PIP Singing- It Does Happen!
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Our parish started a mission last night and Benediction was part of the evening. It was amazing to hear the 150+ people singing "O Salutaris" and "Tantum Ergo." I found it very uplifting. We also said the rosary and it was beautiful to hear the church reverberate with the voices of all praying together. Of course the people who attended were mostly retirees who remember these devotions. No question for the forum, just encouragement.
  • Of course the people who attended were mostly retirees who remember these devotions


    You're not working for the "old people like the TLM" group, are you?
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    No, I am not. I sing with our church choir and also every Sunday with my husband accompanying me on very tasteful guitar. We do a wide range of hymns from "Christians Let Us Love One Another" (PICARDY) to "Be Thou My Vision" to "Humbly Lord We Worship You" to "Sing A New Song" by Schutte, once in a while. I believe the congegration will sing good music of whatever genre. It would be great if there was more good music published from which to choose.

    At 60+, I try not to think of myself as old. I had never sung "O Salutaris" until our church began having perpetual adoration of the Eucharist and the Sacrament would be transferred after morning Mass to the adoration chapel. It is just heartening to hear the church filled with a hymn. Father chanted and the people responded beautifully. Also, being a cantor or choir member most of the time, you don't get the chance to be in the pew and just respond with the congegration.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Carol,

    How would you respond to this general observation: Guitar can't serve as an accompaniment to sacred singing both because it lacks the strength to do so and because it lacks the proper qualities necessary for work in the august House of God ?
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    I have heard some organists who are far less skilled than my husband at providing accompaniment. Wrong chords, poor technique, and bad musical taste are not exclusive to guitarists. There are probably fewer organists who fall into this category simply because would- be church musicians don't have easy access to an organ in the same way that a person can buy a cheap guitar, find some chords on the internet and think they are ready to play in church. Guitar can be properly mic-ed to reinforce its sound. It isn't always the wrong accompanying instrument. It has more to do with the individual artist than the instrument. Please stop judging all guitarists in the same category. I have heard some really schlock-y organ playing in my own parish. Think lounge lizard meets baseball stadium organist!

    I have been educated by some in this forum previously on the advantages of organ in a large church, the quality of hymns that are definitely better accompanied on organ and the "breathing" quality of the organ. After that I did noticed our current organist using the organ to highlight phrasing. Instead of either/or can you see any instance where guitar can be the better accompaniment?
  • CCoozeCCooze
    Posts: 1,259
    I remember some amazing classically-trained guitarists in my university's music program. And, of course, the guitar professor was amazing, as well - as were many of his compositions.
    However, no matter how beautiful some of that music was, there is no reason to hear it in a church, unless it is for a concert.
    Many instruments, voices, and other art mediums can give one a "spiritual" reaction/experience, yes, but that doesn't mean that all belong in a liturgical setting.

    I'm sure there are plenty of instrumentalists who are better at what they do than is their Parish organist, but that is a reason to study and to progress in one's musicianship - not to replace the organ with something else.
    Thanked by 1M. Jackson Osborn
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Okay, I know that I am in the minority here and I accept that. Just FYI, we were ASKED by our pastor to provide music when our parish was between organists. We have been "filling in" now for 4 years, long after the parish has hired a new organist. I have been tempted to quit, especially when I have a sneaking suspicion that our new pastor would "fire" us except that we play for free and he would have to pay the organist to cover another Mass. Also, the PIP sing well when we provide the music and they like our selections, which are often more conservative and appropriate than what the organist chooses. As I have also said before, I have been in this parish since the age of 10 and been a cantor/choir member for most of those years. I will use my God-given talent for God's use as long as I am able, however I am able and whenever I am able. Pastors come and go around here every 6 or 12 years, but I am here for the long haul. Those here who may be pastors, remember that volunteers have feelings, too. Especially if you don't have a poker face.
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Also, in case you are wondering, we are not taking money from this organist, he prefers not to be at church all morning. We make it possible for him to leave earlier and enjoy more of his Sunday.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • StimsonInRehabStimsonInRehab
    Posts: 1,916
    A few years ago, I attended a Men's Retreat at a parish run by Canons Regular in West Virginia. (For those familiar with this community, no explanation is necessary. For those who aren't - no explanation is possible.) This was a retreat attended by gentlemen you'd generally expect to have a benign indifference to music. The priests began by exposing the Blessed Sacrament in Benediction. Mind you, this community has some interesting ideas about promoting a cappella, congregational singing - mixing Kyrie XIV with Gloria XII and Sanctus XVII, really? - but I must admit, it was the most robust rendition of "O Salutaris" I've heard in my life. And it wasn't even the regular tune - it was Jesu Dulcis Memoria. Even the superior commented on the positive quality of the singing.

