The campaign to fund the simple propers is making great progress. We are already one-third the way to the goal. I want to explain in more detail why I believe that this might be the most important project in the world of Catholic liturgy today. As incredible as it is to imagine, there is not a single book of sung English propers in print today that parish musicians in the ordinary form of Mass can use to sing the Mass instead of just sing various songs at Mass.
When this project is completed, we will at last have it, a full book of propers with Psalms that can suitably be sung at every single Catholic parish. We will give them all away for download. The copies we sell will be sold at direct cost so that way choirs can buy as many as they need, and make photocopies when they run out.
Before I continue, please listen to this entrance for All Saints, and, while you do, imagine this in your parish and consider how this would change things in the world in which you live.
Now consider the big picture. People commonly attend Catholic Mass with the expectation that they will hear chant. What they experience instead are a wide variety of songs with texts that are disconnected from the liturgical texts. This often shocks visitors, who wonder what happened to create this disjuncture between their inchoate expectations and the peculiar reality. When did the Catholics change to have music that sounds like contemporary Methodism or evangelicalism? What happened to Gregorian chant or at least its English equivalent?
It is a complicated story with deep roots but the source of the most immediate problem actually traces before the Second Vatican Council. In 1955, Pope Pius XII issued a document called Musicae Sacrae, and it is a fine document overall, one worth revisiting today and learning from.
However, very late in the document, he introduced a small idea that spun out of control over the years. He writes of how touched he is by hymn singing. “Sacred canticles, born as they are from the most profound depths of the people’s soul, deeply move the emotions and spirit and stir up pious sentiments,” he wrote. “When they are sung at religious rites by a great crowd of people singing as with one voice, they are powerful in raising the minds of the faithful to higher things.”
There is no doubt that he is correct here but there is a time and place for such hymns, and they were never intended to replace liturgical chant that is embedded in the ritual, as he will knew. One would never, for example, arbitrarily remove a text that pertains to the beginning of the Mass of the day, having been in place since the 8th century or earlier, with some new song which a text written by a 19th-century poet.
As a way of underscoring this, the Pope wrote that “such hymns cannot be used in Solemn High Masses without the express permission of the Holy See.” But then he added something: “at Masses that are not sung solemnly these hymns can be a powerful aid in keeping the faithful from attending the Holy Sacrifice like dumb and idle spectators. They can help to make the faithful accompany the sacred services both mentally and vocally and to join their own piety to the prayers of the priest. This happens when these hymns are properly adapted to the individual parts of the Mass.”
Now, this is an interesting passage in many ways, but the practical manner in which this came to be applied could probably not have been anticipated. The core problem was that nearly all the Masses in the English speaking world apart from one Sunday Mass was what was called a Low Mass, meaning that it was spoken by the priest and without music for the Mass propers or the ordinary of the Mass. The Pope’s words gave permission to sing hymns during these Masses, and the times when they came to be sung were: entrance, offertory, communion, and recession (which has no Mass proper to be replaced). This gave official approval to what became known as the four-hymn sandwich. This was the steady diet of American Catholics until the Second Vatican Council.
Now we move to Chapter Two of this drama. Part of the driving force behind the liturgical reform of the Council was to move away from this strict high-Mass, low-Mass division and refashion the Mass structure to make every Mass a sung Mass. Vernacular hymnody had become so pervasive that they had nearly devoured the early hope of St. Pius X at the turn of the century. He had hoped for a Mass that was sung by new scholas and a chanting people. Instead we ended up with a quiet Mass dominated by a hymn-singing people even as choirs ignored Gregorian chant.
This is why the Council was absolutely emphatic that Gregorian chant must have pride of place in the Mass. The push for restructuring was to make possible more sung parts of the Mass, including Mass propers and the Mass ordinary. Composers got busy with experiments to make the transition possible.
Hopes were in the air in 1965 when the Church Music Association of America was forged out of the St. Gregory Society and the Society of St. Cecilia. These were new times with new energy behind beautiful Catholic music and an end to the problem of people as spectators and people as English-hymn singers to the neglect of the Mass itself. The CMAA was to lead the way.
