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Daniel_Lysinger
Guest
Gregorian chant certainly sounds a whole lot better than the other options - I sing chant every Sunday mass. Of course, I do go to the Latin Mass, so I suppose that would be expected. 
I agree with you, but I do think people have always preferred âlow browâ liturgical music. Itâs one of the reasons why new forms of music were brought into the mass throughout the centuries and one of the reasons why the sacred music debate has been going on for centuries. Polyphony was once a low brow form of secular music and early on what they brought into the liturgy with the original ways of singing it before it was rendered appropriately to make it acceptable (and actually more high brow) at mass.Yes, organs are expensive (curiously that didnât stop our vastly-poorer ancestors from preferring them) and difficult to play (curiously that didnât stop our supposedly-lower-IQ ancestors from playing them). But so what? Gregorian chant is not overly difficult and sounds far better and more authentically Catholic than screeching David Haasâ âYou are Mineâ into a microphone. So why not do that?
Ahh, we know why: people prefer lowbrow liturgical music.
Your point is taken.Hymns (Haugen, St. Louis Jesuits, etc.) - for lack of a better term - fit words into the structure of the music. Chant fits music into the structure of the words.
Your point is taken.
However, as a composer of sung music, this is an issue about âdeclamationâ of the text. Any good composer worth their salt will always take into account the issues of pronunciation, enunciation, accentuation, stressation (and their opposites), rhythmic value and construct, etc. and all other techniques before releasing a piece into the repertoire. Not all composers, however, do these well or thoroughly.
Very true. Palestrina, Mozart, Bach - they all did this very well. The question then becomes why weâre allowing substandard compositions into our liturgy.Your point is taken.
However, as a composer of sung music, this is an issue about âdeclamationâ of the text. Any good composer worth their salt will always take into account the issues of pronunciation, enunciation, accentuation, stressation (and their opposites), rhythmic value and construct, etc. and all other techniques before releasing a piece into the repertoire. Not all composers, however, do these well or thoroughly.
And there you have it folks.Speaking as a professional organist with a Masterâs degree in organ performance, one of the major problems is that most Catholic churches simply do not pay as well as Protestant churches! I could never live on a salary like that.
Our ancestorsâand when I say that, Iâm referring to the ancestors who lived a few generations agoâworked hard together to pay, through their weekly offerings, for organs for their parishes and churches. That is something that many of us are suggesting on this threadâthat once again, the parish members work TOGETHER to come up with practical solutions to the musical needs of the parish.Yes, organs are expensive (curiously that didnât stop our vastly-poorer ancestors from preferring them) and difficult to play (curiously that didnât stop our supposedly-lower-IQ ancestors from playing them). But so what? Gregorian chant is not overly difficult and sounds far better and more authentically Catholic than screeching David Haasâ âYou are Mineâ into a microphone. So why not do that?
Ahh, we know why: people prefer lowbrow liturgical music.
Exactly.And there you have it folks.
I have found it very upsetting that in my own parish there is the expectation that any parishioner with an expertise in anything will do any work in that field for nothing.
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And just to be clear, Iâm on the finance committee and Iâm not an expert in anything that would help the parish.
There are many communion antiphons that are from Godâs perspective, without saying âthus says the LordââDo Not Be Afraidâ is a horrible, insipid song. It is one of the worst and I am still forced to sing it here on occasion. It canât die fast enough. Other than the disgusting, saccharine melody it has two lyrical problems: It breaks right into âFirst person Iâ personifying, ostensibly, the Lord without so much as a âThus Says The LORD:â preamble. And it doesnât mention God by name, ever. No Jesus or Holy Spirit. We are supposed to interpret for ourselves that this is God Himself speaking. Frankly it feels like a sickly sweet love song masquerading as sacred music.
As a man, I feel emasculated by singing this piece. (But thatâs a subject for the other thread over there)
True, but those are generally a specific quotation from Scripture, not a mishmash of 3 or 4 disconnected verses lumped into a single imaginary locution. Iâve got no problem with hymns or antiphons quoting Scripture that is directly quoting God, but Iâm a little iffy about putting words in His Mouth.There are many communion antiphons that are from Godâs perspective, without saying âthus says the Lordâ
If I recall correctly, this was one of Pius Xâs main arguments when he restored Gregorian chant.All of the back-and-forth regarding chant has led me to this thought, and Iâd like to know if others agree: Hymns (Haugen, St. Louis Jesuits, etc.) - for lack of a better term - fit words into the structure of the music. Chant fits music into the structure of the words.
Elizium23, if you canât do it, you canât do it. You canât get blood out of stones.You can argue all you want about the quality of a certain type of music and its difficulty to sing and the assemblyâs taste and whether or not they want to sing, but at the end of the day, these are insignificant things in comparison to the preferences of the Church. Read the documents and you will see: Organ. Gregorian chant. Sacred polyphony. Pride of place.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of the Church has been ignoring these preferences for decades, and the least-preferred choices are now firmly ingrained in Catholic culture. Priests and bishops in particular have been lax about it, allowing OCP/GIA/WLP to not merely gain a foothold in the industry, but to flourish, to (using a term from the software industry) âembrace, extend, and extinguishâ sacred music until it is something unrecognizable.
The particularly difficult problems are illicit settings of Mass parts and songs with obvious theological ambiguities or errors. Publishers should never have been able to get away with these things: parishes use them often in good faith, because they invested in a particular publishing house or hymnal, and suddenly one day they select a piece, and itâs completely unsuitable for Catholic liturgy. THIS WOULD NOT HAPPEN IF WE USED THE PROPER ANTIPHONS IN THE FIRST PLACE. It would not happen if we used time-honored traditional music. Unfortunately, proper antiphons and time-honored traditional music do not command huge license fees. Unless they are significantly tampered with, they canât even be copyrighted by the publishers who want to resell them for big bucks. Therefore, it is in the best interest of OCP/GIA/WLP to push new material, to sell their in-house creations, and to treat the other stuff like an afterthought, an unpopular option.
The likes of Corpus Christi Watershed and Illuminare Publications are fledgling businesses, and nobody there is getting rich from licensing original material. They are selling a distinctly different kind of product. Much in their repertoires of chant is public domain, or Creative Commons licensed, and they make money by editing and printing hymnals and missals and selling the result. So itâs quite a different business model than the juggernaut houses that rule the industry right now. Itâs also faithful to the preferences of the Church. Iâm glad that my bishop, for one, has taken great initiative to turn the tide and sing the Mass as the Church always intended it to be.
Actually, I know of a few parishes in my area where mostly all of the volunteer choir members donât read music, but they sing sacred polyphony⌠and they actually do it pretty darn well. No, they donât sound like the Tallis Scholars, but it sounds beautiful and they are very much appreciated by the parishioners. I belonged to one such choir back in college. My husband and I were two of the very few who read music in that choir and we were so impressed by the dedication and commitment that this 30+ choir gave to learning this music in one two-hour rehearsal a week and an hour before mass. The same choir sang Palestrina, Mozart, Byrd and Faure, as well as chant at our nuptial mass.And sacred polyphonyâyou have to be kidding?!When people do not read music, they canât do sacred polyphony. Perhaps some of the country singers in the congregation would be able to improvise, because many of them can harmonize without music. But is that really the best way to do Bach or Palestrina?!
People could maybe learn to read music? Itâs not rocket science.So are you saying that since we canât do these things, the Masses should be devoid of all music, and reduced to merely reading the antiphons?