Tsume Tsuyu wrote:This can be a problem in our parish where the musicians outnumber the singers.
Dot wrote:I feel that the singers should take precedence...
Don't the instrumentalists (organists) support the assembly, not just the choir... and isn't it the assembly who takes precedence, not the singers? If you are stood right by the Bass Amp (or 32' pipes), you are going to get a distorted a picture of the relative sound levels and it will seem that you are not effective against everything else. This judgement call must be left in the hands of the music director to get right - hopefully they'll not only be looking out for the choir and instrumentalists, but also old, deaf Mrs Jones who always sits tucked in the corner, but who always joins in with the singing.
Dot wrote:inappropriate adaptations would add layers, not intended by the composer...
But how, pray, do you know what the composer intended? When was the last time you saw a hymn with performance notes as to how it was to be arranged, what stops to use in which verses, or even how fast to take it? If I write something to go at 60bpm in my lovely echoey church, then you may well think it too slow where you are with those awful plush carpets... What if it sits too high in the voice range of the assembly you have - can you not transpose it so that it can be sung more easily? Please, Dot, do not presume to know what the composer wants - because most often they don't know, or it cannot be expressed in words, and it may well depend upon whether it is raining today, or they had sufficient custard with their jam roly-poly for pudding! You're being far too blinkered here, unless, of course, you are the composer concerned - but even then I say you should leave the musical delivery to the music leader. If what results makes you cringe, then learn to pray through that too. Perhaps that is the cross you need to carry...
Contabordon wrote:I've lost count of the number of times I've been solemnly assured that liturgical composers compose only for the glory of God
No way - Give me the money every time! Actually, motives for composition are very complex, but one high factor usually is "Oh dear! What are we going to use for this slot next Sunday...?" I write for my voice range, my instruments and competence, my personal tastes. Not much altruism going on, I'm afraid! But I never lose sight of the ultimate purpose - prayer (whichever form that might take), where appropriate by the whole singing assembly.
There is a difference between theft (photocopying rather than purshace of music) and arrangement of a piece so that it can be used. Q: Is St Etheldreda's-By-The-Gasworks putting its money in the right place - afterall, the Liturgy is the source of our Christian life, so deserves funding! I repeat my earlier opinion: if you are going to arrange music, you should contact the composer wherever possible. But be practical about it too. No composer will complain (and most likely won't want to know) that you wrote out the melody/harmony for (for example) a Bb Clarinet, or that the harmonies are being playing on 4 instruments instead of an organ (because that is what you've got). And in 'performance', if there is a competent player improvising - be that on organ or any other instrument - then there ain't much a composer can do about it - it is a fleeting moment which dies quickly and is forgotten by most the same instant. Just don't write it down. Anyhow, if you try to tie things down too much, you'll end up sounding like Rome...
I rather suspect that our (English) legal system, which seems to work on precedent, would have a right old time arguing about whether it was legal or not to improvise in Church - how many hundreds of years has that be going on? Is not writing texts, and the addition of music, itself an improvisational response to the Scriptures? Precedent enough for me.