Data on young people and traditional music
  • I had the pleasure of engaging in discussion this week with a St. Louis Jesuit super fan who is just flabbergasted that anyone under the age of 60 is interested in traditional liturgy and music. I shared some anecdotal evidence to the contrary based on my experiences and that of my colleagues, but I'd love to be armed with actual data to back this up. Is anyone aware of any studies or polls that show that this is an actual trend?
    Thanked by 2Kathy CHGiffen
  • tomjaw
    Posts: 2,704
    Chant is used as a backing track in a number of video games, sorry Computer games. I think "Halo" is one. Oh and at least one 'Rap' song also has a backing track of chant.

    It would be worth getting in touch with the various Juventutem chapters they should provide data!

    Photographic evidence can be found on the various Una Voce / Latin Mass society websites and Faceache pages.
  • >> at least one 'Rap' song also has a backing track of chant.
    if you heard a THUD that was me hitting the floor. oh brother.
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    I'd be surprised if there was much that was worth much. There are so many problems with data. So many push-polls and "poll"-pumping - they are the the low hanging fruit of infotainment passing as news. So many problems with getting truly random sampling of sufficient size that don't have problems with selection bias, and answer problems due to confirmation bias distortion of questions. Start with the following: are you really curious and willing to dig deep and be confounded (especially by no justifiably obvious trend), or do you want something that has a vaguely data -ish feel to support your position? (A question I would direct across the spectrum.)

    (My requisite "as a" disclosure statement: I write this as someone who as young person strongly preferred traditional sacred music when it could be found done well (but for the couple of years when newly permitted folk music was actually executed far far better than the hymns balefully played on a chord button organ with molto tremolo (shiver), then I found some respect for that idiom), which was more rare than I preferred, and I knew in those days I was an oddball in that regard. There was no Internet to feel connected to sympathetic souls across the virtual ether.)
  • Chant is used as a backing track in a number of video games, sorry Computer games. I think "Halo" is one. Oh and at least one 'Rap' song also has a backing track of chant.


    Indeed. It always makes me smile when people claim that chant is uniquely suited for liturgical use, because it can only ever be used for liturgy.

    I suspect that culture plays a part too: most of the African and Eastern European youth who I have met (as a result of their parents migrating to Western European countries to find better work) prefer modern music. I think this is a reaction to rigid church music at home, for the EEs at least. The Western European kids are a more mixed bag: some of them just aren't involved in church at all, some are heavily into traditional liturgy and its attendant styles, some prefer more modern music.

    (Note: on this side of the Atlantic, "traditional music" means jigs, reels and the the like, not chant.)
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    "on this side of the Atlantic"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xoKvMqQXRRo


    You mean that side?
  • I rather think that if serious research were done it would reveal that youth mirror their parents' preferences (I purposefully said 'preferences', not the sacred word 'taste'). Parents do like for their children to be like them, and most will discourage any cultural diversion amongst their progeny. Too, studies have shown (I gleaned this from a seminar at Rice University several years ago) that most people prefer the music to which they listened in their adolescent years. This doesn't necessarily mean that youth actually prefer their parents' music (they very likely do not), but that they share their parents' rejection of 'classical' music and historic sacred music. In this they are as one - normally. Further, it takes immense character and integrity to buck peer standards (if you want to call them that). I think that, statistically, roughly five percent of the population are ardent in their love of 'classical' music. Others like it along with other stuff. Most, by far, reject it out of hand.

    Occasionally, in a given church, or in a given group of youth, one will find an absolute love of 'classical' music and historic sacred music. Sometimes this is in spite of what is normative in their families, sometimes it reflects careful and loving parental nurture. If one is surrounded by youth who are in this category it would be easy, but mistaken, to conclude that there is a widespread movement amongst American youth toward the classical categories of music. There isn't. I think that 'our' numbers are increasing in certain places, but there is no groundswell of classical music buffdom amongst our youth.

    Perhaps our forum member, Kyle, could weigh in here?

    As far as chant (and probably other 'classical' categories) being featured in computer games and such: this does not signal a love of chant. It signals sacrilege. If not outright sacrilege, then profound ignorance and disrespect. In similar situations one may hear Mozart, or see da Vinci. This, too, is far from a signal that Mozart and da Vinci are ever thought of except in such profane circumstances - which thus represents a weird, declassee, one almost wants to say 'pornographic' rendering of what is sacred or of profound cultural significance.
    Thanked by 1mmeladirectress
  • NPM has done several polls and surveys which try to characterize American Catholic church music and congregational support for it. There are none which specifically looked at young Catholics, at least that I recall.

