I agree that common repertoire is important. But I honestly couldn't see the missal tones working with our assembly – doubt I'd even get a whisper from them.
Indeedy Nick. They're rather lack-lustre to say the least.
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I agree that common repertoire is important. But I honestly couldn't see the missal tones working with our assembly – doubt I'd even get a whisper from them.
Gwyn wrote:Nick Baty wrote:I agree that common repertoire is important. But I honestly couldn't see the missal tones working with our assembly – doubt I'd even get a whisper from them.
Indeedy Nick. They're rather lack-lustre to say the least.
Quite. But it doesn't necessarily mean interesting either. This chant can sound quite simply beautiful with the Latin text, but I fear it doesn't carry the English words at all.mcb wrote:Simple doesn't mean dull
Nick Baty wrote:Quite. But it doesn't necessarily mean interesting either. This chant can sound quite simply beautiful with the Latin text, but I fear it doesn't carry the English words at all.mcb wrote:Simple doesn't mean dull
NorthernTenor wrote:Nick Baty wrote:Quite. But it doesn't necessarily mean interesting either. This chant can sound quite simply beautiful with the Latin text, but I fear it doesn't carry the English words at all.mcb wrote:Simple doesn't mean dull
Someone should tell those Anglo-Catholics (with much greater experience of vernacular chant than we) who been happily singing English chant for quite some time.
alan29 wrote:Doing something a lot doesn't make it right. It just makes it habitual.
NorthernTenor wrote:Nick Baty wrote:Quite. But it doesn't necessarily mean interesting either. This chant can sound quite simply beautiful with the Latin text, but I fear it doesn't carry the English words at all.mcb wrote:Simple doesn't mean dull
Someone should tell those Anglo-Catholics (with much greater experience of vernacular chant than we) who been happily singing English chant for quite some time.
NorthernTenor wrote:alan29 wrote:Doing something a lot doesn't make it right. It just makes it habitual.
But experience is worth considering, Alan. If the English-speaking part of Catholicism weren't so insular we might have avoided some of those mistakes that mar our liturgical life.