We are pretty much out of money for scholarships and we are trying to think of an innovative way to raise money. Thus was born my new book, which is an integrated collection of the columns that many have long told me need to be put into a book. I hope that we can get this on sale as soon as possible so that we can have a sense of how much help we can provide this year. See what you think about the cover. It will be 200 pages
I really like the idea, Jeffrey! And am looking forward to the book.
Not so sure about the title--the sense is great but it could be catchier, I think, somehow. Is "Why Catholic Don't Sing" already taken? (Actually, titles cannot be copyrighted...)
Maybe you weren't looking for feedback on the title?
Jeffrey, It's just me, but I actually like the other one better, maybe a bit thicker letters. (Since you asked. I am a picky person in certain things.)
It seems there are too much for the front cover and the font reminds me of what is it .."NewYork Herald"? something like that. I liked that clean sky, not dark and cloudy. I don't know. it's just me.
Good news. My husband who has better artistic sense votes for the second one. (I guess I just like simple things. but not everyone.) I hear polyphony from the second picture, which we should include. Sorry I'm just confusing you. Either way, I'll definitely buy. What's inside? Is this aimed mostly for musicians or can general readers follow?
[this comment refers to a previous version of the design] The second design is nice, but I don't like the title font, which looks dead and uninteresting IMHO -- and has low readability.
I tried to attach an image, but no luck. I'll e-mail it to Jeffrey.
Well, what's in here is essentially the thing, the case for what we are all about, why it's important, where we fit in within the scheme of things. It is the first book to grapple with the current transitional phase we are in, pitting the sacred music case against its opponents (Glory & Praise, Prayer & Worship, community worship, multiculturalist fads, pop-populism, etc.). It deals with real life parish situations and how to navigate them, and documents the rise of a new sensibility for the sacred in music inspired by a range of forces (Summorum, changing demographics, and other factors).
There are two essays in here I'm particularly pleased with: one on the analogy between Latin Chant and Israeli Hebrew, and another one that explores at length the themes of open vs. closed source musical cultures. They are the least popular among the many topics in here, but both amount to actual contributions of an original sort.
I would think that any Catholic musician would enjoy reading it, or I hope so at least. I'm sure many readers will dismiss it at the at-length working out of a chant obsession. That's fine. It is never boring, so that's what matters from a marketing angle.
It is light and attempts to be as non-technical as possible. It does not purport to be any sort of a primer. It is more a compilation of reflections on the current state of things with a suggested path forward.
On the back cover, I'd add a little more about the intended target audience and what they can expect to find inside. From the description I didn't know if it was a textbook, music, or something else.
Of course, the cover is just a small part of how people learn about the book and want to purchase it. Just make sure that the cover is intelligible when reduced down to a 120x200 graphic, maybe even smaller. Right now, 200 pixels high is very readable, but 100 pixels high is not. 150 is right on the edge.
Carl made some good points. Don't be afraid to make the title/logo bigger, filling more space, and maybe even let it touch the figure.
The back cover could use:
-- A category label such as "Church Music/Essays/Criticism" (upper left). -- A block for the ISBN (lower right). -- A little bio-blurb with a thumbnail photo: e.g., "Jeffrey A. Tucker is Editor of CMAA's Sacred Music magazine. In addition, he is editorial vice president of the Ludwig von Mises Institute, a center for economics research and education. As the lead character in his own anime series on Japanese television, he is beloved by millions of teenage fans throughout Asia."
So I've received two kinds of messages of complaint about my new book. 1) this is an outrage to suggest that there is a fixed and true way to sing like a Catholic, 2) you have done nothing but state the incredibly obvious, hence wasting your time and everyone's time.
Upon hearing complaint No. 1, you should fix them with a steely gaze and ask them to name all the Magisterial documents they've read that address the topic of sacred music.
Everything hinges on whether people accept that the church has teaching authority. If they accept this and wish to think with the church, they're educable. If they don't, there is no way for us to discuss liturgical music because the teachings that guide us have been declared irrelevant. Without the teachings, decisions about music inevitably devolve into personal preferences--or the use of music to enforce agendas.
The only way I see to bridge the gap is conversion of hearts.
It seems like we need sequels to this, 'Pray Like a Catholic,' 'Worship Like a Catholic,' 'Believe Like a Catholic,' etc... Many people needs to be reminded to stay as catholics these days. I believe this is a charity work for catholics who need to be reminded and "act like a catholic" in order not to fall to be another denomination, thanks to the abuse of the freedom seen in music practice in our liturgy. The reform of the second Vatican cannot be achieved without the lay people's leadership like this.
"Everything hinges on whether people accept that the church has teaching authority. If they accept this and wish to think with the church, they're educable. If they don't, there is no way for us to discuss liturgical music because the teachings that guide us have been declared irrelevant. Without the teachings, decisions about music inevitably devolve into personal preferences--or the use of music to enforce agendas."
I agree. When I converted from a protestant to a catholic, I did so because I found the true church with the whole truths in the catholic church. But I'm a bit amazed and diappointed at the people who says that they are catholics but openly excercise 'pick-and -choose' style for their faith. If you are a protestant it won't be wrong to do so, and that's why I guess we have them. And I repect their decision to be a protestant. But catholics, are we supposed do the pick-and -chose in what we believe? Baltimore catechism clearly talks about the authority of the Church, and the true presence of Christ on the altar. You do have a choice to be a catholic or not, but you cannot be a pseudo-catholic, that is not a choice. Most of my old protestant friends are very fervant believers in what they believe. I'm very confused about what many catholics are confused about what they believe.
Well, it turns out about the same, I think. there are costs every which way you do it. lulu is amazing but expensive. Amazon is amazing but expensive. and so on. The only way to do really well in book publishing is to print them and sell them on the street.
Ok, somehow I thought Lulu is part of CMAA (just because it's in the site.) Don't know much about this. So I'll tell my schola they can buy it in either way. Thanks
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