    In my undergrad, I was surrounded by very active young Catholics. Among these thousands of students, I never observed any predilection towards the liturgies with more authentic sacred music. I think that our generation-for good or ill-is largely experiential. The students gravitated towards those masses that were well executed. We had enthusiastic students singing at every mass, musicians aplenty with actual music training (procured directly from the School of Music), and altar servers who knew what they were doing. It was all largely musical dreck, but the singers were trained and the "experience" of the Mass was good.

    The "experience" in the typical American parish is not up to par with this, and the music itself is the least of the young people's concern. It's not that the music is bad; its that the "musicians" are consistently bad. They can not read music, they can not sing in tune, they attempt harmony and fail, they warble and screech until the end of the Mass, when the priest will make everyone clap for them, right after making us stand up for our birthday. The clergy can't sing, even though there are ample sources online to learn the various reciting tones and missal chants. The altar servers tramp around in tennis shoes, twiddling thumbs and playing on phones until it's time to screw up the cue for the bells. The sound engineer can't figure out why the mic won't work week after week. Outside college campuses, and generally traditionally oriented parishes, one finds bad everything, not just bad music.

    I would hazard that if young people find authentic sacred music attractive, it is not on sacred music's own merit (at least explicitly), but rather on the merit of the cohesive liturgical package in which such music is usually wrapped. That's why they gravitate to TLM and orthodox liturgy. Frankly, I am not even convinced that the vast majority of young Catholics have an understanding of what "traditional" church music is, let alone authentic sacred music. Most of my friends considered "Make Me a Channel", "I am the Bread of Life," "Eagle's Wings," and "Mass of Creation" traditional music. There is a huge semantic disconnect between younger and older generations.

  • As one of the "youth" generation (senior in high school) I will say that the preference for musical (and liturgical!) reform definitely moves in pockets. There are small, tight knit pockets of those who have an idea of what reform would entail, desperately want it, and act accordingly. There are also those who are sick of the aforementioned "bad singing" and/or "bad music" but have little to no idea how it can be changed for the better. There are also those who actively do not like the so-called "old" music and will make it their mission to propagate P&W in contrast to Chant and the NO in favor of the EF.

    One factor is personal experience. I was introduced to the EF and almost instantly fell in love with it. I was attracted to it mainly at first because it was so different from what I was used to. I have a very good friend who was raised at what I call a P&W church and after she was invited to an EF Mass, loved it and wanted to go again, and again. (And we still go.)

    This is not always the case. Another friend of similar background was introduced to it somewhere else and it now cannot stand it due to the fact that they did not "have a good experience." (It was a Low Mass, and we were nowhere near the altar.) Personal experience in the Old Liturgy and Music is a big deal for youth.

    Another factor is the pastor. Our pastor, God bless him, is a wonderful priest who is extremely supportive of the EF and traditional music. Even at our youth camp we do chant introits and communions, often from the Liber, and we have had several EF Masses. As sort of an experiment one year, we did two Masses: an EF early in the morning, and a NO at the regular time. Nearly the entire camp went to the Traditional Mass, and we aren't just talking people like me who are already introduced to it. There were kids from all different backgrounds who all came together, illustrating that there is a desire, but it definitely is a factor having a pastor who supports and even encourages it.

    As an organist who plays this traditional music every Sunday, I know I am not a great representative of my entire generation. However, the friends I have of all different sorts show that there is a desire for something more than what we are fed. There is a gap in the lives of current youth which must be filled. I do not think it will be filled by direct mandates from authorities. It will be filled slowly, over generations, by assimilation. Gradually, those without the flame will wick out. It is up to those of us who are entrusted to the flame of tradition in music and liturgy to keep it burning until alone we stand to once again light the world ablaze.
  • ajplafond -

    A beautiful testimony, and Godspeed!
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • Thank you for your input everyone, and ajplafond, I especially loved reading your perspective. I very much wish I'd had your outlook when I was your age!

    Yes, data is problematic. Too bad 538 hasn't done a podcast on Catholic Church music tastes in America. Well, yet, anyway. Perhaps if data is too much to ask, we'll-researched and presented articles would also be good. And yes, if I'm being transparent, I'm looking for things that will support my position.

    I must say that my take on the generational issue is different from M. Jackson's above. From what I've seen and experienced, younger people desire quality and authenticity, and are generally allergic to older folks' ideas of what they "should" like. Many I've talked to seem to see a return to sacred liturgy as almost an act of rebellion. But I had an odd
    path as it relates to Catholicism and church music, so I could be a weirdo.

