Hi folks, I was just "appointed" to select music for a Mass this coming Friday. According to the USCCB, the Mass for Friday is the Memorial of the Vietnamese martyrs and the Responsorial is not a Psalm, but from I Chronicles. The Response is I Chronicles 29: 13b, and the entire selection is from I Chronicles 29: 10-12.
Do any of you happen to have a setting of this that can work with a makeshift ensemble, gathering to rehearse at 5:00 p.m. for a 6:30 p.m. Mass?
I’m not competent to provide an actual suggestion for your situation, but I know Anglican chant exists, and I know that it can be used for canticles as well as psalms. I also know that no one else has made any suggestions yet, so what I can say is that anglicanchant.nl has an index that lists chants linked to psalms/canticles in various collections. Here’s the I Chronicles 29 link: http://anglicanchant.nl/psalms/psalm0200.html
Not many suggestions there; the majority seem to come from The Scottish Prose Psalter, helpfully on line.
The text, unsurprisingly, isn’t the same, so it’s not ready for use, would need repointing. And then, single and double Anglican chants aren’t the most natural match for the three line format in evidence above.
If it's not too difficult, they'll give a valiant effort.
This Mass will be decidedly 60s and 70s oriented, unfortunately. It's our Diocesan Minor Seminary (closed in 1985) Alumni Mass, so the music will lean VERY Sof V II. But we can try almost anything. Everyone in the ensemble will have learned to read music in H.S. and many have stayed active in music ministry for three or four decades. They can usually learn.
Anglican chant would definitely be a solution. For these four stanzas of text, I would probably use a single chant, with the cadential figure coming by the end of each third line, therefore going through the chant twice. The other possibility suggested by the punctuation would be to cadence by the end of the second and third line of each stanza, but after a quick glance it looks as if some of those final lines might get a little choppy.
If this is appealing I might be able to suggest one.
Here's a quick and easy example, using a single chant but cadencing by the end of the 2nd and 3rd lines of each stanza. The pointing was a little hasty, and my pointing system is a bit idiosyncratic!
They're already complaining via e-mail as I sent out the rest of the songs, all guitar-oriented. What I sent them isn't 60's enough!! This is what I call a "memory Mass" as it's an alumni reunion of a closed school. They want to do what they sang in high school/prep. school. The older guys complain that they don't know the music, even though most of it has been standard, American-suburban Catholic.
Mr. Giffen's arrangement can be done as everyone coming to sing has been singing for decades and can read. How willing they are, is another story. I will report back.
The canticle is, by the way, not proper for the Martyrs -- that would be Ps 124 with response "Our soul has escaped like a bird from the hunter’s net" -- but for the Friday in Ordinary week 33.
Well, folks, I'm sorry to say, they couldn't pull it off. They had trouble with older 1970s music they had sung in their youth; and had trouble with the Taizé "In the Lord I'll Be Ever Thankful." It all turned out nicely, though, they made a nice sound, but it was a struggle.
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