That SEP Buzz

We’ve waited a long time for this – forty years for this book but a mere 8 months since its conception – and yesterday was the day that I finally looked at the final product, and it is amazing. If I could figure a way to post directly from my iphone to this blog, I would do it (will try again today).

It began with the arrival of the books in the ballroom.

Then I opened the box while many, including Arlene Oost-Zinner and William Mahrt and many attendees, ceremoniously stood by to get the first look.

Then finally we pulled out the first one: ooh aaaah! As we had hoped, this 460-page book is actually quite compact and manageable, due to a specialized paper style.

Then finally, here was the first look at the stuff inside. One can only stand in amazement: this is the first truly complete and accessible book of sung chant propers for the ordinary form of Mass.

And now I’m pleased to say that you can order yours too, from Amazon, with prime shipping available.

See: The Simple English Propers. The link says that they are out of stock but that’s because Amazon didn’t order enough to meet the demand over the last few days. In fact, I delayed posting this link just to make sure they they stocked up but their algorithms are dictating inventory levels (sometimes the human brain works better!). In any case, they will be there in a day or two. All this means is that you can’t get overnight shipping.

All that aside: it’s a new day for chant in the ordinary form! Congratulations to the brilliant, hard-working Adam Bartlett for his spectacular work.

Common Mass Settings: Mistakes and Corrections

Pray Tell has drawn attention to the Diocese of Jackson, Mississippi, which is insisting that every parish teach and use two Mass settings as an effort toward a common repertoire – and one can hope that this is in addition to the Missal chants. The Bishop writes:

The two approved settings are: The Belmont Mass by Christopher Walker from Oregon Catholic Press and Missa Simplex by Richard Proulx from WLP/Paluch Music. Both settings are straight forward and based in plain chant so that they should fit easily into any parish. Either setting will facilitate our faithful learning the new English translation of the Mass in a simple and prayerful manner.

As Bishop and Guardian of the Liturgy for the faithful in the diocese, I mandate all parishes in the Diocese of Jackson to use only the above two Mass settings for Masses in English for the above listed transition period. This applies to all Masses including school and youth Masses.

After the transition period, parish music ministers may choose from the myriad of new and revised Mass settings, keeping in mind that Catholic musical tradition is about singing the Mass and not singing at Mass. Settings chosen should lend themselves more to congregational participation than to performances.

The Roman Catholic Liturgical Tradition is a beautiful and sacred treasure. As Bishop and protector of that treasure, I appreciate your full cooperation during this time of transition.

Both settings are fine and suitable – good choices overall, if we restrict ourselves to mainstream publishers, which this diocese is doing for understandable reasons. Both would serve regular parishes well. They treat the text well, are flexible enough to be sung with or without instruments, can be sung by a cantor alone or choir, and avoid the attempt to slice and dice the speech rhythm to turn it into a metrical song.

They have some degree of musical integrity even apart from the issue of whether and to what extent that people will sing along; neither settings attempts to sound like a pop song. And yet it would be a safe prediction that people will tend to sing along with the cantor or choir.

For most parishes, these settings would amount to a much welcome departure from the parish convention of singing settings that have three main problems: 1) they attempt to push prose into a strict metric with awkward results that too frequently result in dance-like songs, 2) they often strive to use the antiphon/response format when it doesn’t and shouldn’t apply (the Gloria is an example), and 3) the overt and primary goal of many settings is to get people to sing along, and hence the melodies are drawn from popular culture rather than staying within a liturgical style.

The forthcoming translation will help in this regard because it avoids that triple-time metric of the current Gloria and Sanctus translation. It also offers an opportunity to avoid the other two errors as well. That’s not to say that metrical settings are impossible or that participation can’t be anticipated with a chant-like setting. It is a matter of where the composer is placing the priority. If the primary goal is to create holy, beautiful, and universal music that adheres to the sense of the liturgical text, we have a good beginning. And the two settings link above are a good beginning.

Catholics and Technology: Finally a Training Conference

This is very interesting and creative: a event that combines technology and media training for Catholics with serious liturgy. It is administered by Fr. Ryan Humphries of the CatholicUnderground podcast, and includes speakers such as Fr. Z and Matt Warner from the NCReg. The date is August, 26-28, 2011, and it takes place in Houston, Texas. It is only $35!

Unlike some other conferences out there, they are putting particular emphasis on the Sacred Liturgy and recognizing it as the primary form of communication that the Church has to offer. I’m thrilled to see this sort of event taking place. We need much more of this type of thing that combines training and teaching with a focus on digital media.

Magister Gets It Wrong, Very Wrong

Sandro Magister of Chiesa is a very popular writer among Catholics who follow and love the pontificate of Benedict XVI. His journalistic work is distributed online in many languages, and he is usually a valuable source of information about goings on in the Vatican. He has been an excellent champion of the pope who never fails to defend him against critics.

But as a journalist, Magister has one big blind spot: music. He is not a musician, doesn’t follow this beat very closely, and must rely on the judgment of others within the Vatican to alert him to trends and changes. This is always a dangerous method for any journalist who aspires to be an independent voice. He has good instincts that favor tradition but lacks the competence to seriously evaluate whether and to what extent it is being realized.

