organist wrote:What was missing Tsume was the procession by the choir with the ministers into and out of church. This gives the choir a greater feeling of involvement and participation. At least most of the choir can see the altar - at St Anne's cathedral, Leeds the choir could see nothing of the action of the Mass! I have seen a very appreciative comment from Martin Baker about the music at the Mass. One advantage of the choir's position is that the conductor is hidden by a screen and the singing comes from "on high" - the cathedral has the finest acoustic for a choir that I have experienced! It would be interesting to have comments from Brentwood cathedral where the choir also sits in stalls behind the bishop's throne - my experience there was that the arrangement worked well. Let's not forget that Westminster Cathedral was designed for a different liturgy and many of our churches had choir lofts and organs tucked away at the back of the nave. In Brompton oratory the choir is not seen at all. How about a new discussion thread on positioning the musicians?
I think processing would have made me feel even more remote from the congregation and had we have been expected to process at Westminster I probably would have not sung in the choir. As Celebrating the Mass puts it "The choir remains at all times a part of the assembly." I have real problems with choirs that are not a part of the assembly but apart from the assembly. This runs the risk of the Mass becoming a concert, and I've been in several churches where this has felt the case (but given the quality of singing I would have asked for my money back if it had been! )
The language used at Westminster (not by SSG) at the Mass could easily have given the impression that the congregation should listen and not join in: It was said that we "sang for... " and "music was sung by..." But surely we were leading the congregation in their singing, not doing it for them! Catholic Congregations don't as a rule sing well (See article on Marty Haugen in this week's Tablet) and anything that could possibly undermine them should be avoided at all costs. I've stopped our announcer saying "John Smith will be singing the psalm" and got them so announce "...leading the psalm" for just this reason.
As regards positioning of musicians, we need to consider the position dictated by the acoustics of pre-VCII buildings versus the ideal position if we weren't constrained by practicalities. I play organs both in a loft and in a (very shallow) transept. Of the two the acoustics are much better from the loft, but I can't hear the congregation whom I am accompanying and don't feel in the least a part of the congregation. From the transept I can see the congregation (not the backs of their heads), hear them and feel part of the community. The choir sit next to the organ here facing the opposite transept but on a slight diagonal towards the congregation. Its not ideal as there is a clear separation between them and the rest of the congregation (which loosely I could justify via Musicam Sacram "[the choir] is part of the whole congregation, and that it fulfills a special role" but in an ideal world I'd like them to be singing as a body facing in the same direction as the rest of the congregation and on the same level as them.
Where we are constrained to put musicians apart from the congregation, we need to make every effort in other ways to make sure they feel (and are seen as) a part of them too.