Sarabande, If you have the opportunity, read/scan through Christopher West’s massive history “The Christian West and Its Singers” and you’ll discover that the road to “perfection” on the part of the purveyors of sacred music at service has always and continues to be a rocky one.
I think there’s one aspect that’s stuck with me conceptually from attending CMAA colloquia that’s pertinent here: Gregorian and other ordered chant should be regarded less as “music” and more as a “language” unto itself. The association, or marriage, of the (psalm) texts to melodies is so fused that it’s virtually impossible to separate the two. Of course I’m speaking from the platform of Latinate chants, but it extends otherwise as well. “Perfection,” per se, is already a precondition within the form. Whether it is rendered well in chapel or church is a human endeavor, and therefore approaches “perfection” from a human perspective in execution. And, for my money, all that needs a pervasive sense of humility on the part of all involved, performers and hearers.
We also have to keep in mind that the restoration of chant at service is a fairly recent historical process, and the advent of all this information technology makes this process immediately accessible from your barcalounger (as opposed to searching libraries far and wide). And great conflicts have arisen within the centres of these restorations since Solesmes as to “perfection” in rendition.
So, I’m glad (again) that chant has been knocking on the door for forty plus years after it was ushered out of the church. So, it’s important not to “strive for perfection” so much in the realm of an art form, but to use the techniques of the choral arts to transmit the language of chant as humbly and beautifully possible.