God's giving me lemons....
(Squeeeeeze... squeeeeze... squeeeeeeeeze...)
This suggests another side to the story. Still, if a pro is balking at putting in unpaid overtime, it would be a bit squirrelly to play the vanity card instead.....one accomplished musician ... no longer wants rehearsals. He wants to show up on Sunday, have me plunk the sheet music in front of him (nothing new or challenging) and play.
This suggests another side to the story. Still, if a pro is balking at putting in unpaid overtime, it would be a bit squirrelly to play the vanity card instead...
And lazy.Those people be crazy.
That's the daftest thing I've ever heard,...
I once took pleasure someplace of seeing men, through piety, take a vow of ignorance, as of chastity, poverty, penitence. It is also castrating our disorderly appetites, to blunt that cupidity that pricks us on to the study of books, and to deprive the soul of that voluptuous complacency which tickles us with the notion of being learned. And it is accomplishing richly the vow of poverty to add to it also that of the mind... All this ability of ours is as good as vain and superfluous. Montaigne III 12
I have sung in church choirs, or groups, where there was a quite clear and explicit desire to avoid sounding too "artistic", too "beautiful". Because it would seem to separate the "role" of the choir from "leading the people's song", and tend to introduce a hierarchy into the liturgy. Can't have that!
Problem is, we have only one accomplished musician (or as accomplished as one can get in a small town...) and he too no longer wants rehearsals. He wants to show up on Sunday, have me plunk the sheet music in front of him (nothing new or challenging) and play.
As Pope Benedict XVI has stated, “Nothing can be too beautiful for God”. Musicians should take these words to heart, because it is they who bear much of the responsibility for bringing beauty to our liturgical celebrations. Pastors should encourage musicians to aspire to the highest levels of beauty in sacred music and to embrace with joy the work which this entails. We should always aim high to offer God the best and the most beautiful music of which we are capable. Whether paid or volunteer, those responsible for sacred music in the Mass every week should be committed to prior practice and rehearsal. Every hour of worship should represent at least two hours of structured preparation at a time and place apart from the congregation.
http://www.ccwatershed.org/media/pdfs/14/06/15/16-28-51_0.pdf
If I were to encounter this attitude among people who also wanted to be in my choir, I hope I would have the self-control to respond by digging a little deeper into the statement. I might start with, "What makes you feel that way?"
If a person rehearses in the forest and nobody hears it, did that person actually rehearse?If they rehearse you'd never know it.
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