Chant Inspires the Blogosphere

I’m thrill to wake today to three absolutely wonderful promotions of the Sacred Music Colloquium, June 25-July 1, Salt Lake City.

Fr. Z offers an excellent write up, and, truth is that Fr. Z. was trained to chant under the best of the best. Whenever we have Skype calls, he dazzles me with his knowledge and makes me feel like I should never write anything on this subject again. He is a true expert.

Then we turn to Fr. Anthony Ruff, who similarly trained under the best of the best in Europe. I dare say that he could sing the entire Gradual by memory — with notes corrected according to 9th century manuscripts. He blogs at PrayTell.

Finally, we look across the pond to the king of hermeneutical continuity, Fr. Tim Finigan. His write up points to all the wonderful things I like about the Colloquium film.

Thank you to all who have pushed this event, which promises to be the best in human history.

Some things I might have offered June in SLC

Unfortunately, my bride and I will not be able to attend the Colloquium that we could actually drive to this June. Arlene, Jeffrey T. and the CMAA braintrust were too kind (or truly magnanimous and perhaps foolhardy) to invite me to present at a breakout session regarding the “care and feeding” of choirs in a comprehensive parish music program. But with the likes of Kathy Pluth and Matthew Meloche and other long term friends expanding the colloquium format with very practical offerings, my POV will still be represented.
However, it occured to me that as I was asked to prepare a brief (seven minute or so) presentation on the “future” of parish music ministry in a four parish conglomerate that has been on a learning curve for about four years, what I’ve been personally involved in lobbying for and advocating the reformations of certain aspects of a modern comprehensive parish, some of these thoughts might be of general interest.
So without further comment, here is the draft of my crystal ball gazing for us locally out in Central California that I’ll offer to staff and clerics tomorrow morning. My hope for its “reception” is the same as I’ve hoped for every collaborative effort with both lay and clerical liturgical personnel: an unvarnished and receptive consideration that extends beyond the convenience of personal tasted or modern conventional wisdom. Here is my vision for the immediate future of our parishes’ improvement and ongoing progress:

These are the items I would propose as future priorities:

*The eventual phasing out of pulp or subscription hymnals/missals in all parishes.

+             It has become apparent on many levels that this economic expenditure, namely repurchasing the virtually identical repertoire (with only minor additions and some major deletions) every year is wasteful and irresponsible in many ways beyond the budgetary concerns. No matter what major supplier is chosen, none show any inclination towards adjusting and improving their content to be more aligned to what is clearly mandated by the many ecclesial documents governing the function of sacred/liturgical music at Mass.

+             The issue of manifesting a clearly identifiable “Catholic” ethos and identity in all the liturgical arts, most severely obvious in music, is clearly apparently emerging from both the upper, hierarchical leadership of the Church, but also from the younger demographic of teens and young adults who are availing themselves of the information about our traditions via the internet and elsewhere that speak of a spiritual and mystical “fruition” that is sometimes found wanting or even lacking in the contemporary Mass experience. It is not only about issues of music such as chant, or postures or translations, it seems based upon having and experience that stimulates the worshipping soul at a more deep level than emotion or mundane obligation. This, I believe, must be discussed by the pastoral council, the clergy and liturgical interests in our parish in a systematic, serious and progressive way, and very soon. These concerns cross demographic and social delineations as well.

  • The mitigation of these above concerns– how can music ministry remain diverse yet become more cohesive? How can, in the processes of changes, the objectives of full, active, conscious participation coalesce with a clearly principled architecture of what liturgy is and how it is performed?

+             The third typical edition of the Roman Missal in the English translation will not be abrogated in the near future, despite many concerns about its process and effect. Happily, celebrants at our parishes have fully embraced the collects and prayers with enthusiasm and competence, and the faithful are responding in dutiful reverence and zeal for the most part. Therefore, I would propose that a coordinated campaign be studied, decided upon and implemented where parishioners would be shown it would be in their best interests, both as worshippers and as stewards, to obtain the Sunday Missal in their own family editions, in any of our vernaculars. On savings of overhead dollars from the general fund alone, they should be “sold” upon this one time expenditure.

+             The parish institutes another committee study to determine how best to consolidate the musical needs of the parish (in all languages including the increasing volume of Latin) into a solid delivery form. Though I personally consider certain commercial hymnals to be superior to others in content, I fully realize that none of them would address both the concerns of those folks to whom the repertoire of the last two generations has great merit (and which is licit) and the very real need to embrace the larger goals of the Second Vatican Council regarding the essential musical nature of “singing the Mass” rather than “singing at Mass.” This means the informed discretion of examining all our roles, some official, some out of necessity, and how to align them according to the preferred optional priorities established by legislation.

+             There are a number of “delivery” media to consider in this reorganization of resources. Besides the aforementioned commercial hymn (hardbound) book, a compilation specific to the expressed needs of our parish or even our diocese could materialize as a commercially available option with today’s on demand printing readily available.

 Of course, the use of projection technology has already had its “baptism” at our newest parish and can only improve with time and experience in that suitable environment.

