Sorry, Dan. This is the same kind of “I’m OK; you’re OK - let’s just focus on the Eucharist” that has got us to where we are today. Watch the Vesper Service in Washington the night before and compare it to the Mass in DC. Stark contrast. You young folks and our converts have not been exposed to our deep and profound Catholic music heritage. You are hearing from those of us who 40 years ago kept our mouths shut in submission to the Magesterium of HMC when we were subjected to having Simon and Garfunkle inserted into the Mass. You can listen to all of the converts and all of you young folk but it can’t change history or tradition. Or solid Church teaching which teaches the exact opposite of what so many want to believe.
Jazzfest has opened in New Orleans. I could go down to da city and hear music like I heard in Washington. But I can keep pointing it out, over and over and over again, when JP II came to New Orleans in '87 he did not hear ragtime, Dixieland, jazz, or a Cajun two step. Dance hall music belongs in the dance hall.
It is a big problem. NONE of the other venues for the HF’s visit were like Washington. I’m OK; you’re OK" is unfortunately a fiction perpetrated by you young folk and our converts. Forty years ago we had our roots ripped out from under us in “the spirit of Vatican II”. Fifteen hundred years of musical tradition ripped out and thrown out in favor of ofttimes banal, mundane, pedestrian, insipid, and trivial music.
Let me give you something to think about. If you can hear Kermit and Miss Piggy singing the hymn …that came from my cathedral choir director back in the early 90s. Muppet Music is Muppet Music.
Placido Domingo sings Panis Angelicus and all of a sudden it’s a performance. We blythely pass over the sacro-salsa much less the Haitian in French. Mon Dieu! We had Haitian immigrants here in Louisiana both black and white in the 1790s. French is still spoken here and as I have pointed out over and over and over again there was no Cajun fiddler at JPII’s Mass in New Orleans, no ragtime, no Dixieland, no Jazz, no Mardi Gras Indians, no second liners. So exactly what was the Mass at Washington?
As Fr. Neuhaus pointed out so eloquently in his article, it was “in your face”. I cannot believe otherwise. And so, all you young folk and our converts…I’m 56, I’m not dead yet. We have every bit as much right to insist upon our legitimate cultural heritage as you do to adhere to the banal, vaccuuous, insipid, pedestrian, and mundane music that you seem to be so enamoured of.
I know you don’t like our stilted, antiquated, obsolete, “nobody knew what we were saying in Latin” music. OCP is not Palestrina. GIA is not Vivaldi. Dance rhythmns can be successfully incorporated in to sacred music. One only need to listen to Monteverdi’s “Vespers of 1610”. But the composers of the sacro-salsa are not in the same league as Monteverdi.
This is not something new for me. My classmates in "69 thought it was OK to include Simon and Garfunkle…all for the sake of having a guitar folk Mass. Groovy, doncha know.
I’ve stewed for 40 years. For all you young folks and converts I ask you to listen to the music of our heritage. Durufle and Faure wrote motets into the last century.
Our heritage is trashed. I am not allowed to celebrate my heritage because you young folks and converts have never been exposed to it. Where is the justice in that?