Simple Propers for Holy Week

Download Simple English Propers for Holy Week:

Note that there are no propers in this collection for Good Friday. The reason for this, of course, is that there is no Introit, Offertory or Communion prescribed for this day. The SEP collection is only focusing on these three processional chants, which are typically the bulk of the proper for typical Sundays and Feasts, but as we know, Holy Week is its own beast.

One place where I broke the convention of the book was with the Offertory that is prescribed for Holy Thursday in the Graduale Romanum. This is the well known and very simple Ubi Caritas. The text and the musical setting for this chant are verbatim from the new English translation of the Roman Missal. The musical structure is identical to the Graduale Romanum and the text is newly translated as a part of the Roman Missal effort. I actually find it to be very nice!

So while the Simple English Propers book will be very useful for the week-to-week liturgical “grind”, when it comes to Holy Week additional resources will surely be needed.

Chant for Children Ages 8 through 11

This chant course for children age 8 through 11 was developed by Richard Scott in England.

Booklet

Track 1 Football chant
Track 2 Great Amen
Track 3 Karaoke
Track Catholic rap4
Track 5 Stabat Mater
Track 6 Anglican chant
Track 7 Sung Gospel
Track 8 Rudolph in Latin
Track 9 Psalm 78
Track 10 Litany of Saints
Track 11 Litany of Saints in English
Track 12 Litany of Saints Rap
Track 13 Alleluia Byzantine
Track 14 The Adhan
Track 15 Psalm 23 in Hebrew
Track 16 Psalm 114 Tonus Peregrinus
Track 17 Sanctus XVIII
Track 18 Sanctus XVIII
Track 19 Victoria Requiem
Track 20 Durufle Requiem
Track 21 Organum
Track 22 Lapidaverunt
Track 23 Rorate Caeli
Track 24 Sound the Trumpet
Track 25 Psalm 84
Track 26 Christus Vincit

Chant first but no particular style of art?

Fr. Anthony Ruff writes in his piece in GIA Quarterly that certain statements in Sacrosanctum Concilium are in tension with each other. Of this he is certainly correct. But an example he provides – one I’ve seen many times – doesn’t fly. He writes that this is an illustration of the tension: “Gregorian chant is to have first place, but the church has not adopted any style of art as its own (nos. 116, 123).”

You have to look this up to see the error. Section 116 famously said that Gregorian chant is to have first place. But to get to section 123, you have to move past the section on music and here you discover that the sage statement about style concerns architecture and furnishings, not the core music of the Roman Rite.

The Church has not adopted any particular style of art as her very own; she has admitted styles from every period according to the natural talents and circumstances of peoples, and the needs of the various rites. Thus, in the course of the centuries, she has brought into being a treasury of art which must be very carefully preserved. The art of our own days, coming from every race and region, shall also be given free scope in the Church, provided that it adorns the sacred buildings and holy rites with due reverence and honor; thereby it is enabled to contribute its own voice to that wonderful chorus of praise in honor of the Catholic faith sung by great men in times gone by.

We think here of the many Churches in Europe that were converted from the Gothic to the Classical style during the Renaissance (changes that were truly tragic in retrospect). I’m thinking too of the Art Deco at the Loyola University chapel or the Byzantine style of the National Shrine or the modernism of the Oakland Cathedral. All of these are admissible and signs of life and change in art. Rome has no set of blueprints for buildings, no stack of approved patterns for vestments, no molds for statues that everyone must copy. It true to some extent in music, as motets and Mass settings reflect the style of the times (Haydn vs. Palestrina vs. MacMillan). This are always subject to change.

But Gregorian chant is not a style. It is not music that is identified with a particular time or place or people. It is the foundational music of the ritual itself, the music that has lasted throughout the whole history of the rite. It can be substituted with another form but its status as the core, the model, the ideal, never changes. This in fact is what is meant by the seeming proviso “all else being equal” – it means that even if circumstances change that merit some other approach, the status of the chant as the number one form of music is unchanged.

But here we must consider that there is a reason why the Church put this section on changing art styles in the section under architecture and furnishings. It is precisely to avoid the confusion that chant can be entirely displaced. Gothic styles and Art Deco styles can be entirely displace; Gregorian chant cannot be, which is why section 116 says what it says. This was a major contribution of the Second Vatican Council: to settle this issue once and for all.

The upshot of Fr. Ruff’s article is to argue that if we take Gaudium et Spes seriously, we must be open to modernity and adapt our ways to fit it. However, I find nothing in Gaudium that would unseat Gregorian chant from its primary place in liturgy. No, chant does not make Mass a “museum piece” any more than reading the Gospel means that we are somehow stuck in the past. The Gospel and liturgical chant are timeless things.

I really do not understand why people have such a difficult time understanding these distinctions, but apparently this confusion is common. I receive many emails from people who are somehow under the impression that this blog is all about promoting our personal taste and displacing the personal taste of others. Again, the opinion here is not unlike what Vatican II says: there are certain features of liturgy that are beyond taste, and chant is certainly among them.

Current and Forthcoming: 8th Sunday

Collect:

CURRENT
Lord, guide the course of world events
and give your Church the joy and peace
of serving you in freedom.

FORTHCOMING
Grant us, O Lord, we pray,
that the course of our world
may be directed by your peaceful rule
and that your Church may rejoice,
untroubled in her devotion.

Post-Communion

CURRENT
God of salvation,
may this sacrament which strengthens us here on earth
bring us to eternal life.

FORTHCOMING
Nourished by your saving gifts,
we beseech your mercy, Lord,
that by this same Sacrament
with which you feed us in the present age,
you may make us partakers of life eternal.

Comment: Again, yet again, I’m stunned by the differences, and elated at the liturgical future that is ours. Prepare to grab your friends and bring them back to Mass!

NYT Takes Notice of Free Online Music

The New York Times has taken notice of the Internet Music Score Library Project, and the dramatic change it has meant for music. If anything, the story understates just what a difference this project has made for the availability of classical music. It has breathed new life into what has long been a dying genre, making a world of music available to people to try, practice, and perform – and doing so outside monopolistic publishers and their overpriced scores.

Indeed, I would say that this site is saving music from the publishers, and restoring a system of distribution that prevailed for hundreds of years on the Continent and gave rise to the most vibrant and flourishing musical culture we’ve ever known. The ethos of sharing and learning from others pervaded music before the age of copyright, which permitted growth and development generation after generation.

The story does not mention the Choral Public Domain Library, but the effects of this site for Church music have been similar. There is just no chance at all that our own schola would have ever gotten started without this site, and this is true of hundreds of other parish-based scholas. It is now common for most any schola to sing exclusive from packets of music that are downloaded for free. It is especially useful for trying out music. We have no problem in passing out half a dozen scores in the course of one rehearsal, keeping what works for us and tossing out what does not. This would be impossible in a world of music imprisoned by copyright and caged by state-protected publisher monopolies.

This entire method of distribution has been a major boon to the whole of serious music, and brought to life what otherwise might be a dying tradition. What’s more, this method has taught modern composers the merit of publishing in the Creative Commons to assure wide distribution, and given rise to a new financial model as well: the revival of commissions and patronage rather than royalty as a means of supporting new composting. Indeed, the Chant Cafe has had a role here in funding the Simple English Propers project.

The NYT article hints at the tragedy for long-dead composers whose works are still under copyright. Their work is being overlooked and thereby under-performed. This is a very sad situation. I should mention also that many liturgical texts are now burdened with this old model of pay-to-pray and this seriously harms the cause of evangelization in the same way that the old copyright system nearly killed classical music in our time.