    And I had to chuckle about the definition of "traditional music" that seems to be so disagreed upon. I remember talking with a potential choir member a few years ago who exclaimed, "Oh, I LOVE traditional Catholic hymns! Be Not Afraid is one of my very favorites!"
  • I am pleased that Hildegard has taken issue with the tenor of my observations. I do keep hearing about the 'desire for quality and authenticity...' on the part of many of our youth and believe it to be true of growing numbers. To the extent that this represents a generation more mature than past ones, this can only be welcomed and rejoiced in. It saddens me to say, though, that even these are a minority. Let us pray daily that they become the majority. God bless them every one.
  • Jackson,

    Our Lord started with a Virgin Mother (a distinct minority) and 12 mostly-uneducated Galilleans. Don't give up on the minority of youth yet, or on the unpersuaded majority.

    Thanked by 2Hildegard bhcordova
  • Chris -
    You may have noticed that I didn't say there was anything wrong with being in the minority.
    The minority is often the most prophetic place to be, is it not.

  • I do not know if there is a tendency among young people in general to appreciate Gregorian chant and the traditional liturgy, but what I do know is that, everywhere I went to mass in the extraordinary form, most people (85%-90% ) was between twenty and forty years of age and the children about 5%. Already in places where I attend mass in ordinary form, half of the people are over forty years of age and at least one third over fifty-five or sixty. In both, the total number of people was between 100 and 200.
  • KyleM18
    Posts: 150
    Among young people, there is a tendency to have traditional church music as long as it is done well. The problem is, it almost never is. Most of my friends probably would not want to go to an EF mass, despite them having considerably better music (most of the time). They stay away from Polyphony and the like because it is hard to do right. I was one of the few at my old school who was able to sing polyphony (I must admit to preferring Byrd to Palestrina, though). The teachers were not willing to teach such music, so we were left with Hillsong and other P/W stuff (which was what the teachers liked).

    When I asked around to see what the kids liked, they liked anything with a meaningful text and a beautiful melody for congregational singing, but fell in love with the music the choir sang, which included the occasional motet. However, the common complaint was that it was evident not much work had gone into it, because most of the kids in the choir were lost. I sang the bass part, we had 2 tenors, 1 or 2 altos, and 3 sopranos that would consistently sing. The others would either try to sing, but sing off key, or would stand there, smiling and laughing nervously.

    The first factor is that these kids are not taught to read music. Nor are they taught how to sing. We have some (myself) that are classically trained for both solo and ensemble. We have those who are trained for pop singing. And then we have those who are not trained at all, nor wish to be trained. The second factor is that the kids are not supported in their endeavors for good church music. We are constantly put down and made fun of by the staff, especially the religion teachers (What a shocker!). The third factor is that most of the kids don't even want to go to Mass to begin with.


    This is just the High School experience however. In my parish, we have two "Youth Choirs". The first one is me on piano/organ (Father hates when I play organ because then the other organist always gets upset.), 2 guitarists, 2 flutists, and 3 singers. We sing mostly traditional hymns and plainchant, but occasionally throw a bone to the St. Louis Jesuits and the like. The other group is a full P/W group that plays once a month, and is quite unliked by the parish. Both groups do not produce a good sound as a whole, I must admit. This leads to the kids not wanting to come to Mass, or not wanting to sing.
  • theusiv
    Posts: 20
    This is an interesting discussion on this topic. In the Philippines, the growing number of young people becoming interested, or engaged in, or prefer traditional catholic music is steadily growing despite mounting oppositions both from religious and secular institutions. In my MA ethnomusicology thesis, I explored why young contemporary Filipino catholic would attend traditional latin mass or join choirs that sing latin or gregorian chant despite the threat of being labeled as fanatic, psychologically-imbalanced, resistant to Vatican II, and many other social threat. There are many cases in the Philippines where a choir is disbanded or prohibited from singing in the parish mass for the reason of singing one latin offertory or a communion. In the worse case scenario, an organist was fired from his teaching job when he found out to he a regular attendee of TLM. In my research however, I found that young people are looking for a more serious music that allows them to strengthen their identity as a catholic in a postmodern society where identity is always a problematic issue due to overwhelming possibility of options. Those who seem to be on the opposition side are people in their 40s. At this point, I am currently doing my PhD in Ethnomusicology dissertation to understand the role of gregorian chant and latin hymns in the postmodern performance of religiosity among contemporary filipino catholics.

    theusiv
  • theusiv -

    What a beautiful tale on the one hand, and a sad one on the other.
    I will pray for you and for all your youthful colleagues who love historic liturgy and music.
    What you are experiencing is blatant evidence that the Vatican II Old Guard is alive, well, merciless, vicious, and un-Christian - a lion's den of wolves in sheep's clothing!
    (Pity they never read what Vatican II actually said.)

