alan29 wrote:There's chant and there's chant.
I personally love plainsong, but I have to say that I didn't come across in parishes it in pre Vat II days. Masses by Tozer et al, certainly. Victyorian motets, oh yes. Hymns from the Westminster Hymnal, for sure. There was the annual school mass for St John Baptist de la Salle, but the plainsong for that took weeks and weeks of preparation.
So where is this tradition of chant singing in the parishes that we are meant to work within? Are contemporary modal noodlings meant to satisfy that requirement? (That comment is not meant to be as barbed as it seems and is not directed at any individual. Rather I find myself trying to get my head round a certain mind-set.)
Alan,
You comment raises three issues – the extent of chant singing in parishes before the Mass of Paul V; the nature of liturgical chant; and the competency of the modern chant-style settings we’re beginning to see.
I haven’t seen a survey of chant singing in parishes pre-Novus Ordo that isn’t incomplete, anecdotal or circumstantial. That isn’t surprising – there was no reason for anyone to put in the legwork required to compile detailed statistics over time. That said, the Liturgical Movement seems to have had an impact in this respect in many places in the UK, through groups like the Society of Saint Gregory and educational initiatives in Catholic schools and training colleges. The range of anecdote suggests that the impact was not uniform. My own is of my experience of the chanted ordinary in a South East London parish of the early 1980’s, where the congregation sang the chant when given the chance with what would now pass for enthusiasm. Clearly, Catholics were used to singing Ordinary chants in that part of the world at least. Even now, older members of the congregation are far from uniformly silent in the places I sing the Ordinary.
Granted, other parishes, fed on a diet of low mass and choral ordinaries, had a different experience; but the point of the Liturgical Movement was the reform of the layman’s engagement with the liturgy, and reform would not have been thought necessary in the absence of problems.
Your comments raise the issue of the nature of liturgical chant in two respects: in relation to modern, non-Gregorian chant-like settings; and indirectly when you speak of the time taken to learn the chants for a particular mass. Music that would generally be labelled chant covers a multitude of approaches and traditions. The Council unambiguously gave primacy in the Roman Rite to Gregorian chant, but it also allowed – even encouraged – other musical styles, so long as those who write or select them think carefully about their appropriateness to the liturgy, taking Gregorian as the foremost model of suitability. I therefore believe it to be misguided to take an all-or-nothing approach – Gregorian with all the Propers from the Graduale Romanum or something else entirely – rather than accept the meditative and practical qualities of the simpler styles with which the likes of Christopher Walker and the Psalite Group are now experimenting. So, too, one should distinguish between the Propers that are the domain of the Cantor or Schola and those chants that are the business of all. The GR Propers are a glory of our tradition, but one would not expect everyone to sing them; or all Scholas to have the resource to sing them every week. Oher chants – Gregorian and otherwise – are available, that make the meditative beauty of chant available across a range of singing-skills.
As to the quality of the new chant-style settings: these things take time, and we’re still at an exploratory stage. If you think you can do better, I strongly urge you to help fulfil the vision of the Liturgical Movement and the Council by doing so.