It’s more than that. The pastors are not tin-plated dictators demanding this type of music for their parishioners. They are listening to the needs of the people themselves. And many, many people tell us that they love the folk and contemporary music.
Oh, yes, I should have made that more clear in the post. I thought I did by mentioning the congregations, but I agree. Much of the time, the pastors are doing what will keep the people in the pews. I know for a previous parish of mine, the pastor actually sent out surveys of what the parishioners wanted for music at mass because people were withholding money to the parish due to the music there.
Our choir has been working particularly hard on some classical pieces such as Mozart’s “Ave Verum Corpus”, Arcadelt’s “Ave Maria” and Robat Arwyn’s “Benedictus”. We have been premiering these pieces once a week when the choir is full enough to give them adequate treatment. “Benedictus” was in particular a labor of love for me, as it was a duet where I carried half the piece alone. After we did the Arcadelt piece one Sunday, a lady came up to me and cooed about how much she liked the “old music” she liked to listen to when she was younger. That music to which she referred would be the renditions of “Be Not Afraid” and “On Eagle’s Wings” we did for Entrance and Recessional. I really wanted to slam my face into the desk at that point, but that’s what people want.
I’m so sorry about that, and the Arcadelt is a lovely piece as well. It’s weird, we recently had a different experience at one of the parishes where I work. Since they got other better trained singers, the music director and the pastor has begun to do more classical sacred repertoire. We did a special Sunday with all of that and since then many people have been asking for more of it. So, it will be happening more often.
Our bishop wrote a four-part series on singing the Mass, in which he stressed the importance of musical forms which the Church prefers, gives a history of liturgical music, and explains the importance of the proper antiphons. He hired on a director/composer who had written Simple English Propers and who followed up with the Lumen Christi Missal. The Cathedral began to implement chanted propers and our pastor hatched a plan to purchase the LCM for our pews and discard the 20-year-old Gather hymnals. Well, that went over like a lead balloon in our parish. Many parishioners raised an outcry and said they paid good money for Gather and why did it have to be taken away? Our choir director dutifully began deploying chanted antiphons and within a few weeks lost his job and was replaced by someone who expressed clear distaste for the LCM and Gregorian chant. In fact we had an entire parade of directors who did not like the Missal and kept us on a steady repertoire of OCP.
I’m very sorry for you previous choir director. I wasn’t around, but my older colleagues told me about something very similar with organists and other musicians back in the 70s and even in the 80s. Many lost their jobs in favor of what was going on back then in liturgical music. So, we lost a lot of Catholic organists to the mainline Protestant churches.
For most of our pastor’s nine years here we have used Latin chant settings of the Mass parts, and last Easter we added the Missa de Angelis
Gloria in Latin. We refer English-speakers to the readings in the LCM, so some parts of the LCM are being used.
Gather is forever gone from our pews, but for the most part, implementation of the
Lumen Christi Missal with its proper antiphons and plainchant splendor is on indefinite hold, and it is not by the wishes of Rome, or our bishop or our pastor, but by popular acclaim by the parishioners, who are getting 80% OCP material now, much to my dismay.
Well, the good part is that you have been using Latin chant settings for the mass parts. That’s a huge feat.
This is exactly why I say that people who appreciate the forms of music and instruments preferred by the Church documents need to make their preferences known and foster appreciation for them among all Catholics. The priests and bishops will not impose this music on us until we are clamoring for it and railing against the banal pop hymns, weak theology and profane instruments which pass for liturgical worship today. I suggest that we go about this not in a spirit of complaint or disobedience, but in respectful deference to the governance of ecclesial authorities, and in patient charity to others, and mainly positive affirmation of good priests and bishops who make the right choices for liturgy, those who uphold the rubrics and those who think with the mind of the Church.
Agreed. All that you said is why I don’t think just saying to obey your bishop is so easy. I do think that if you start with the young, it will help build that appreciation, but then you have to convince the adults to allow the music teachers to help teach them. That said, whenever parents see their adorable, little ones sing or play something and do it well (for kids, at least), it makes it easier for them to appreciate the “unknown”.