Getting Serious with Father Weber

Fr. Samuel Weber is widely recognized as a leading chant scholar and composer today. His book of English/Latin Compline chants that came out last year is absolutely first rate. What many people do not know is that this is just the beginning. He has been creating English chant scores for many years, though they have never been collected in a single book.

After a conversation last night, Fr. Weber agreed that the most natural home for his past and ongoing work in this area is MusicaSacra.com. We’ve now put all this work on the server in an open directory. I’m happy for anyone to create a user interface for this but in the interests of time an open directory is going to have to do for now.

He has also begun create a new Gradual based on the Missal antiphons from the new translation that will appear in the 3rd edition of the Roman Missal. These will be uploaded week by week beginning now. However, keep in mind that it is not necessary to sing the words of the Missal antiphons; the Graduale antiphons are just as suitable (as are the older translation of the Missal antiphons). There are no regulations mandating any particular translation for the sung propers of the Mass. All of these files, then, will continue to be useful into the future.

The entire file structure is located at: musicasacra.com/weber

Mass of the Mediatrix by Patrick O’Shea

Like many Catholic musicians, I’ve listened to what seems like a hundred Mass settings over the last year, and I’m not sure that I trust my own sense of what I hear anymore.

So I’ve developed rules of thumb about what I favor, and most readers probably already know: I favor plainchant over metrical settings, vocal over instrumental, modal over major/minor, simple over complex, and so on. When I was sent the Mass of the Mediatrix, I immediately saw that it fell on the other side of the ledger. I prepared not to like it.

Then I looked and listened. It took me a while, but I began to realize that this is very sophisticated material. It is rich and colorful and complex. It is accompaniment dependent, to be sure, but this enables the melody line to be relatively simple. It is not formulaic in any sense. There are long lines here, and passages that offer a real musical challenge. The more I followed along with the score, the more I was persuaded that this is an excellent piece of work. Yes, it runs counter to all my rules of thumb, but such is the way art works. As soon as you try to can it, fix it, box it up, it escapes and something beautiful emerges that you least expect.

However, I would be very interested in your own reaction. I give you Mass of the Mediatrix by Patrick O’Shea. And of course high praise for the medium of delivery and distribution here.

Incidentally, as a check to my own instincts, which I no longer fully trust, I sent the link to our co-blogger Charles, who had high praise for the Gloria, which is the one part he had a chance to listen to. He wrote the following back to me:

I found the initial melodic motive of the Glory to be at once subtle and intriguing in its “painting” of the text. The opening ascending perfect fifth (and even corresponding descending perfect fourth in the tenor) upon “God” naturally elevates one’s intention towards praising God, but then is further propelled into the “plagal” melody of scale degree 6-5 on “hea-ven” which is adorned with a prepared suspension of 2-1 in the tenors, a very sweet added Major ninth effect for that one beat. I wonder why Dr. O’Shea did not have the tenors declaim “in the” with the other three voices and simply slur the quarter to half assignment to “high-“ est. But it’s not a primary concern. The plagal character is reiterated (tone painting again?) with 4-3-2-1, “and on earth, peace to people of good will…” , which also features a lovely traditional suspended dominant chord resolution. The strength and noble simplicity of this opening motive will serve later portions of the Glory both directly and indirectly, which is always a good “bonding agent.”

A one measure organ interlude is both a modal nod, using the flat VI to flat VII to tonic “cliché (not meant as derogatory!), but also as a preview of a tonality shift soon to follow with the four exclamations: “We praise….etc.” The melody uses the “rising hands” of the minor third (A-C natural) against a I to V minor in which the basses firmly establish “we” on beat one, with the other three voices entering on beat two to finish the exaltation “We praise You.” Then Dr. O’Shea restates the prepared Major 9th suspension within another lovely-prepared plagal cadence (adore YOU), again in the tenors, to then essentially shift from tonality to modality for the remainder of the text to “O God, almighty Father,” at which also we encounter a moment of tonal surety at the prescribed key signature shift to C Major. The descending 4-1 phrase is also quoted again twice within that portion, “heavenly King, O God, almighty Father,” which a congregation should absorb quite easily after a couple of hearings/singings.

