Southern Comfort wrote:I do not think it appropriate for the choir to troop up in procession after everyone else has received and is trying to be quiet, as that will be a major distraction. The only case where the choir can join on to the end of the Communion procession will be if they (and everyone else) are singing something (for example, Eat this bread) that they can sing from memory in the procession.
Bizarre use of the word
troop. Is it just the choir who troop, or can anyone? All we do is join the end of the procession
with the rest of the people. If the choir went first rather than last (let's call it
barge their way to the front, if you prefer), would the assembly be entitled to stare grumpily at the last twenty members of the assembly to join the procession instead? Everyone else has received and is trying to be quiet, after all.
Southern Comfort wrote:Telling them that this [a period of silence] will happen while the musicians are receiving
No. This precisely marks the choir's
communion out as separate from that of the 'people'. We are part of the assembly, and the only ritual action that makes sense of this is to join
with the rest of the assembly in procession.
TT beat me to it - to my mind there really is no compelling reason to make an obsession out of making one song cover the entire procession. To be sure, there are songs that are long enough, there are songs which are indefinitely extendable
with psalm verses and there are ways involving improvisation and repetition of prolonging a song for the sake of it. But some songs are actually better in their original form, and not even slightly improved either as aids to (or expressions of) prayer, or as musical works, by spinning them out. Making a priority out of the length of the song to my mind means at least sometimes putting the cart before the horse.
So what can we do instead? Sing more than one song, for instance! We do that regularly on big occasions, when thirty repetitions of the same antiphon would probably begin to grate.
Or (as TT pointed out) on a normal Sunday when the song comes to an end, we draw on the talents of our excellent organist, who knows the kind of music that is conducive to a prayerful procession.
keitha wrote:does the organist at Salford not receive Holy Communion as part of the assembly?
Well, without personalising it, it depends on the organist, and it's up to them. The routine accommodates it - the music comes to end end just before the last communicant has received, and it's a short step from the console to the end of the procession.