...by playing a little fantasia...
Is this supposed to be a dig at the Latin OF? We usually have fairly full organ to lend courage to the rear pews. But last Lent we silenced the organ altogether, without losing any singers.To those who play at Traditional Latin Masses
the Latin OF
Train your choirs to think their pitches.
As for accompanying chant, a capella is the ideal which should be, eventually, the achieved goal everywhere that chant is sung.
I don't see it as an "ideal" and always accompany the Ordinary. All this is no more than personal preference and I am not aware of any holy writ from the Church specifying otherwise.
Spoken like a singer. LOL. Pius X is dead, and the rites of the Church have changed. Much of what he said isn't feasible for the new rite. In fact, much of what he said was based on the flawed scholarship of his time.
It was not introduced and spread all over just so organists could play loud Roman circus music as preludes and postludes.
I was the director of the music program at www.windsorlatinmass.com for several (pre-SP) years. We accompanied the ordinary (when chant)
For others, this cramps their style and their preferences. They will, like the late mediaevals, the baroque modernists, and the modern practicalists, perform it the way they wish. There are no academic principals here
Indeed, like every good relativist, they will insist that there is no verifiable objective paradigm.
Is this supposed to be a dig at the Latin OF?
Unaccompanied music can grate on the ears when there is nothing else.
Unaccompanied Gregorian from the congregation can certainly grate
I, for example, like Palestrina. But I don't want to hear him every week.
...compliments the voices and simply sounds better.
Unaccompanied music can grate on the ears...
The Europeans don't seem to have any problems with it.
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