Nick Baty wrote:The rest of us are just desperate for new music.
It's not good to be in such a rush, I think. The texts have only been available in their final form a matter of weeks. The time is right, now, for a discussion among not just composers (including those who compose, but bizarrely, claim not to
), but anyone with enough musical awareness and interest to be willing to share in the conversation.
But why on earth should we be in desperate haste for the finished products? Rome wasn't built in a day, as the saying goes, and it seems to me unreasonable to expect too much of what will be available in 2011 to be more than a stopgap. Speaking for myself, I expect new musical ideas to take shape over years, not weeks. I want the new texts to be washing around inside my head, so that I have some kind of instinctive feel for the rhythm and structure of, say, the Gloria text, before I'm going to feel in a rush to find a melody for it. Look at where we are now: not a lot of music we still use was written in 1973. We're in a better place this time round, because we have forty-odd years of experience with the vernacular liturgy, and plenty of good musical models in our present-day core repertoire, but that doesn't mean either that we have to have an entire new repertoire in place by September, or that anything published this year will automatically stand the test of time.
So all we need - for now - is some material that will do - for now. As one or two have said, what's on offer at the moment from the major US publishers isn't the last word. It would be barmy to have imagined it might be. I don't seriously expect that initial offerings from this side of the Atlantic will necessarily put an end to the need for future composing either
(though I have seen some good-looking offerings circulated for comment from a number of composers - and a non-composer
- which will be amply better than mere stopgap material.)
For my worshipping community I'm thinking of starting off with (i) the ICEL chants; (ii) an adapted 'old' setting of the eucharistic acclamations for which people will more or less know the tune and will get to grips with the new words; and (iii) a new setting of the Gloria. (Actually that's the order I was planning when we thought that the new texts would first appear in Advent 2011. Now we know we're starting in September, it's going to be (ii) and (iii) first.) With a Latin chant setting, as usual for us, in Lent 2012, that could well keep us busy until Easter 2012. I don't think I'm going to rush out and spend too much more of the choir music budget on 'repertoire' that happens to be available in 2011.
the event is only of interest to a few erudite souls.
Yeah, right.
Anyone expecting erudition will have to leave the room when I'm speaking; or better still, just share in the conversation, and let's see where it takes us?