Here are some poignant paragraphs from the Introduction; if indeed true, very disheartening and concerning. However, WE have seen the fallout. Yes?
It would be a mistake to give in to the temptation to discard it
now as not up-to-date and outmoded or as music fit for men of letters only.
This also would be against the express injunction of the Church. Any cen-
sure to the contrary would be tantamount to restraining and choking live po-
tentialities. It may be unpleasurable to have to face Gregorian chant as a
norm, but we should endure it. Imitations will not do. Genius and skill need
deeper roots, and a universally accepted voice culture requires the same pa-
tience and effort as agriculture — and God's blessing in due time.
1. The Anglican solution...There the polyphonic artistic song has been systematically fostered since the fifteenth century. Poets of note, from Dryden to Masefield, have translated the Latin hymns into a beautiful poetic language and they have created other elegant compositions of liturgical art. Composers from Byrd to Britten have contributed good church music...Today, the Anglican Church on both planes has the artistically best choral song bolstered by a tradition of almost five hundred years...
B. Possible solutions. Since none of these solutions can be acceptable for the Catholic Church, because they do not do justice either to the Gregorian or polyphonic tradition, we shall be obliged to ask first of all, what in view of the new condition must be abandoned ?
1) Wherever Latin disappears, there the Gregorian tradition will also perish. Whoever does not realize this, is either a fool or a liar. (Even he who deceives himself is also a liar.)
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