    Who knows? Maybe there's just something about the music of Benediction that sticks with you.
    Thanked by 2Incardination Carol
  • Carol,


    I really seem to have struck a nerve.

    I didn't mean to offend you, and for having done so I am contrite.

    Let me concede a few points:

    1) Not everyone who plays an organ is a trained organist.

    2) Some who are trained musicians are pig-headed.

    3) Sometimes (even, sadly, often) nearly anyone in the pews could choose better music than some of those "in charge" of music programs.

    4) There are some pieces which are more effectively (and appropriately) accompanied on guitar than on organ.

    My case against the guitar doesn't involve one particular person playing it. Quite the contrary. It is the Church Herself who says that the organ is, by its nature, and not dependent on the musician playing it, suitable to the august mysteries of the worship of God. Pope Pius X gives a list of some instruments which can serve well, and others which must be utterly excluded. Sixty-ish years later, the American bishops created a mess when they adapted (eviscerated, really) that same holy Pope's teaching by saying that any instrument which is, or can be made , fitting may be used. This statement arrived during the reign of what Dr. Peter Kwasniewski calls the "Vel" missal, and which most of us call the Ordo of Blessed Paul VI -- or, more colloquially, the NO or Novus Ordo.

    What ought to be sung at Mass isn't the same thing as what may be sung at Mass.

    Microphones have no place whatsoever in the Mass. That they have been given the master bedroom and absolute veto power tells us something about the environment in which we live. It is true that if you look at the recent Pontifical Mass at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, microphones are in evidence, but that doesn't negate the principle: Mass is by its nature theocentric, not anthropocentric. The prayers aren't addressed to us (Msgr Bugnini notwithstanding), and so don't require amplification. Some of those microphones are incidental (because I think a recording was made, and a high-quality recording often uses equipment such as a well-balanced amplification system).

    While there are some pieces of music which are better suited to the guitar than the organ, they are extras, added to the liturgy in certain times and places, sometimes without actual justification.


    The rules of the forum (which our administrator reminds us to observe periodically) involve refraining from personal attacks, and I maintain that this is a good standard to maintain. My original question didn't intend to impugn any guitarist personally.
    Thanked by 1Carol
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,371
    As a PIP, in order to sing a hymn well I need a clear understanding of the tune and rhythm. Percussive and plucked instruments are quite good at both, a piano duet demonstrates that, but it requires rapport between the performers. Congregational singing is inherently fuzzy, without rehearsal the participants will each have different ideas about timing and phrasing, and are spread over a large and reverberant space. Our ears are designed to be very precise about measuring time differences, location of a sound source depends on analysis of the time difference between arrival at each of our ears. I suspect that the precision of percussive stringed instruments makes them inherently less satisfactory for congregational accompaniment.
    OTOH I occasionally get an organ intro which leaves me with no clue as to the tune I am supposed to launch into.
    Thanked by 3Carol CCooze CHGiffen
  • chonakchonak
    Posts: 9,157
    Thanks to CGZ for mentioning the Forum guidelines. They also say:
    Be patient about legitimate differences in personal taste.
    We do not want to be known as people engaged in pointless arguments.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    I was involved with the performance of a mass by Padilla, if I remember correctly without looking it up, it was Juan Gutiérrez de Padilla, 1590-1664 approx. It had a guitar part throughout. While I certainly wouldn't object to guitar in such a beautiful and authentic setting, what I do object to are the saloon musicians who strum, thump, and play indistinguishably from what one would hear in secular settings. I admit I probably object to the style rather than substance.

