C
clem456
Guest
In our parish, there is a lot of pressure for the liturgy/music director to conform. He is capable of doing it all from pipe organ with a big choir to the H’s with guitars.
But the leadership element in the parish really pushes for the new music in an effort to bring em in.
This effort is ongoing for 45 years now and has not produced the hoped for results.
But, because ministerial leadership is predominantly 55+ and female, a certain type of music is still the correct “new” music. Ok…
Here’s the irony: our director comes from a very musical family. Wife and son are both accomplished musicians. My son as well is a musician.
When these two boys went through high school here my son says “they think they know what youth music is but they don’t know what they’re doing. It’s stupid”. Take it with a grain of salt, he was 16 or so.
What do these young people listen to and perform in college?
How about stuff like Carmin Burana by Orff.
Sound track to Lord of the Rings.
Beethoven’s 5th.
All intense music, with timeless themes. Music that can move the spirit outside itself. .
It’s unfortunate that many people in control of liturgy have no idea what type of music moves people. Music need not be tepid, or “nice”, or “different” for different’s sake, to appeal to young people.
Much of the music sung at our youth masses is near impossible to follow. The melodies make no intuitive sense whatsoever, the rhythms meander to nowhere. They are different, for the sake of being different. What my son was saying in effect was “the music panders to young people in a patronizing way. We know you young people need something different, here ya go”.
There isn’t a problem with modern music, there is a problem with poorly done modern music. There is such a thing.
But the leadership element in the parish really pushes for the new music in an effort to bring em in.
This effort is ongoing for 45 years now and has not produced the hoped for results.
But, because ministerial leadership is predominantly 55+ and female, a certain type of music is still the correct “new” music. Ok…
Here’s the irony: our director comes from a very musical family. Wife and son are both accomplished musicians. My son as well is a musician.
When these two boys went through high school here my son says “they think they know what youth music is but they don’t know what they’re doing. It’s stupid”. Take it with a grain of salt, he was 16 or so.
What do these young people listen to and perform in college?
How about stuff like Carmin Burana by Orff.
Sound track to Lord of the Rings.
Beethoven’s 5th.
All intense music, with timeless themes. Music that can move the spirit outside itself. .
It’s unfortunate that many people in control of liturgy have no idea what type of music moves people. Music need not be tepid, or “nice”, or “different” for different’s sake, to appeal to young people.
Much of the music sung at our youth masses is near impossible to follow. The melodies make no intuitive sense whatsoever, the rhythms meander to nowhere. They are different, for the sake of being different. What my son was saying in effect was “the music panders to young people in a patronizing way. We know you young people need something different, here ya go”.
There isn’t a problem with modern music, there is a problem with poorly done modern music. There is such a thing.