T
TCCOV
Guest
Brother Tiger,
Mildly amused I am that your professors haven’t immunized you yet to know that we laity actually cannot demand from any priest a darned thing!
The OP used quotations to qualify “supposed to” when asking about chanting all orations. That was mistake 1.
There really is no equivilent typology to Masses in the OF comparing to those of the EF from Lecta to Solemnis, if I understand the post-conciliar legislation. MS (1967) seems to qualify a taxonomy that is based upon the EF, but also seems to “inform” the OF by inference.
The GIRM, therefore, seems to be the prevailing document. All that said-
Yes, it is of the greatest merit and benefit to all if the Mass is sung entirely by all (according to their offices) from Introit to “Deo gratias.” There is no requirement or formal name for such. Paradigmatically (is that a word?) such a Mass would be substantively akin to a “Solemn High Mass,” presuming that even the lessons and all propers (whether a responsorial or gradual, or a brevis gospel verse rather than a Latin, gregorian melismatic alleluia versicle, were pointed and chanted. I’d have no personal problem if the homily was intoned recto tono for that matter.
But, as you say, the prevailing culture suggests young people have been systematically weaned from thinking they can individually sing well (when with a modicum of study many would excel) much less corporately. And seminaries seem to put more stock in professors’ who cover both the liturgical and musical/vocal curricula, and not have singing specialists on board. So…
But a start to finish chanted Mass can still be done within the 55-65 minute window Americans demand, and be done beautifully. In Latin or English or Spanish or whatever.
Mildly amused I am that your professors haven’t immunized you yet to know that we laity actually cannot demand from any priest a darned thing!

The OP used quotations to qualify “supposed to” when asking about chanting all orations. That was mistake 1.
There really is no equivilent typology to Masses in the OF comparing to those of the EF from Lecta to Solemnis, if I understand the post-conciliar legislation. MS (1967) seems to qualify a taxonomy that is based upon the EF, but also seems to “inform” the OF by inference.
The GIRM, therefore, seems to be the prevailing document. All that said-
Yes, it is of the greatest merit and benefit to all if the Mass is sung entirely by all (according to their offices) from Introit to “Deo gratias.” There is no requirement or formal name for such. Paradigmatically (is that a word?) such a Mass would be substantively akin to a “Solemn High Mass,” presuming that even the lessons and all propers (whether a responsorial or gradual, or a brevis gospel verse rather than a Latin, gregorian melismatic alleluia versicle, were pointed and chanted. I’d have no personal problem if the homily was intoned recto tono for that matter.
But, as you say, the prevailing culture suggests young people have been systematically weaned from thinking they can individually sing well (when with a modicum of study many would excel) much less corporately. And seminaries seem to put more stock in professors’ who cover both the liturgical and musical/vocal curricula, and not have singing specialists on board. So…
But a start to finish chanted Mass can still be done within the 55-65 minute window Americans demand, and be done beautifully. In Latin or English or Spanish or whatever.