But as we all know, hymns aint IT. Let the choir/cantors sing "the part assigned to them" (propers) and the people their part (ordinary) and you will have a singing congregation.
Congregational singing is one small piece of liturgical music. Do you feel it is the be all end all of measuring success? If the people only sang the responses and the ordinary, wouldn't that be perfect?
I can help you fix that.
But these days the cultural expectation in most of the world, even at the very highest levels, is that people sing something in those slots
I'd rather not throw the baby out with the bathwater by rejecting a superb text just because I think the congregation will falter on an unfamiliar tune.
I have heard "The Strive is O'er" played in such a manner as encourages singing, and as confuses both choir and congregation. Same for "God of our Fathers".
Why, oh why, do we have to accept these "cultural expectations"? If this board has any value, it's that the people here are thinking outside of this box - and succeeding. Yet somehow these "slots" are set in stone forever?
PGA, I think the number of cathedrals/basilicas who have revised the entrance procession has greatly expanded in the past 3-5 years. I'm pretty sure there are at least 2-3 posters here in cathedral jobs that do it.
We do not do it as a rule, but we do the Gregorian introit by itself with verse at least once or twice a season. We just did it with Vocem iucunditatis a few weeks back.
We did this seasonally at my last parish -- one first Sunday of Lent our associate pastor reached the altar, we stopped and he turned to the congregation and siad words to the effect of, wasn't THAT depressing? LOLyou are talking about singing NOTHING CONGREGATIONAL, ONLY the proper, chanted by the schola, after which mass commences, with the congregation not uttering a word until the "Amen" after the sign of the cross?
To be clear - you are talking about singing NOTHING CONGREGATIONAL, ONLY the proper, chanted by the schola, after which mass commences, with the congregation not uttering a word until the "Amen" after the sign of the cross?
If so, I salute you; even in our parish, which is quite "traditional," that really wouldn't go over, except, like I said, on sporadic holy days.
If the celebrant was singing, they were much more likely to sing.
Does it matter what they sing, as long as they sing? (To put it differently, is "active participation" to be considered above all else?)
If the people are singing random devotional songs not connected with the sacrifice of the Mass - What, then, are they actually participating in?
may just love singing crap. Never over-estimate the power of people who have been nabbed in Renewal Witnessing and had the music chosen by the person witnessing become holy and sacred in the minds of those attending - including the clergy.If they are singing their little hearts out, but they are singing something crappy and banal and unconnected to the liturgy - then that is a sign of a congregation that yearns to participate in the liturgy fully.
The assembly generally don't sing with the words on a screen in their face.
My Episcopal parish uses two handouts (seasonal "shell" and weekly "insert"), plus a hymnal. It's confusing unless you know what's going on. The members sing really well, but visitors seem to spend a lot of time trying to find their place.
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