The weekly use of “Orders of Worship Music” is one that appeals to many, not the least of which is our pastor. But that option would have to be preceded by agreement upon the scale of such a weekly project, and the acknowledgement that final decisions on repertoire selection would have a “buck stops here” political reality that everyone would have to buy into.

                A very innovative, and not improbable alternative would involve creating and linking music resources to the parish website, made available through at least three or more free or inexpensive sources (such as our current yearly license with OCP, OneLicensing.org) or music sanctioned under the free use Creative Commons v.3, or basic public domain hymns, Masses, and a gigantic plethora of liturgical musics, that could be hosted by the various directors under the Music Director’s aegis, and then promulgated to the faithful in the pews by “application” links (either free iTunes or Android platforms) to specific Masses, specific times and specific parishes onto tablet , pad or even cell phone hosting. Should anyone not think there is a real future in this “mode” of delivery, I would point out that we are already using it here in this parish, and others have created vast databases of whole hymnals, missals and accompaniment volumes from the current era to those of antiquity that are in use across the globe. When Android platform tablets are currently selling below the $100 price point, and likely to cross the $50 mid point this year, it is not unreasonable to poll parishioners whether there might be many benefits, such as preparing for Sunday liturgies’ music and potentially other information prior to the weekend, besides that of throwing money away on newsprint subscription materials that deface and clutter our church pews and buildings.

+             The implementation of the MR3 translation has afforded enlightened parish ministries to re-engage in the evolution of how all constituents, ie. The People of God (everybody), must regard and prepare the performance of ritual activities and actions not only for the English speaking faithful, but for all catholics. Finally many are coming to the core of the questions whether inculturation among diverse ethnic and linguistic clienteles is best addressed by the “Polyglot Model” (diverse vernaculars used in a single Mass), the unity envisioned by St. Pius X with the faithful’s FACP in the sung Gregorian Latin modality, or even whether Latin Roman rites remain viable (chant, for example) using the new lingua franca of the USA and many other countries, namely English.

+             Lastly, it is the Music Director’s long-considered conclusion that we enhance the already generous and successful aspects of our multi-spectral approach to worship music styles and performance modes (organ, ensemble, cantor, choir, schola, etc.) by  reviewing the criteria and standards by which the fairly autonomous directors have used thus far over two decades, and undertook to review what are literally ELEMENTAL and INTEGRAL  aspects that must be part and parcel of the decision process that determines the musical repertoire choices that determine what as many as twenty congregations may sing in English, Spanish, LaHu or even Latin in the near future. As mentioned, the Church documents clearly mandate a hierarchical priority of texts that form the foundation for “singing the Mass” rather than “singing at Mass.” These options are clearly not set in tablets of stones, but are none the less ideals which deserve much more than lip service in our deliberations. This means, at the least, the lifting up of the two primary and related principles: the use of Proper texts as well as optional (four) texts which have direct allusions to the festal, seasonal or scriptural content of each Mass. The era of choosing music based primarily, or solely upon popularity or personal preference of either/or the congregation’s likelihood of singing or the music ministry’s personal preference is soon to be relegated to the history books as a flawed, failed though noble portion of our liturgical history.

An Aggregated Review of Ten Glorias

This is not an indictment of GIA, but of the whole culture of Gebrauchtmusik that has infected the US publishing industry, and the composers who write for them, in the past twenty years. The Church deserves music that respects the integrity of the text and the education of the people. Even more, the Church deserves music that lifts it up out of the banality of the culture.

Read the entire review.

Announcing the Feast: Why Antiphons?

From Jason McFarland’s book:

Without a doubt, responsorial or antiphonal singing is especially suitable for processions because such songs have an open musical form and thus a variable length that can accommodate the infinitely variable length of an entrance procession. Repeated antiphons also facilitate active participation because the gathered faithful can sing them from memory, in contrast to singing a hymn from a book, and thus engage more fully in the entrance procession. (p. 110)

Indeed, antiphons are a unique liturgical-textual genre. Their purpose is neither to proclaim nor to allude to the ancient Christian textual tradition, but to appropriate it. In so doing, antiphons reflect and pass on a tradition of textual interpretation. This occurs through the way a specific antiphon text employs the textual tradition and relates to and interacts with its verses to produce a particular Christian meaning, and then how the antiphon and verses together relate to and reveal something about a specific day of the liturgical year, thereby announcing “the mystery of the liturgical time or festivity” (GIRM 47). (p. 167)

Wassim Does It Again

Following up on a spectacular success in Michigan, Wassim Sarweh is taking his show on the road to New York!

Gregorian Chant Workshop

Learn the history, rhythm, notation, vocal techniques, modes and psalm tones of Roman Chant. This course will include discussion of both the Ordinary and Extraordinary Forms of the Roman Rite, as well as use of English and Latin in the Liturgy.

Advanced- accompanying chant ( how to accompany or follow accompaniment)
Chironomy- directing chant and following the director
How to improvise on modes
Isons – establishing mode
Old roman – how to…
and more!

4 & 5 May 2012
St. Patrick’s Church
235 Glen Street
Glen Cove, New York 11542