    Pius X certainly meant well in attempting to "restore" church music. However, he was another in a line of those who wanted to hearken back to an earlier age when music was pure and untainted by the world. A pipe dream, really, since such never existed. Certainly, standards are needed for church music, high standards in fact. But it seems to me that every time a purist tries to reestablish a "golden age" of music, it creates a terrible backlash of over reactions that destroy both the baby and the bath water. We often end up worse off than before.

    I have a book of wedding music approved for Catholic weddings from 1955 or so. Approved, yes. Truly awful, yes. I have thought that the backlash against more traditional Catholic music that occurred after Vatican II happened because much of that "approved" music wasn't very good. It was itself an extreme producing a more extreme reaction. It seems ever thus. Really, how many more hymns to the Blessed Mother by Sister Mary Snorkelface of the Holy Visage did we even need or want.

    It appears to me that there was in those earlier times a richness of musical styles and varied instruments for several hundred years before Pius X. Anyone remember serpents and trombones, for example? Makes me wonder how authentic some of those "restorations" really are. Some of our current crop of reformers are really promoting Solesmes as an ideal. Get real. There is nothing authentic about Solesmes. It was another attempt at restoration based on interpretations and assumptions not wholly accurate, but current with the scholarship of the times.

    To the point of organ vs. guitar, I have not found that guitars have the power and presence to lead a large congregation in song. Certainly, if guitar is all you have, use it to the best of your abilities. I used to play organ for college chapels with approximately 1500+ in attendance. Accompanying was spread around with several groups responsible for playing. The guitars students sometimes used couldn't do the job, but the pipe organ had the power and presence to actually lead. I was asked to play more often because of the suitability and practical effects of large organ accompaniment.

    My 2 and one half cents and ymmv.
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Now we are getting somewhere! We all seem to agree that we should have the best music possible with the best musicians available to enhance the liturgy for the glory of God. We acknowledge that there are less than perfect musicians making music at Mass. I do believe the organ is a superior instrument to the guitar for use at Mass and that there is a lot of inferior music composed for the guitar with the intention that it be used at Mass. Those who frequent this forum are generally well trained as musicians and in liturgical music. In reality, away from the bigger cities, much of the music heard at Mass would make most of you scream. The purpose of the Musica Sacra is to promote Gregorian chant and I have learned a lot from you all about it.

    Thanks for all your comments and concern. Especially thank you for, Charles, for Sister Mary Snorkelface! Also, what does ymmv mean, please?
    Thanked by 3CHGiffen bdh SarahJ
  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Thank you! I thought it was one of those pious things I didn't learn because I went to public school, rather than parochial school. LOL
  • fcbfcb
    Posts: 331
    Carol, were O Salutaris and Tantum Ergo sung a cappella? I have a pet theory that a cappella singing strengthens congregational singing. On most Sundays I sing penitential rite C and it seems to me that the congregational response is much stronger than when we are singing something accompanied; likewise when the priest sings the dialogues. I'm not against instruments (of any sort) in the liturgy, but I do think that a cappella singing gives the congregation the feeling of, "well, I guess it's up to us."
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    Especially thank you for, Charles, for Sister Mary Snorkelface!



    She was in the same order with Sr. Mary Thrombosis of the Sacred Heart, Sr. Mary Giganticus, of the Abundant Eclairs, Sr. Mary Mucous of the Sorrowful Sinuses, and Sr. Mary Godzilla, who was my first grade teacher.


  • Carol
    Posts: 849
    Yes, it was a cappella and I have noticed the same phenomenon. Problem is unaccompanied singing does eventually sink in pitch or worse.

    I became a sweetly patient (I hope) but firm first grade teacher because I encountered the public school equivalent of Sr. Mary Godzilla who told my mother in front of the whole class that I wouldn't need a cupcake at the Halloween party since I preferred to eat paste! (It was the old flour and water paste doled out on a little piece of paper from a 3 gallon container which I had tasted once.) Not the container, the paste.
  • Andrew_Malton
    Posts: 1,156
    Quibble, @CharlesW. "There is nothing authentic about Solesmes" is false. Or exaggerated. The charge has been made before, of course, and has been well refuted by among others Dr Mahrt in this forum and in the journal (reprinted in his book).