    God bless you and all your friends.
    (And, I would love to read your dissertation!)
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Everyone, especially those who weren't actually around in the immediate post-counciliar times, should read, re-read, and believe what theusiv has written above (and Kevin's experiences, too). What he and his colleagues are enduring is exactly what the American hierarchy, its priests, and its street music musicians dealt out to any who didn't get in line with their lock-step after the council. What theusiv and his friends live with right now is the real unmasked 'spirit of Vatican II' people. This is how they got (and continue to get) rid of Gregorian chant. This is how they (not the council, but they) purposefully made it a stranger to following generations.
  • Theusiv,

    I'm sorry that you've endured this mistreatment.

    I must openly wonder, though, to square what you said with what Jackson wrote: people in their 40s were opposed so angrily? Did you mean people in their 60s or 70s?

  • theusiv
    Posts: 20
    Hi Chris,

    Perhaps because of different cultural context. In the Philippines, as far as my study is concern, those who openly oppose traditional catholic music are in their 40s and the majority of them belong to the parish pastoral council or in parish organizations.
  • Theusiv,

    You certainly know the Philippines better than I do (for any number is better than 0). The part I recognize from my days in OF situations is the last sentence of your most recent post: apparently some things are constants in the universe?

    those who openly oppose traditional catholic music [...] belong to the parish pastoral council or in parish organizations
  • ...belong to...

    Isn't it a truism that, very often, those who have such an agenda to push are the most fervently desirous of getting themselves ensconced on committees and parish councils.
    Thanked by 1eft94530
  • theusiv
    Posts: 20

    I certainly have a first hand experiences of the situations I described in my last post. That actually led me to grad school to understand what contributes to the social persecution of young people attached to traditional catholic music. Religious politics is very much strong in the Philippines. The leaders of the opposition are mostly liturgist educated in San Beda College Institute of Liturgy founded by the late guru of inculturation Dom Anscar Chupungco. For many years, their liturgical agenda dominated the Philippine archipelago since after Vatican II. I started serving in my parish since I was 10 years old until I graduated from college. The only music I know that is for the Mass is that of PW music accompanied by band and guitar. Until I was invited to serve as a director of music in our diocese. There I was introduced to liturgical documents and teachings of the Church. But I begin to experience the conflict I never knew existed when I started introducing gregorian chant to the parish where I served for many years. Well, I thought (thought I know it is) Gregorian chant is the best music for the celebration having been stated in the SC as the "principum locum." To cut the story short, this situation led me to embark on this career path as an ethnomusicologist within the area of liturgy to provide a some sort of bridge (that is what we ethnomusicologist do) to understand why postmodern young Filipino catholics are gravitating towards more traditional catholic music and rite. My study still continues towards the PhD level and so far, I am steadily helping many parish choirs in my diocese to incorporate latin chants in their repertoire.

    By the way, here is a copy of my MA thesis.


    https://www.dropbox.com/s/1lqaazlrsna3k3d/Chant as Postmodern Religiosity.pdf?dl=0
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    those who openly oppose traditional catholic music are in their 40s and the majority of them belong to the parish pastoral council or in parish organizations.


    I have told parish council members that given their real value to the parish, the lot of them should be loaded onto a boat, taken to the middle of the river, and sunk. The only thing that gets the attention of those in charge, is threatening to cut off their funding. That actually works.
  • bhcordovabhcordova
    Posts: 1,152
    I thought that the parish council was a thing of the past. Now we have pastoral councils that are supposed to act as advisers to the pastor.
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    Parish pastoral councils are hardly a thing of the past. Finance councils are canonically required, and pastoral councils are canonically recommended (Canon 536) for ordinaries to consider implementing and, typically, then required by diocesan rule.
    Thanked by 1PaxMelodious
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    I bristle at the notion that any particular thesis, no matter how eloquently voiced, suffices as an explanation for many situations that can appear, at once, both simple and complicated. As I've said a thousand times, all politics are local. If there is a mark of consistency regarding success or failure in these concerns, look at the managerial history and intentions of current and former pastors, both of parishes and sees. I'd venture that for every instance of V2 intolerance on the part of attack sheep there is a complimentary one of intentional mismanagement on the part of clergy.
    Thanked by 2Liam CharlesW
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    Don't steal our cherished bones of resentment to gnaw on like that!
    Thanked by 1melofluent
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    I have thought the church in the U.S. could put a banner out front that says, "mismanagement R us." It's probably as bad elsewhere, but I have no experience with the world scene.
  • Hildegard wrote:
    I must say that my take on the generational issue is different from M. Jackson's above. From what I've seen and experienced, younger people desire quality and authenticity, and are generally allergic to older folks' ideas of what they "should" like. Many I've talked to seem to see a return to sacred liturgy as almost an act of rebellion.