The next section and motive, setting the text beginning with “Lord Jesus Christ” again uses the ascending flat VI/flat VII progression to I (C Major) that served as a precursor to another subtle shift yet to come. But Dr. O’Shea repeats that progression that, however, leads to an unprepared suspended III chord (Esus-E) which seems to then serve as a bridge between E and A minor, but not as dominant to tonic, apparently. He uses the C natural key signature and “C” itself to again serve as the ascending flat VI/flat VII/I with E as the tonic, affirmed at the terminal cadence of “mercy on us.” I should mention that the melody in the soprano emulates the economy of chant melodies in both tessitura and scale/step motion, but doesn’t seem mere craft, but an obviously sacral entity in character itself, or as if sung a cappella.

The chromatic/enharmonic cascading suspension harmonies of the “You take away the sins….” segment is simply gorgeous writing as well as a nifty treatment leading to a iv-Vsus-V progression that leads to a grand restatement of the opening motive at “For You alone….”

I really don’t need to exhaustively analyze the melodic or harmonic structures much further, except to mention an obvious and thoughtful treatment of “Most high” that should not tax the congregation as it is a sort of culmination of the original ascending motive, just saved (as best) for last. I would characterize this rhythmically as hymnic or strophic in character. But that should not be any sort of deterrent to any choir or schola looking for an innovative and luscious harmonic treatment that isn’t imitative of the so-called “Faux Kings College” or Gebrauchsmusick-like settings that came into being after the 1970 Missal.

This has both inspiration and art wedded by craft. It should take its place with capable choirs alongside new settings such as Chris Mueller’s, Jacob Bancks’, Royce Nickel’s and other new choral composer voices, as an alternative to always singing the Schubert/Proulx Deutchemesse or similar classical treatments.

Composer of the Propers of the Mass: Sanctificat

I found this past Sunday’s Offertory antiphon in the original Gregorian to be extremely difficult. After singing it, I looked at by book and saw that it was filled with beads of sweat – a sure indication of its difficulty. I was a bit surprised by this – I can’t remember having such trouble with a piece of chant – and so I’ve been looking around for recordings only to find that Kevin Allen has actually written a wonderful polyphonic version. The great aspect of this is that if your choir’s polyphonic forces are stronger than your chant forces, there are growing numbers of options.

Eric Whitacre’s Amazing Experiment

I’m sure that I’ve posted this before, but it is so moving and extraordinary – and not only because of the technology and what it means but also because it demonstrates that polyphony of the sort we love is loved in ages and places and still lives today. This is one of an infinite number of Catholic gifts to the world.

The Brilliance of László Dobszay

The more I understand about the topic of Catholic music, the more it seems that music and liturgy are really inseparable. The mark of a truly mature musician in the Catholic Church is the understanding that it isn’t really about the music after all but rather the integral contribution that music makes to the overall ritual.

A goal of the liturgy reform at Vatican II was to achieve this more fully; the effect has been the opposite: to completely shatter the relationship between the loft and the sanctuary. The main objective today is draw them together again. This is more important than any other personal taste in music or parish political agenda.

One man who worked very hard over the last decades to explain the problem and provide solutions was the Hungarian musicologist and chant expert László Dobszay (1934-2011). I was stunned to hear of his death, and I’m sure many others feel the same way. He was a visionary, a genius, a truly innovative and brilliant thinker who understood the Roman Rite like few other living people. He was a mentor to me through his writings and his drive. He was also a very dear man.

The presence of a mind like this in the world makes a person like me absolutely afraid to write anything at all, simply because he possessed universal knowledge of a topic that I can only hope to understand in fragments. But rather than look down on what I wrote or tell me that I should stop until I had mastered what I need to know, he was always incredibly encouraging, enthusiastic, gentle, helpful, and happy to see that so many people in his last years had taken up his cause.