    The dual statement "There is something inauthentic about Solesmes" is not false. But their scholarship restored, or founded and began the restoration of, many important things, including the melodies themselves. And surely there is no doubt that, even if the old Solesmes method of performance is not historically unassailable, it restored an authentic movement and life to the chant which had been lost.

    Sorry about the double negatives, I guess I'm hedging a bit here.
  • Incardination
    Posts: 832
    Yes, Charles, I think I must tag on to Andrew's comment... both as regards St. Pius X and Solesmes.

    It is one thing to say that certain things could be improved about the respective efforts of Pope St. Pius X and Dom Gueranger (especially as we access more manuscripts and undertake more research), quite another to dismiss the initial efforts of the reform as being simply "well-meaning" but with a clear implication of "poorly done".

    One of my choir members wanted to argue with me that "they wouldn't have done it like this in the x'th century". Likely true... but unless we live in an ivory tower, probably not all that meaningful. The reforms initiated by St. Pius X and Dom Gueranger were intended to begin to restore balance, to begin to return liturgical music to its former glory - not to be the pinnacle of scholarly erudition in its own right. Chant had been suffering through several centuries of decay and decline. The work started by Solesmes has - as Andrew says above - turned that around. Not perfect, but certainly far better than what was present by the end of the 1800's. And I certainly don't see a problem with returning to music that represents the high point of Catholic culture and musicality - to music that provides a lofty setting for the Liturgy.

    We can contribute to the ongoing reform in our own right without denigrating the efforts of those who went before us, in many cases which provided the platform for us to continue improving Liturgical music.

    I think there are some for whom there is nothing beyond Pope St. Pius X... beyond Mocquereau. Perhaps what you were driving at is that we should continue to expand our knowledge and explore additional techniques. I couldn't agree more. But let's respect those who started us on this path of reform.

    My two cents.
    Thanked by 1SarahJ
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    But let's respect those who started us on this path of reform.


    Respect, yes, idolize, no.

    And I certainly don't see a problem with returning to music that represents the high point of Catholic culture and musicality - to music that provides a lofty setting for the Liturgy.


    I don't object, either, but we really don't know where and when that high point was. It probably wasn't in 19th century France.

    The charge has been made before, of course, and has been well refuted by among others Dr Mahrt in this forum and in the journal (reprinted in his book).


    Dr. Mahrt has his own agenda. One can desire the restoration of Catholic music without always agreeing with Dr. Mahrt as the only way to accomplish it.

    quite another to dismiss the initial efforts of the reform as being simply "well-meaning" but with a clear implication of "poorly done".


    Those reforms are always well-meaning with future generations realizing they were limited by the knowledge and scholarship available at the time.
  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,371
    Chant has clearly been developed by the Church for singing a capella. It tends to be responsorial, as Penitential rite C, or alternatim, as the Creed. A competent cantor or schola helps keep momentum and pitch, but unaccompanied hymns tend to sag and drag. I know little of shape note singing, but it often seems quite slow.
    My experience of congregations singing unaccompanied is limited but favourable, but it is limited because it only occurs on particular occasions. For example the Sunday after Christmas when the music group had decided not to turn up and I volunteered as cantor. I chose a familiar Mass setting from the hymnal, and told the congregation that if they wanted music they would have to do it themselves. I thank they sang more lustily than had the music group been there, but of course the congregation consisted of the more committed, the others had exhausted themselves (and their piety) by turning out on Christmas Day. My two penn'orth.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Incardination
    Posts: 832
    Probably beating a dead horse...

    Respect, yes, idolize, no.


    My issue is that I neither see my comments as "idolize" nor your comments as "respect".

    I don't object, either, but we really don't know where and when that high point was. It probably wasn't in 19th century France.


    ... to begin to return liturgical music to its former glory - not to be the pinnacle of scholarly erudition in its own right.


