D
dochawk
Guest
I don’t think we’ve finished in 45, but . . .It’s commonly shorter
I don’t think we’ve finished in 45, but . . .It’s commonly shorter
The vast majority of the faithful today do not sing, period.Agreed. The vast majority of the faithful do not sing to contemporary music.
Since he actually went through a period in his pre-adolescence when he was very devout, the chances are he chanted at synagogue at some point. (Not to mention the likelihood that he had to do it at some point when he attended his Catholic elementary school in Munich in the late 1800s.)For all of his amazing intellect, I do not believe that Albert Einstein ever chanted.
Chant was designed exclusively for singing by choir monks and canons of cathedrals and collegiate churches, and was never intended for congregational singing. Besides, there was no congregational singing in the Roman Catholic Church until the seventeenth century, and even then, chant was mostly off limits until the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.Chant is an extremely old form of congregational singing.
The Church Fathers of the 2nd Vatican Council obviously felt singing Gregorian chant was appropriately to be considered attainable for congregational singing and in fact set it up as deserving pride of place in the liturgies of the Roman rite. Plainchant is still Gregorian chant, and it can be learned by gradeschool children. Yes, there are difficult kinds of Gregorian chant but there are difficult examples of essentially every one of the fine arts.Chant was designed exclusively for singing by choir monks and canons of cathedrals and collegiate churches, and was never intended for congregational singing. Besides, there was no congregational singing in the Roman Catholic Church until the seventeenth century, and even then, chant was mostly off limits until the late nineteenth and early twentieth century.
So yes, it was designed specifically for an extremely highly-educated population. Practically no one in Europe when Gregorian Chant was developed could read except for choir monks and canons. And they alone had the eight or more hours a day to practice chanting.
Chant is quite sophisticated and not something that anyone can just “pick up” by mere exposure without formal training…
No, Gregorian chant was never designed for congregational singing. Pride of place does not mean everyone singing it, all the time. Some simple settings of the Ordinary are quite amenable to it, but even then it takes considerable practice for the entire congregation to sing with one voice. Few things are harder than having a choir or schola sing with “one voice”, with everyone, with un-metered music, arriving on the same note, at the same time, with the same intensity. It takes years for a schola to find its voice.The Church Fathers of the 2nd Vatican Council obviously felt singing Gregorian chant was appropriately to be considered attainable for congregational singing and in fact set it up as deserving pride of place in the liturgies of the Roman rite. Plainchant is still Gregorian chant, and it can be learned by gradeschool children. Yes, there are difficult kinds of Gregorian chant but there are difficult examples of essentially every one of the fine arts.
I cannot think of a single type of liturgical music–any music!–that cannot be done better by a trained choir than by a congegration. None. There is no music that sounds good when you have people coming in late or starting early or singing off-key. That’s the reality of congregational singing. There is mercy involved, that is the long and short of it, because usuallly someone is off.I have to ask: do you sing Gregorian chant? By that I don’t mean just the simpler ordinaries, but the full propers from the Graduale Romanum?
First of all, no. Plainchant does not mean “simple or easy chant”. All Gregorian chants, from the most banal to the most perversely complex and difficult, are Plainchant.Simple plainchant IS Gregorian chant, just as the Minuet in G Major really is music by Bach.
Yet you seem to know very little about the topic. I think you are relying on your imagination of what Chant is rather than on any actual knowledge of the topic.If there is any generation of Roman Catholics in history that has no excuse for failing to learn at least plainchant, it is ours.
Implying to us that people who lived in monasteries in the Middle Ages were “an extremely highly-educated population” compared to the typical educational attainment of the laity now paints a highly romanticized picture of chant and the extent of a typical monastic education in the Middle Ages.Yet you seem to know very little about the topic. I think you are relying on your imagination of what Chant is rather than on any actual knowledge of the topic.
It doesn’t, GordonP’s description is bang-on.Implying to us that people who lived in monasteries in the Middle Ages were “an extremely highly-educated population” compared to the typical educational attainment of the laity now paints a highly romanticized picture of chant and the extent of a typical monastic education in the Middle Ages.
I think we’re totally talking apples and oranges. I am not suggesting that every parish is going to use Gregorian chant every time they sing. I’m not suggesting they ought to attempt the pieces you’ve been posting. I am saying that it is worthwhile to pursue the subset of chant that is accessible to the laity, just as it is attainable to teach the laity to understand and pronounce a limited amount of Latin. You’d think we shouldn’t attempt the Agnes Dei because people don’t want to put years into learning Latin or we should only recite or sing the Kyrie in the vernacular because of the way laypeople butcher the Greek.With all due respect you are comparing apples to oranges. First of all, Plainchant is not Gregorian chant. Gregorian is a subset of plainchant, one of many chant traditions in the Roman Church. The Ordinary of the Mass is a subset of Gregorian or Ambrosian chant, and the simpler settings are a subset of that.
That’s why there was essentially no congregational singing for about 1200 years. Or just about any lay participation whatsoever, beyond an odd “Et cum spiritu tuo” or “Amen” now and then.After all, if we have “sacred music” that allows the singers to come in late, sing with the wrong rhythm and sing the wrong notes–because for that sacred music it doesn’t matter ?!?–we have settled for cacaphony.
I don’t disagree with this. I think it would be sensible to use Kyrie XVI, Gloria XV and Sanctus/Agnus XVIII on ordinary Sundays (no Gloria during Advent and Lent), with one of the simpler Credos though I think the Credo, being a profession of faith, would best be said by heart in the vernacular on most Sundays. For more festive occasions, Mass VIII (De Angelis) is well-enough known to be appropriate, along with Credo III.I am saying that it is worthwhile to pursue the subset of chant that is accessible to the laity,
If other music sounds cacaphonic, Gregorian won’t sound better just by being Gregorian! All I’m saying is don’t expect a quality improvement because it’s Gregorian. Even with the simpler settings, there will be some clashes. Yes the simpler settings are easy to learn and even memorize. Blending the voices, requires more effort. A good cantor can help. It requires volunteers more than it requires Internet debates about why we don’t have chant.I think that decrying using chant in sacred music as a “cacaphony” is applying a double standard when judging the other sacred music that a congregation might attempt.
I would hope nobody is suggesting that we’re so wrapped up in a “perfect” liturgy that we can’t trust the laity to contribute to it. Honestly, that sounds like a good way to manufacture some Protestants to me.That’s why there was essentially no congregational singing for about 1200 years. Or just about any lay participation whatsoever, beyond an odd “Et cum spiritu tuo” or “Amen” now and then.
The congregation could not be trusted not to spoil the liturgy. To the point where the liturgy was essentially held largely out of sight and hearing of the congregation, behind the chancel and altar screens and curtains.