    I've been planning to come back to this thread an post something similar.

    Psychological studies of adolescence say that it is a time of pushing boundaries and rebellion: of (trying out) rejecting what family and other adults say, and forming your own approach.

    Teens usually reject whatever they see as the "old hat" culture that their parents like (music, art, etc). So if the parents were into P&W, it's no surprise that the kids gravitate to chant. And vice versa as applied to my generation:

    Now - of course this is an on-average perspective. There will be counter examples -
    especially among those with an education in formal music.

    But there are many examples too: I remember being bored to tears by predictable metrical hymns with archaic language: the energy, rhythm and relevance of folk and contemporary liturgical music helped me to pray in a way that older stuff didn't. As I've grown older, wiser/sadder, and better musically educated, I've come to appreciate the older materials - and found that some things which previously prayed now seem trite. Secular choirs have taught me polyphonic masses (although I certainly haven't found God to be lurking in them, and I still find thundering organ music creepy/cultic).

    And it is very hard to get meaningful data: to today's teenager, "Holy God we Praise Thy Name" and "Be Not Afraid" are of the same vintage - they've been around forever, so are both traditional hymns! And chant is that stuff which happens on certain gothic videos etc.

    As regards to older people resisting a return to chant etc: I suspect that what they are really resisting is a return to a world where the spiritual elite (priests, maybe the choir) were engaged in liturgy, and ordinary people weren't (at best they said the rosary during Mass, at worst they slept). Do not assume that all was rosy in the pre-VII church.
  • theusiv
    Posts: 20
    Indeed no thesis can really provide a complete explanation on this issue. But it can certainly allow us to have at least an insight into the situation. In the Philippines, it would hardly be an issue of mismanagement but for pure ideological maneuvering. Since after the Vatican II, the Philippines has ceased to experienced TLM since religious congregations that celebrate the rite is hardly existent. Latin Mass movement only started as a small movement during the 1980s within the Archdiocese of Manila through an indult but was later suppressed because it was also the same time when the SSPX established themselves within the same diocese. Oddly, it was the family of my college music professor that invited them to come to the Philippines. Along side with that is the growing cult groups in the Philippines that uses traditional catholic music and traditional catholic practices no longer practice in the Philippines since after VII. On top of all of these was the desire of many academically-trained liturgists of the Philippines headed by the late Anscar Chupungco to promulgate an inculturated form of the Roman rite called "Misa ng Sambayanang Pilipino", a project that started during the early part of the 1970's. It was never given a recognitio by the Holy See until this day but it is being constantly promoted. In the recently concluded conference of the diocesan directors of liturgy where I was in attendance, consistent attack on the summorum pontificum was the common theme among the speakers while cheering for the recent statement of Pope Francis on the reform of the reform. These circumstances, and many other things, contribute to the problem because music is no longer just music but has become somewhat a "social category". To be interested in chant or to be involved in chant risk being labeled as anti-Vatican II, psychologically-imbalanced and fanatic. Not so familiar with what is happening in the US but I can only speak for, even for a little, about what is happening in the Philippines. Maybe there are points of similarities and of course points of departure.

  • Admittedly, we do not represent the norm (we are what is supposed to be 'normative', but isn't the 'norm'), but at Walsingham all our youth love the hymnody, Gregorian chant, choral music and organ music which is heard at all our masses. In the Holy House home-schooling program our several hundred children of all ages study Gregorian chant and a variety of instruments and classical music. Only men and boys serve in the Sanctuary, and one could not hope to find more reverent and respectful youth, boys and girls, anywhere.

    I'm sure that there are 'pure Roman rite' parishes here and there, both OF and EF, where a similar regimen holds. We and they represent exceptional parishes and cathedrals which ought to be the universal norm.

