presbyter wrote:Whether it be a Cathedral or Parish church, settings of these acclamations which do not involve the assembly in song are proscribed.
Where does it say that then? Presbyter, you're getting carried away. Surely you mean that's your (rather hard-line) interpretation of the documents? There's a difference, I submit.
presbyter, quoting GIRM, wrote:Since in these times the faithful from different countries come together more frequently, it is desirable that these faithful know how to sing together at least some parts of the Ordinary of the Mass in Latin especially the profession of faith and the Lord’s Prayer, set to the simpler melodies.
This kind of puts it all into perspective, perhaps? It strikes me as a good illustration of how the rules taken literally as prescriptions/proscriptions can be fairly useless. The Creed and the Lord's Prayer come at the very
bottom of the list of musical priorities in any Mass, at least according to the
rules laid down by the Bishops of England and Wales. How can we expect the people to know the Lord's Prayer in Latin if singing the Lord's Prayer at all is "for the angels"? Presbyter, which of these rules are we allowed to ignore?
presbyter wrote:Now please stop arguing about the beauty of choral settings - and the preservation of the treasury of sacred music
There are three judgements here, according to the US bishops:
liturgical, pastoral and musical. It's easy to be a fundamentalist when it comes to the liturgical judgement, because the principles can be interpreted as prescriptions for those with a mind to. The musical judgement is more complex. But I don't know that it's worth nothing beside the other two.
presbyter wrote:you can't sing a Palestrina or a Langlais Sanctus anymore in the celebration of the liturgy - so don't!
When I read this I feel uneasy - like I do when I read hardline assertions that
Humanae Vitae, as part of the Church's ordinary magisterium, should be held to be taught infallibly. Very nice for you if you agree with it, but I'd like to see it in black and white from somebody in charge, rather than a zealous commentator, before I'm persuaded.
presbyter wrote:Instead, let's have some beautiful settings composed that have choral embellishments for cathedral choirs and a jolly good tune for the people.
Here's the rub.
Where are these musical settings? I for one would love to know of them if they're out there; I certainly wish there were more. But Rome wasn't built in a day, and the last forty years simply hasn't thrown up an instant alternative repertoire of liturgically sound classics. How could we expect that to have happened? In the mean time do we really have to agree that the Israeli Mass is better than the Pope Marcellus Mass? Or is there perhaps room for the odd dissenter who thinks that Palestrina is conducive to worthy celebration of the Eucharist.
Don't get me wrong - I haven't changed where I stand. Yesterday at our Mass of Chrism we had Paul Inwood's
Gathering Mass, and very fitting it was, brass fanfares and choral descants and all. You wouldn't catch me silencing the assembly to stun them with a choral Sanctus. (We did that with Lotti's
Crucifixus, Byrd's
O Quam Suavis, and Stainer's
God So Loved The World. Not a dry eye in the house.
) But I can understand people who see it differently, as musical ministers giving of their best and as ministers and members of the assembly happy to be (non-normatively passive
) participants in something sublime.
Martin.