Schubert "Ave Maria"
Mozart "Ave Verum Corpus"
"Holy Art Thou" (Ombra Mai Fu)
Faure "Pie Jesu Domine"
This is a text set to the Handel "Largo" from his opera Serse (Xerxes). The text might be appropriate, but I have reservations about the music itself (and its origins) as being appropriate for a Requiem Mass."Holy Art Thou"
Faure's Pie Jesu Domine IS from his Requiem, and I've heard it sung at a Requiem Mass.Faure's Pie Jesu would depend on several factors. .... Could it be sung at a Requiem Mass?
Someday you will feel differently about this, it will just take awhile. Honestly.I'll be honest, I'm not a big fan of that style of piece, and I'm also not a fan of orchestral Masses, for the same reason.
the folk sing the respond, not an antiphon
... the interpretation of "respond" as a noun rather than a universal presumption as a vowel.
“Not all musical forms can be considered suitable for liturgical celebrations,” says Pope John Paul II in his Chirograph on sacred music (2003). He quotes Pope Paul VI: “If music — instrumental and vocal — does not possess at the same time the sense of prayer, dignity, and beauty, entry into the sphere of the sacred and the religious is [thereby] precluded.”
This is very doubtful. Mozart composed his Ave verum corpus in June of 1791, about six months before his death, for his friend, Anton Stoll, a church musician (we would call him a music director) for the parish of Baden bei Wien. It was written for use in the celebration of the feast of Corpus Christi and probably had its first performance on that occasion in 1791. The autograph score indicates nothing about the work being intended for women's (or young girls') voices.I could have sworn that I read some'eres that Wolfie wrote that for a convent school for young girls originally. Not that I want to look it up....
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.