Music during communion question

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With all this (name removed by moderator)ut I have been able to make a choice. I will have the CLASSICAL PIECE “Sheep May Safely Graze” by Bach played during communion. I appreciate everyones opinion on the topic. I do feel confident in my choice, though I will confirm its appropriateness with my priest. Thanks to all.
 
Hi Kbell - welcome to CA!

Don’t feel picked on or discouraged if your questions here turn into full blown discussions about the topic in general. It happens, and it is no reflection on your choices, more of an opening for discussion on the topic at hand. 😃

~Liza
 
I am a musician with a master’s degree in music, and I think the OP’s choice of ‘Sheep may safely graze’ by JS Bach is most appropriate. It is a gentle and slow piece, quite conducive to meditation, but not exactly soporific; the harmony takes a few interesting and unexpected turns which are lovely to hear.
 
We are talking about objective versus subjective here in regards to music.

Example: I love Billy Joel… I love to play his music, listen, etc. Not only do I like it, but I can give you a dissertation of why his music is objectively good. (in his own realm-although by the way, he is majorly inspired by classical music). Honestly…about 100 pages worth …Someone has the option to not like it. But saying it is mediocre music (again, in its own realm), is not right.

I also recognize other music writers (Elton John), that I don’t care for, but I recognize the intrinsic value in the music itself. It doesn’t catch me, but thats my relative opinion. I could also give you a dissertation on why his music is objectively good.

Your comments about not liking the music is fair. I understand not liking them, but that in itself does NOT make them mediocre. In a suburb parish in a VERY Catholic city, those songs are the ones that my parish Sings the best Seriously. and again, JP II stated we are one body was his fave. So you have a different opinion. I grew up with the organ in my church…I hated it…it creates very bad memories for me. I do not view organ as intrinisically bad.

I’m not saying that compared to a classical piece of music that a Suzanne Toolan song is better muscially. I’m saying, for a regular parish, that kind of song gets the best response at a wedding. Because of your previous experience, you want to vomit. Others want to sing.
 
We are talking about objective versus subjective here in regards to music.

Example: I love Billy Joel… I love to play his music, listen, etc. Not only do I like it, but I can give you a dissertation of why his music is objectively good. (in his own realm-although by the way, he is majorly inspired by classical music). Honestly…about 100 pages worth …Someone has the option to not like it. But saying it is mediocre music (again, in its own realm), is not right.

I also recognize other music writers (Elton John), that I don’t care for, but I recognize the intrinsic value in the music itself. It doesn’t catch me, but thats my relative opinion. I could also give you a dissertation on why his music is objectively good.

Your comments about not liking the music is fair. I understand not liking them, but that in itself does NOT make them mediocre. In a suburb parish in a VERY Catholic city, those songs are the ones that my parish Sings the best Seriously. and again, JP II stated we are one body was his fave. So you have a different opinion. I grew up with the organ in my church…I hated it…it creates very bad memories for me. I do not view organ as intrinisically bad.

I’m not saying that compared to a classical piece of music that a Suzanne Toolan song is better muscially. I’m saying, for a regular parish, that kind of song gets the best response at a wedding. Because of your previous experience, you want to vomit. Others want to sing.
I am also located in a VERY Catholic city (so Catholic, I didn’t know that there was so much anti-Catholicism until I went to college.) I grew up in a very active suburban parish, which keeps growing and currently work in our city Cathedral Basilica.

I’m sorry, but I must say that most of those melodies, the counterpoint, etc. are mediocre, musically and compositionally-speaking, and any trained musician will recognize that. That and along with the fact that they are held up as equals to the masters who gave their brilliance to the sacred music composed specifically for the church - that’s what makes me vomit - not because I “prefer” one style of music over the other. It’s because my training and experience has broadened my mind to recognize what is well-composed and what is not. Once that is opened, it’s hard to revert, not that I would ever want to.

One can say that they prefer one kind of music to another, which is totally fine. I’m all for differences of opinion. I am first to admit that I like bad and mediocre music in other genres and I recognize the fact that they are trash comparatively speaking to the masters. But I would never have them performed for God because I do know they are mediocre and God does not deserve mediocrity. Also, to believe that compositions such as ones by Toolan or Marty Haugen are superior or deserve equal or more performance in mass to the compositions to Bach or Palestrina or Mozart would have a difficult time justifying it on a theoretical and composition level.

Also, why not have congregation sing plain song instead of those kinds of hymns? When that is introduced into mass, it’s amazing how quickly the congregation picks it up and sing with all their might. I also used to attend mass in a very rural area, where a new, young priest introduced the plain song and chants to a congregation (mostly farmers), that others would have thought were not “sophisticated” enough. (Classical music and chant has nothing to do with sophistication, as I am sure you well know. I believe it is for all when introduced correctly.) I was so moved by this, I asked this priest how he did it. Very simple. Taught it every week, they picked it up with a couple of weeks and loved it. They were so sorry to see him go. I brought it to my children’s choir back in the city, they loved it as well and apparently our guests at our wedding said you could hear their voices loud and clear chanting along in Latin with the choir.

I appreciate the fact that your parish apparently enjoys that kind of music. Good for you and for your congregation and as long as that is the best your musicians can give, then that is fine. If it’s not the best and you are capable of giving more without totally destroying the piece (it’s just as bad hearing an incompetent musician trying to perform Bach’s Organ Fugue in D-Major or an untrained singer wrestle through the Schubert Ave Maria with really bad Latin pronunciation - if you’ve never heard those pieces before performed well it can be enough to turn someone away), then I believe it is doing God and them a disservice.

I know that neither one of us will change each other’s minds. I’m not writing any of this to do that. So let us agree to disagree. 🙂 Thank you for the discussion.
 
I am getting married soon and I need to choose a classical piece of music to be played during communion. The Father suggested it be something we could pray and contemplate to. The other musicall chioces are vivaldi, Handel and Bach pieces. Any suggesstions?
Thank You,Kelly
Just be sure that the person or people playing the music at your wedding, are capable to play the choices you make.

Nothing worse than good songs being butchered at a wedding, regardless of the songs chosen.

Jim
 
I should have known I would have gotten jumped here.

Yes, I am very aware of the rules…no need to be patronizing.

First off, I was not referring to the “performance” aspect of classical music. I was referring to the fact that less opportunity for participation at a wedding (no matter what kind of music) leads to this idea that we come to watch it, instead of participate and pray.

…snip…

In every wedding I play, I reiterate…EVERY SINGLE wedding I play, the more you can make everything possible congregational that has the option, you should.

From the constition of the sacred liturgy:

…snip…
It seems that you have the same misunderstanding of what “active participation” is truly about that many professional musicians/liturgists do. It is not about constantly “doing” something, as Pope Benedict XVI reminded us in his recent exhortation, Sacramentum Caritatis:
Yet we must not overlook the fact that some misunderstanding has occasionally arisen concerning the precise meaning of this participation. It should be made clear that the word “participation” does not refer to mere external activity during the celebration. In fact, the active participation called for by the Council must be understood in more substantial terms, on the basis of a greater awareness of the mystery being celebrated and its relationship to daily life.
This document is a must-read for all those faithful who are in any way involved with planning, executing, or actively participating in liturgical and/or Eucharistic functions.
  • Mike
 
Thank you for this, muldog. I was actually scouring the the Holy See website looking for this document and anything similar, but didn’t know the title. 🙂
 
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