Gabriel wrote:I have never really understood stopping the music in August...
Where I am, we do stop. Many people are away and it gives the choir a break from me! If the people wanted music, then it would happen, but it doesn't and I suspect that this is a salutary reminder to me that many people, whilst they appraciate being led and having the musical mass, do not want to sing, or even do not feel empowered to sing or to start singing, if the choir is not there (and some, even if the choir is there).
When I took on the job of leading the music, I had small children and I insisted on one week off per month, so that we could visit parents and relatives, so one sunday a month, there is no music. Now that they are older, there is often still no music (though the school does, from time to time, take the opportunity to fill this slot). Personally, it feels strange not to sing, but I also appreciate being able to be away without disrupting what is now an established pattern.
Gabriel wrote:On a related matter how are those who are sustaining something planning for the 4 weeks of John 6. I think it is one of more difficult mini seasons in ordinary time to prepare music for: an embarrassment of riches for Communion and what else do you do?
According to the
Liturgy Office: Gospel Acclamation, Eucharistic Prayer;
Opening Procession, Gloria, Psalm, Communion (procession or thanksgiving);
and the rest could be left, if you cannot think what to do
The Opening Procession and Communion Procession could both pick up the Johannine themes. It wouldn't be overload to weave the thread through both. Nor, in my opinion, to use the same musical material across more than one week, such as Peter's assertion, "You are the Christ". There: planning for a season and not for single weeks... though, if I recall correctly, the five weeks of John (Sundays 17-21) are interrupted by the Assumption of BVM, meaning that the bit we get on the final week ("This teaching is most difficult") doesn't ever get told to us... unless it refers to the Assumption, of course