He must have felt like a lone warrior for all those prior decades. A champion of Dobszay’s work has been Fr. Robert Skeris, who worked to bring Dobszay’s writing to an English audience. When I first read the Skeris-edited book The Bugnini Liturgy and the Reform of the Reform, I was absolutely stunned. It seemed to bring everything together for me. I even recall reading the book while standing in line to pay for groceries!

Here was a severe critic of the structure and rubrics of what is known as the ordinary form today who was by no means an uncritical champion of the older form of Mass. Neither politics nor nostalgia interested Dobszay. He was passionate about the truth above all else. And the two truths that this book drove home were 1) the Roman Rite is intended to be a sung liturgy, and 2) the propers of the Mass are the source text for what is to be sung by the choir.

A reform that he championed was once considered outrageous: he wanted the permission to replace Mass propers with some other text to be completely repealed. The propers must never, under any conditions, be neglected. I’ve come around to this view. So have many, many others. In fact, it is a rather common view now, and one that even finds growing support in each successive translation of the General Instruction on the Roman Missal.

Of course he was a master in understanding the Gregorian tradition, and a true champion of the universal language of the Roman ritual. However, he was also nearly alone, for many years, in being an advocate of sung vernacular propers in the ordinary form.

For years, I couldn’t understand his thinking here. Why vernacular? Well, Dobszay saw that there was a step missing in the achievement of the ideal if we expect to take a leap from the prevailing practice of pop songs with random text to Latin chant from the Graduale Romanum. That step was to sing the Mass texts in the vernacular according to a chant-based idiom drawn from our long musical tradition.

He turns out to be incredibly correct on this point. In fact, he was the true inspiration behind the Simple English Propers, book that has permitted regular parishes to start singing chant for the first time. This book and so many others are part of his legacy that he left in this world. In fact, I would even suggest that the new translation of the Roman Missal that is implemented this Advent owes much to his influence.

Just this week, I had a conversation with a dedicated Church musician who had converted to the chant cause and implemented sung propers in Latin in her parish. This approach was making gains in Mass after Mass for two solid years. Then one day the pastor came to her and said: “I’m not really sure that the introit you are singing really serves its purpose. I think the people are afraid of the Latin, regard the schola as somewhat separate from everything else, and I fear that this approach is alienating people.”

She was stunned and of course bristled. But what the pastor says goes, as we all know. Tragically, progress stopped. Now the parish is back to singing English hymns that are not part of the Mass proper. They are just hymn selections chosen the same week from a check list of possible pieces to sing. The choir was no longer singing the liturgy; it was singing something else.

So what went wrong? It would be perhaps too easy to say that the pastor was a liberal holdover who didn’t get the Roman Rite. His impressions may or may not have been right, but it is crucial to consider that his objection was not to Mass propers but rather to Latin. It was the Latin that the congregation had not really been prepared for. This was the sticking point.

I’m gradually beginning to realize this myself. The vernacularization of the liturgy is something we need to come to terms with as we think about strategies moving forward. It is simply a matter of thinking through, very carefully, the stages of reform. We do not want to leap ahead until the ground is prepared. Perhaps, then, it would be best to begin to English propers and work toward Latin as seems pastorally wise in parts of the Mass such as communion, or perhaps only at selected Mass times.

This was precisely what Dobszay had concluded after years of working with choirs and parishes in Hungary. This is why he spent an equal amount of his time on Latin as Hungarian propers, and why he pioneered so many efforts to restore Mass propers to the rightful place regardless of the language.

The critique of this might be: you are neglecting the greatest masterpieces of music that the Church has to offer in favor of reductions and doing so only for practical reasons! To this I would respond: these masterpieces are not being heard right now. Right now, people are singing pop music that has nothing to do with the Mass. This approach must end before we can really achieve must else. Reductions in the vernacular can still be beautiful and they at least lay the groundwork for future progress. We have to get on the right track before we can get to where we need to be going.

The right track does not include pop music. Sung propers in plainchant integrate with the Christian liturgy so that it can become a seamless whole again. Dobszay understood this. He was very wise, and way ahead of his time. Though he has left this world, his writings and personal inspiration provide a template for the current generation of Catholic musicians to making lasting progress in healing the great division between liturgy and music.