galuppi. I’d encourage you to check it out, both through the samples found at the links below, and if you like what you hear, to support them!

The choir can be found here on Facebook, and you can buy the album on iTunes or as a physical CD.

Hymn Tune Introit–All Saints Day

For those looking for an easy way to introduce the proper texts, try singing this versification of the Gaudeamus to any Long Meter tune as the bell signals the beginning of your opening procession.

If followed by the oft-sung For All the Saints, there’s rather a nice textual segue.

Today let our joy be increased

In celebration of the feast.

For all the saints, the angels raise

To God the Son glad songs of praise.

Update: As a reminder, the 2015 Advent Calendar of Hymn Tune Introits may be found here.

Masses with a “theme”

Well, school has started up again, which means that in one area of many parishes the music director has little say in the quality of the liturgy.

The School Mass.

In many places, Masses are assigned to a class or grade, which means that the teacher of the class, who may or may not be a practicing Catholic, who almost certainly does not have any liturgical training, is responsible for training lectors, writing petitions, and “choosing the hymns.”

Often the teacher runs forward gamely with this responsibility under the illusion that Masses can have a “theme,” which specifies the appropriate songs for the Mass. Hopefully there are not too many Halloween hymns around, but in many programs undoubtedly the hip, modern, forty-seven year old Make Me a Channel of Your Peace will make a brand new splash this October.

I feel the school Mass is a huge issue in any parish beginning to reform its liturgy. In addition to the children and their teachers, all of whom are having bad liturgical instincts reinforced and your positive Sunday instincts undone, often these Masses are also attended by the most devout parishioners, often parish leaders. So the retired parish leaders and daily Communicants, the salt of the earth, but accustomed to grooving at Mass to the greatest hits of the 70s and 80s, will have all your good Sunday work undermined.

The best kind of theme–still mistaken–is the homiletic theme. This kind of thematic Mass, enshrined in some hymnals that abound in “hymns of the day,” takes its cue from the readings of the day.

One of the many huge benefits of the use of the Proper texts at Mass is how they carry us out of the idea that we can master the Mass, making it small enough that anyone can fill in the blanks of a liturgy planning sheet as though it were a religious game of Mad Libs.

There is no theme. Or rather there is one theme. We cannot tame it; it should master us. We cannot confine it on our property, like a pond. But if we’re willing, we can swim in the depths of its ocean, subject to its tides.

As with almost all of our liturgical tragedies, this one can be solved by focusing on the young. Train a child in the way he should go, and when he is older he will not depart from it. Let’s teach the children to sing the song of the Church, and soon enough, all will be well.

The Passing of a Woman of God

I was very sad to hear of the passing of Helen Hull Hitchcock, the indefatigable foundress of Women for Faith and Family and one of the founders of Adoremus, which has done so much great work for the Liturgy, particularly the implementation of Liturgiam Authenticam.

Helen was very kind to me personally, and to a number of my friends as well. She was one of those wonderful people who look for opportunities to mentor and foster others’ work. One time, when I was doing coursework in Rome and my mail kept being misdirected, she sent along extra mailings, twice, after her first two packages went astray, cheerfully and with a good-humored sense of the unpredictability of the Eternal City.

Regarding this Forum, every once in a while I would receive an email from her, adding her insights to the discussions on these pages.

Her work and goodness will be missed, and I am sorry to know she is not among us any more in the same way.

Requiem aeternam dona eis, Domine; et lux perpetua luceat eis, cum sanctis tuis in aeternum, quia pius es.