  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    I have heard many discuss the glories of Catholic music in the past, depending on when that past was. I grew up with it in the fifties, then the sixties. It went from bad to worse. I suspect strongly my area wasn't much different from most. The problem with restoration is determining when that "former glory" occurred. I know, location, location, location.


  • a_f_hawkins
    Posts: 3,371
    Are you suggesting the pinnacle of Christian music was other than 19th century Russia?
    Is outrage!
    Thanked by 3CHGiffen CharlesW Drake
  • bhcordovabhcordova
    Posts: 1,152
    Not Christian, Catholic. 19th century Russia was heavily Russian Orthodox.
    Thanked by 1CharlesW
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    Still is heavily Orthodox. Russian music is incredibly beautiful and no one can accuse them of not taking liturgical music seriously. They take all things liturgical as if they were matters of life and death - they are.
    Thanked by 2CHGiffen toddevoss
  • Russian music is incredibly beautiful


    My son just now is conducting an experiment on plants. The ones hearing the Russian chant have withered even more than the other plants.

    What's that wonderfully disarming abbreviation? YMMV.

  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    Sounds like a rather whacked experiment. LOL. Maybe those plants like Disco.

    There is all kinds of chant from all kinds of places. Bulgarian, Carpathian, Melkite, Ethiopia, and so on. Western chant is far from the only Christian chant out there.
  • ...plants...
    I read once of an experiment wherein plants in group A were played Mozart, Beethoven, etc., and they flourished. The ones in group B were subjected to rock 'music' and withered in short order.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    I have heard such accounts for years. Plants are subject to many ailments including inept keepers who over-water, or don't water them at all. I wonder what would happen if I waved a picture of a guitar in front of my fig tree? The angst might kill it. Perhaps a selection by Marty Haugen might discourage the poison ivy in the field behind my house. Ya think? ;-)
    Thanked by 1M. Jackson Osborn
  • bhcordovabhcordova
    Posts: 1,152
    Or possibly encourage it and discourage the grass?
    Thanked by 1CharlesW
  • I shouldn't want to dismiss as mere fancy the reports of experiments involving plants' reactions to music or other stimuli. I believe it is known that people who cultivate flowers and plants, and caress them, sing to them, speak kindly to them are rewarded with healthier, 'happier' plants than those who pay them only a little indifferent attention. Further, if rock 'music' can have a bad effect on people (even on people who like it), why should it not have adverse effects on flora? All living things are related through the fact that they have life. It is not far fetched to suppose that they are affected for good or ill by atmospheric stimuli.

    I also read once of a whale that was trapped in a cove somewhere in Alaska. When the navy consulted an animal psychologist as to how to lure it back into the open sea, they were told to play music for it. The navy did this, broadcasting music from their ships, but the whale only became agitated. Consulting the psychologist again, he asked them what music they had played. It was, of course, rock or something similar. The psychologist then said that they should try Beethoven, which they did, and the whale followed the ships back into the sea.

    There is no question that certain types of music are sick, even though certain types of people like them. There is an unquestioned interaction betwixt the human mind and body, and noisy, sick music. Even those who prefer bad music likely suffer from it without realising it.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    As for the whale, I can attest to the fact music can have a Pied Piper effect. I attended a penance service some time ago at a prosperous parish in the affluent part of our county. They had a very good lounge pianist playing the top 40 Haugen/Haas/Joncas type music. The affluent parishioners worn out, I suppose, from all the efforts expended making money, keeping up the large houses, and driving the expensive cars, were floating around humming and mouthing words to the soothing sounds of Catholic elevator music. They were almost in a trance-like state - or maybe a whale-like state based on the Alaska story.
    Thanked by 1Carol
  • Richard MixRichard Mix
    Posts: 2,767
    These are bad times for science. I tried to google the whale story, but this was as close as I could get. Mythbusters repeated the plant experiment and had rock-exposed plants outgrowing the classically-lulled.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,934
    Fake news. Many experiments do not even approach standards for genuine scientific research.
    Thanked by 3Carol CHGiffen GerardH