quaeritor wrote:It doesn't leave much room for "how dare these unqualified dabblers tell me that my stuff isn't fir for purpose?"
Well, if you put in those terms, no, it doesn't, but we could paraphrase: "on what grounds do the Bishops, or those they have delegated judgement to, invalidate the appropriateness of my composition for liturgical use?" Having the right to judge is not necessarily the same as producing right judgement or reasonable grounds for judgement, or even a fixed, immutable judgement. Bishops, as priests, are well-versed in making accommodations. A 'dabbling' bishop may be less willing to pronounce musical judgement; hence, he may delegate responsibility to people with more narrow and rigid musical opinions. It is quite appropriate for composers to speak up for their own sensibilities on how musical forms relate to tradition, theology, pastoral concerns and so on, as a bishop may appreciate this kind of information in order to form his own opinions.
Get this.
There is an inconsistency between theory and practice in the "Guide for Composers" if you oblige composers to produce musical conformity between a modern sanctus, memorial acclamation and doxology and amen and then assume the average priest will come along and not perform the modern doxology but a traditional doxology which does not musically conform even to the Amen.
Given such inconsistency between theory and practice, if a priest sings the doxology as per the missal tone, why is it better to sing a modern amen to it which links musically to the modern sanctus and modern memorial acclamations rather than to the actual doxology melody used in practice? Would it not be equally musical, and stylistically very appropriate, to follow the missal tone doxology melody with the traditional ending? Would it not be musically just as sensible to a congregation who know and may expect the traditional amen melody as the ending?
If you can't provide priests willing to learn new doxology melodies, how can you expect musical uniformity across the entire eucharistic prayer? If you are already making provisions for a commonly occurring lack of uniformity in practice, why demand it of composers in the first place who are composing for practical purposes? Isn't there a clash between actual practice and pie in the sky which means that you should not be obliging any composer to do anything?
The next thing they'll be telling us is that the verse of a responsorial psalm must finish on the same pitch as the starting note of the response, no exceptions. I believe it would impoverish modern religious music to insert any more such formal obligations of specific compositional patterning into guides for composers.
Telling composers that they "should" take the doxology missal tone into account when composing their own doxology and amen is quite unwarranted. If I have access to a priest and congregation who can manage my modern doxology and amen, why should I bother relating them to the traditional tone? And if I have a priest who doesn't know my modern doxology and amen, why "should" the congregation have to sing my modern amen after his traditional doxology? The modern musical conformity of the eucharistic prayer has already been broken, we've moved back to the traditional from the modern. Need I go back to the modern just for one word?
Get on with you. This is whimsical stuff indeed for an obligation.