I’ve usually ignored his writings on this topic, and declined to correct them simply because they haven’t done too much damage so far. But on May 30, 2011, he sent out a column that made the following claim: “Benedict XVI…has declined to act and to make decisions in the field of sacred music.” In the area of sacred music, “Benedict XVI’s grand vision is not being backed up by actions, which are even moving in the opposite direction.”

Now, this is just startling on its face. It comes close to being a smear of the pope himself, and it is outrageously unjust. If you visit Rome and attend the daily sung Office in St. Peter’s, you will hear beautiful Gregorian chant and polyphony of the highest caliber. The music of the Renaissance has been revived, and the choirs in St. Peter’s are cooperating with the Solesmes monastery. At Vatican Masses, we hear the Gregorian introit and communion chants with regularity, and sometimes even the offertory chant. The ordinary of the Mass is scrupulously derived from official chants books and sung with great care.

This is a dramatic change from the past, even from the preconcilar past. The progress has been rapid and thorough in St. Peter’s itself. Right now, the music is better than it ever was under John Paul II, Paul VI, John XXIII, and even Pius XII, and going back in time, perhaps even to the 19th century and before. The Vatican has long struggled with the music question. Benedict is bringing clarity for the first time in very long time.

It’s true that one cannot always discern this from televised occasions but there are several choirs that provide music and the progress in the sound itself is uneven. As regards repertoire itself – and this is the critical issue – there has been a dramatic turnaround. And even when the pope travels, the advance team works with the choirs on the ground to push them into the best possible performance of music. The results are not always great, but we must remember what is possible right now. We are coming out a half century of near chaos, a time when the musical capital of Catholicism’s outposts has been almost completely depleted.

Benedict’s changes have not only transformed music at the Vatican and a papal liturgy. The changes (which include Summorum Pontificum and also pushing for a new English missal) have unleashed a global revival of chant and polyphony – and a new comprehension of the very meaning of liturgical music itself.

The idea of the new ethos is to use liturgical texts to accompany liturgical action, and, further, to use musical settings of those texts that are organic to the ritual. I know that this doesn’t sound too complicated but consider that this single point has been lost on nearly everyone in a decision-making role in Catholic music for many generations.

Benedict XVI is working to restore this understanding. One might go so far as to say that the shift in liturgical music that has occurred under him is the single most conspicuous change that has taken place in the Catholic world in the last 10 years.

My reminder of this obvious reality is only necessary given Magister’s amazing claim that the music question has been somehow neglected. This approaches being an jaw-dropping claim. So what is his evidence? This is where he gets petty. Magister says that the Pope did not pay enough attention to a conference held by the Institute of Sacred Music in May of this year. “The prefecture of the pontifical household made it known that there would be no audience, nor any apostolic letter.” This, says Magister, amounts to “ostracism.”

And yet, in a letter dated May 26, the Vatican released a letter from Benedict that celebrated this very institution. “In the span of the last 100 years, this Institution has assimilated, developed, and expressed the doctrinal and pastoral teaching of the pontifical documents, as well as those of Vatican Council II, concerning sacred music, to illumine and guide the work of composers, chapel maestros, liturgists, musicians, and all instructors in this field.”

This is hardly ostracism. In fact, the whole tone, approach, and thesis of Magister is utterly preposterous. So why is he making these claims? A hint about the source of his poor information comes in his article’s attack on the appointment of the position of director of the Sistine Chapel choir. Magister says it went to the wrong guy, Don Massimo Palombella. Magister says he is “clearly not up to the role.” So he says.

This is the third time that Magister has made this claim. I knew nothing of Palombella when he was appointed, so I quickly looked him up. It turns out that his a specialist in the Roman school of polyphony in general and Palestrina in particular, and this is what he is emphasizing in his work with the Chapel. The singing style is not to my taste – this is due to a conflict between the Roman and English schools that dates back to the 19th century. (Some people have said that St. Pius X’s interventions in the area of music were motivated by his desire to reform this choir, which he couldn’t stand; it didn’t work.) But the repertoire itself has been first rate.

In other words, there is no basis for trashing Palombella this way – and Magister is not competent to judge. And who does Magister like instead? He likes the old director Domenico Bartolucci, who was supposed to have the position for life but was booted in 1997 under John Paul II. As a way of expressing support, Benedict made him a Cardinal and has written glowing tributes. But that’s not enough for Magister, who apparently thinks that Bartolucci needs to be reappointed.

Now, Bartolucci might be a great man and a great musician. I enjoy his interviews, in which he routinely attacks all pop music in satisfyingly vicious terms but also trashes the sound of Solesmes-style chant, which he regards as affected and effete. Bartolucci says he favors a manly and warrior sound for chant. These comments always strike me as hilarious, especially given that the Sistine choir under his rule was not exactly an exemplar of excellence (and many readers who know the truth are right now laughing at my understatement).

In other words, it seems very clear to me that Magister is the victim of some kind of strange Vatican-based bureaucratic struggle. He has been manipulated into presenting a series of petty issues as some kind of giant struggle for the soul of sacred music. And his involvement in this tiny world has led him – even with all his long journalistic experience – to overlook the most exciting and wonderful development in the Catholic world in many generations.

Yes, this is very disappointing. My biggest worry here is that this one Magister column has misled many, many people. I hesitated to say anything about it but after the twentieth or so email expressing disappointment in this papacy as a response to this article, I had to clarify. I hope we can put Magister’s preposterous claims to rest.