O
OraLabora
Guest
You didn’t answer my question.People seem to have the resources and effort to learn contemporary Christian music.
You didn’t answer my question.People seem to have the resources and effort to learn contemporary Christian music.
Because it won’t happen by itself that’s why. I joined a Gregorian schola 17 years ago, learned chant even though I had zero musical notion (couldn’t even read normal music notation, let alone Gregorian notation), and have been actively singing with them in parishes for all that time; we cover multiple parishes in our city, singing at a different one, once a month. We are entirely volunteers.Why?
It depends what you mean by Gregorian chant. The simpler Mass settings for the ordinary? Pretty easy, it’s true.I can’t understand why people seem to think that Gregorian chant is something that is so complicated, so difficult, etc.
Simple chants only. The Propers were always pretty much in the hands of a trained schola or choir. Moreover in the EF Mass, only the servers chanted. Not the assembly.yet they could sing chant.
Not in every time or in every place though. At least in the US, before Vatican II, the state of music was pretty bad in the Church, and the low Mass reigned supreme. At least from the anthropological studies I’ve seen. The book Why Catholics Can’t Sing is a very enlightening read in this regard and I’d highly recommend it, especially for American Catholics.For more than 1000 years Gregorian chant had pride of place in Catholic Churches. Churches whose congregations were filled with peasants, serfs, people who had almost no education. . .yet they could sing chant.
This is not entirely true. Gregorian chant underwent a considerable decline to the point where, in the 19th century, it was only a caricature of the original. Gregorian chant was restored to pride of place in the mid- to late-19th Century by the monks of Solesmes, under the liturgical renewal movement. Dom Prosper Guéranger, first abbot of Solesmes after its restoration, is generally considered to be the father of the liturgical renewal movement.For more than 1000 years Gregorian chant had pride of place in Catholic Churches. Churches whose congregations were filled with peasants, serfs, people who had almost no education. . .yet they could sing chant.
Maybe that is the key to your success, your ability to be a roving troop. It is good that you and who is in your troop are able to do that.Everything you experienced. It’s why we evolved into a roving troop, small doses seem to be better digested.
No doubt. We found that saturating people eventually became antagonistic. By rotating around parishes, we are seen as a special occasion. Those who want chant more frequently often just come to the parish we happen to be at. We call them our groupiesMaybe that is the key to your success, your ability to be a roving troop. It is good that you and who is in your troop are able to do that.
I think you are correct, but would say that just because music is not merely personal taste, there is most definitely personal taste in liturgical music.At the risk of restarting the weekly Liturgy wars on CAF, I will argue that music is not a mere personal taste. The Pope said himself that not all music is appropriate for the Liturgy and we should not use “just any old music.
We started several years back using chant for a Mass setting during Lent. It was not my decision, but I wonder if the idea was that those who didn’t like it could see it as a Lenten sacrifice.I think if we want to introduce Gregorian chant, we need to tread gently to avoid making people feel insecure or confronted.
Thank you for saying this.Mostly from lack of resources: i.e. people willing to put the effort into learning chant and performing it in a language they probably don’t know very well, if at all. Have you done something about that in your parish?