    This applies to theusiv's concerns only as an example of historic liturgy and music in a crucible in which it is cultivated by the entire spectrum of our Ordinariate's bishop, our priests, and the fervent love of our people and our youth, both at the cathedral and throughout our widely scattered (US and Canada) 'diocese'. Perhaps others similarly blessed would want to 'chime in' here.

    As far as theusiv's suffering from accusations of being 'anti-Vatican II, psychologically-imbalanced and fanatic' - well, those who torture others with such cruel and un-Christ-like accusations would do well to look into the proverbial mirror. The supreme irony, of course, is that these tyrants are the very ones who are 'anti-Vatican II' - as is obvious to anyone who knows just what the council actually, really did say about music and liturgy. Someone should tell them so!

    I suppose that if they could get away with it they would have you all sent off to a frozen far-away gulag for corrective indoctrination. That seems to be the sort of people they are.
  • KARU27
    Posts: 184

    Aren't there plenty of videos with young folk and their traddie music?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=77&v=3eHP7xIAVHM
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    And there are plenty of videos of young folk with non-traddie music
  • Young-ish person here. Parents supported my interest in music, paid for lessons, but did not have any strong opinions about what music I liked or listened to. I did not grow up in a home where "classical" music was played on the radio or otherwise. I was baptised as an infant in the Free Methodist church, where I attended with my grandmother as a child until about age 12. All the old timey hymns were played there, but I never paid them much attention. Was told multiple times by just about everyone in Grandma's church that I should learn organ since I was learning piano. Still didn't pay attention, but ended up taking the elders' advice as an adult, and all the old hymns had somehow sunk in and became valuable to me as a novice church musician. Started violin when I was ten years old, on the condition that I spent equal time practicing both instruments. I attended a high school with a prestigious orchestra program. My parents were glad their investment seemed to pay off, but my increasing interest in music was beyond their own. After a while I suppose it did become an act of rebellion, primarily because I was sick of being ignored and not having anyone to talk to about something I was passionate about. Continuing on my youthful path of rebellion, I started RCIA during my senior year of high school and converted a year after graduation in a very modern/"progressive" NO parish. (My father refused to attend his own grandchildren's baptisms and first communions. Funny thing is my kids aren't his only Catholic grandkids. My older sister also converted and has two daughters. Oh well.) I digress. The usual garbage music (Haugen was practically God in this place) was used there, but I didn't know it was garbage at that time, so I liked some of it. Exposure to chant and polyphony didn't come until college undergrad-and I was almost in my mid-twenties by this point. It took a while for me to warm up to it, honestly. I got a C in my Medieval-Rennaisance course because it just wasn't reaching me yet. I did eventually come around, though. Chant, or being open about a preference for chant, will definitely get you raised eyebrows around here, especially in the large, wealthy, bourgeois churches like the one my family currently attends...

    If other young people are like me, they often want more traditional music once they get some exposure to it. I had a solid foundation that surely helped my reception of it, though.
  • KARU27
    Posts: 184
    And there are plenty of videos of young folk with non-traddie music

    Well, yes, but the original question was about young people and traddie music. Wouldn't the many many youtube videos count as data? The "St Louis Jesuit Superfan" already knows about all the young people and their non-traddie music.
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    But the videos function as anecdotes, while the OP asked for data and polls.
  • bhcordovabhcordova
    Posts: 1,152
    How many thousands of videos need to be produced before they are data?
  • KARU27
    Posts: 184
    Is a puzzlement! How many youtube videos make a datum?
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    But studies and polls are about comparative data. Not individual data points, like anecdotes.
    Thanked by 1KARU27
  • bhcordovabhcordova
    Posts: 1,152
    No, the OP asked for data to back up the assertion. I would say that the thousands of youtube videos made by young people to be compelling data.
  • Liam
    Posts: 4,945
    I think they would only be compelling to the already-persuaded. That didn't seem to be the purpose here.
  • tomjaw
    Posts: 2,704
    Here is a discussion of some U.K. based data, (sample size 1,500-3,000)

    http://www.lmschairman.org/2016/06/church-statistics-what-happened-to.html

    A quick look at the many photographs on that blog will show a significant difference to the statistics published for the general Church.

    It seems that statistically, the young particularly men, can be found attending the EF.
  • JesJes
    Posts: 576
    OF Easter Vigil this year 15 people average age 80
    EF Easter Mass this year 60 people average age 16 (way more children than adults)