Peter Jones wrote:By the way.... all three publications (Laudate supplement, Celebration supplement and Glory to God) do show that the Panel permission to publish process really is about the texts of the Missal and not about making musical judgements. Yes, the panel is sometimes making observations about music but these are just that, observations. Musical assessments are being made by editors who, in virtue of their office, cannot be members of the panel.
I beg to differ, on the evidence of the addendum to the Panel's terms of reference (see Appendix I of the Composer' Guide) that insists: "Settings of the acclamations of the assembly in the Eucharistic Prayer should be complete and have a musical integrity." Neither completeness nor "musical integrity" are issues of textual fidelity (the stated purpose of the Process), and while the vagueness of the term "musical integrity" is representative of the sloppy thinking and expression of the Guide, it surely implies musical judgement.
Incidentally, the Guide also appears to take arguable positions on the practical implications of "the full, conscious and active participation of the faithful in the liturgy" that have nothing to do with textual integrity. In the capacity of a Guide, that's fair enough - it presumably reflects the thinking of the Acting Secretary of the Liturgy Office, and I for one have been happy to write a setting that happens to accord with that thinking. As a rule book that drives the Permission to Publish Process, though, it looks like an ultramontane exercise of power: this (however poorly expressed and outside the scope of the Process's stated purpose) is how I believe it should be done, and done it will be.
Given the arrogance of this approach, I suppose it shouldn't surprise me that no provision been made for appeals against the Panel's decisions, despite their being expressly provided for in the terms of reference; or that repeated requests of the Liturgy Office for enlightenment about this are simply ignored. I suspect the Liturgy Office is still reeling from the shock of receiving an appeal that questioned its judgement.