I do not need to explain that the reality was close to the opposite and it has remained so ever since. The high hopes were completely dashed due to dramatic cultural shifts, terrible missteps in the implementation of reform, demographic factors, and a range of other upheavals that made the words of the Council itself appear to be a dead letter. The results are far worse that Pius XII could have ever imagined in 1955.
The history I’m referring to here is now forty years ago, and not that much has changed. However, there is a great movement afoot today to teach Latin propers to singers in a new generation. Many parishes have made the transition. The preconcilar rite is now authorized again and we can again here Gregorian chant in select parishes around the country. Workshops in Gregorian chant filled up months in advance.
But there is a problem. A vast gulf separates the vast majority of song-singing parishes from the chanting parishes. There is a grave lack of materials available that make a transition possible. It isn’t very easy to go from “Gather Us In” to “Dominus fortitudo plebis suae,” even among those singers who are fortunate enough to be in parishes were the pastor favors such a switch.
Even as of this writing, there is not a single book in print that I can hand a parish musician and say: “here is the music of the Roman Rite in English; use this to replace what you sing now.”. Not one single book offers the entrance, offertory, and communion antiphons in english with Psalms so that the Mass can again sound truly liturgical. So long as this persists, there will be little hope of changing this parishes to sacred music, and the gap that separates Gregorian parishes from praise-music parishes will grow and grow.
Now we come to Chapter Three and the propers of the Adam Bartlett, a musician in Pheonix, Arizona. He is writing chants that any parish can use with Psalms to cover the entire liturgical action. He writes them on four-line staffs so that people can get use to reading real chant manuscripts. They are intended to be sung without accompaniment so that singers can throw away their accompaniment crutches and use the instrument that God gave them.
The method here is brilliant in every way. The texts are modernized in the best sense without being politically corrected. The texts come from the Roman Gradual, the official music book of the Roman Rite. He preserves the mode of the original Gregorian so that we retain and re-enliven the sound and feel of the original Gregorian. There are 24 total melodic formulas that are used in total for the primary set of antiphons; one in each mode for each proper (8 for the Entrance, 8 for the Offertory and 8 for the Communion). In this way the melodies become intuitive and easily learned without the burden of having to learn a completely new melody each week.
In short, these pieces make it possible to go from what is toward the ideal. They offer the greatest hope we have in our time for doing the thing that must be done.
Now, someone might say: surely we can use these for every proper of the Mass every week! Well, you don’t have to. But when you need an entrance, offertory, or communion, you can have a book in your shelf that allows you to sing the propers on the spot. They are easy to learn and train scholas in how to chant. They also sound very beautiful and compelling.
How do they mix with the politics of parish life? To use them requires no efforts at changing the pastor’s mind about something fundamental (such as language), and they will not give rise to some strange resistance movement against them in the parish. They take the existing parish culture and move it toward something holy, beautiful, universal.
The plan is to give the complete book away to the entire world, for free download. We will also bind it and sell it with absolutely no profit. The cost to the purchaser will be identical to the cost of printing. This way it can achieve maximum distribution across the entire English-speaking world.
Maybe you think that you can’t afford to commission music for the Catholic Church. You can’t afford to be a benefactor of an artist. Well, that’s where the technology comes in. When our method of raising money here, you can give $5 or $50 or $500. For the price of a value meal at the local fast-food joint, you can partake in sponsorship of music that can completely change the way Catholics sing at Mass – not in just some parishes but all.
This way, when people come to Mass, they will hear chant and love it. Our parishes will again attract people rather than disappoint them and drive people away. We will be singing like Catholics and inspire this to continues because these provide the basis for future growth. This way, we can look forward to a brilliant future that is continuous with the best of our past. And make no mistake: what happens in the Catholic Church has a huge influence on the culture at large. Beauty in our Churches enlivens beauty in the world.
This is what your contribution can make possible. Please donate right now.