and some organ filler...
sacred silence is just as necessary as music
My comments about the Low Mass were in reference to the EF Mass.
Would small groups sans the Michael Jordans of the choir be a good idea, where we work on very simple pieces they can do on their own?
"Low Mass" = "Mass Said Inside a Vacuum". No devotional hymns. No singing. No organ. Nothing.
NO, NO, NO, and a thousand NOs!!!'...only adorns...'
how to deal with the personal side? And by that, I mean those "superstars" in the choir whose absence leads the choir to say, "oh no, X,Y, and Z aren't here - we can't sing at ALL!" Would small groups sans the Michael Jordans of the choir be a good idea, where we work on very simple pieces they can do on their own?
'...(well-)...'
In the past, I've tried directing certain pieces (to which I was told not to direct, as someone conducting would be considered as a "soloist" and "Catholic church music doesn't have soloists." No, I am not kidding.)
While I agree that a (well-)sung Mass is preferable, there isn't something missing in a Low Mass.
Everyone should get to experience a Low Mass every once in a while. One can appreciate that the silence truly is sacred.
Tournemire Jr. really has no preference either way.
people think they are the norm. They are not, or at least, shouldn't be.
Everyone should get to experience a Low Mass every once in a while.
...an enormous...
...every once in a while.
The only positive facet of a said mass is that... one might realise how shabby it is.
Adam, I'm curious - at your old church, did you repeat these communion pieces every Sunday, at every communion, for a month? As in, four weeks in a row? And your choir/congregation was OK with that?
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