londonchurchman wrote:I just feel that "giving" them one line smacks of being patronising and suggests that that's all they can handle. I have heard antiphonal singing of a psalm with the congregation and cantor singing alternative lines to a simple setting at congregational Vespers at Westminster Cathedral and the level of participation is much much better, and it sounds just stunning.
I've been to Vespers at Westminster, and I agree that it's stunning to hear the choir and people singing alternatim. But the Mass is different from the Office, and there's a point to the Psalm response which is more than just tossing the people a bone: the text of the response often encapsulates exactly what connects the Gospel reading with the OT reading and the psalm. To some extent, depending on how thematically unified the scripture readings and the propers are for a given Mass, it can sum up the whole celebration. So I'd suggest it's a much better option to keep looking for settings that you feel are musically worthy, that to write off the form altogether, on the basis of a (misplaced?) unease at what it sets out to achieve.
londonchurchman wrote:As I said before the musical settings for the resp. Psalms I have heard have been horribly ugly and not even particulalrly singable -often sounding like a commercial jingle - which defeats the whole object of participation.
I can't really relate to this at all. If you're saying all responsorial psalm settings are inadequate, the only reply can be to ask when on earth you found time to hear them all? I suppose you may have been trapped in a parish where a second rate source was used exclusively, but by the sound of things you get around a bit. There are lots of good collections to choose from. I draw a lot on Geoffrey Boulton Smith, ed: Responsorial Psalm Book for Sundays and Feastdays (Collins, 1980) and Stephen Dean, ed: The Complete Responsorial Psalter (McCrimmon, 1997), plus the three-volume Psallite collection, and a great many individual settings in song-style available in collections, hymn-books and as individual octavos. If settings in a plainchant idiom are more to your taste there are the Chabanel psalms and those by Arlene Oost-Zinner, available on-line for download. Lots to choose from, and I'd urge caution against sweeping generalisations about quality, which runs the risk of sounding like prejudging the issue.