Which is definitely true for some, but has no bearing on appropriateness for a liturgical context—just like concert audiences don't really care that Fauré's Requiem doesn't include the full text and isn't as licit as Duruflé's..It meets people where they are, brings them ( and honestly, me) great comfort at difficult times of their lives, and uses a contemporary idiom to achieve this.
Bernac was a superlative interpreter of mélodie, not Catholic liturgical music. The two call for fundamentally different ideas—obviously the Benedictus doesn't call for the same "sensuality" (as you put it) as Chanson d'amour or Phidylé.There is a story about Pierre Bernac that he told his students, and I paraphrase, good music making requires the mind (points to the head), heart (points to the heart, and sensuality (pointing to the genitals.).
This seems like a rather Protestant view of the Church to me, honestly.More importantly, music is not a one size fits all proposition. If that were the case we might be only listening to Wozzeack day and night. The Church is clearly defined as the People of God. Other references to "Church" point to an ecclesiology that is flawed. Where the People of God gather, as Christ clearly taught, God is clearly in their midst; the God who includes Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
So OCP and Joncas consider "Lord" to be an offensive, masculine term or expression?
I would (and do) put this song in the same box as the item under discussion on this thread. Along with most Marian songs, which for the most part are equally pie eyed emotionialistic and maudlin groans of manufactured heart throbs. OEW is far from the only worthless music in the Catholic repertory, it is just one of the more recent and shameless to be imposed upon us. Its place is at around a camp fire.Bring Flower to the Fairest...
So OCP and Joncas consider "Lord" to be an offensive, masculine term or expression?
The song is firmly lodged into the funeral repertoire by now (it's requested at around 75% of the funerals I play)
So OCP and Joncas consider "Lord" to be an offensive, masculine term or expression?
People like what they like. You can’t force someone to like something. You can expose them to a piece of work, but if they don’t like it, that’s the way it is. You can’t talk them out of it.
Yes, the article attempting to assign some sort of theoretical basis to its claims of demonic inspiration is insane. There are some incredibly dumb "observations" that could just as easily be applied to standard hymns or works in the repertoire. Two examples:Ach, that unsigned Why we need new music: the demonic inspiration for On Eagle's Wings is just as embarrassing as the song. Can we agree it makes slightly more modest demands of nonprofessionals than The Star-spangled Banner and that, as TimTheEnchanter points out, it's the work's success that many of us find so galling?
Deliberate subversion or suspension of tonality is as old as dirt and has nothing to do with "respecting reality" - you could say exactly the same thing about Vierne's Berceuse. The author continues digging a hole:The song is in the key of D major. This being the case, the weakest pitch in the scale, C#, is the half-step below D, and is known in traditional theory as the "leading" tone, precisely because it leads back to the tonic, the D in this case. It has no strength by itself, but only in that to which it leads. (Perhaps the analogy to Saint John the Baptist is apt: it is strong because it leads to the right place, not because it is, by itself, the stopping place.) Joncas, rather than respecting this reality, makes the leading tone lead away from the tonic on 4 of the 5 times the pitch occurs, on accented beats, in the verses.
This reads like the work of either someone who prefers to pretend that there were no legitimate musical developments past the year 1750 or believes all of musical history can be encapsulated in a first-year theory course. Now, you may wish to argue that such features make a composition unsingable by an untrained congregation; I agree. But to link them to "Broadway" and insist that they, in an of themselves without context, are unsuited for worship is patently absurd.In fairness, there is one sense in which this C#, the leading tone, does “resolve” properly, does have the possibility of bringing the ear (and thus the soul) to a place of rest. If the C# is seen as a suspended note, such that the tri-tone (G to C# in the accompaniment) on the downbeat is the result of a kind of “stretching”, then the proper resolution is downward, from C# to B. Unfortunately, however, the suspension is not prepared properly, which means that although there is a dissonance which resolves, the dissonance itself comes, ex nihilo, without any warning or consonant interval prior to it. Tri-tones and suspensions can move a piece effectively, even beautifully, forward, but only when they are used judiciously. By any reasonable measure, the beginning of a melody on a suspension is arguably suited for a Broadway musical, but not for service to the Most Holy Trinity.
The melodic structure of each verse descends from on high, just as one might imagine one descending from the parapet of the temple, and then leaps back up to the higher register. If the intended audience were a bird, soaring on the thermal air currents, this might have some merit – and it is perhaps the intent of the composer to make the melody sound like a swooping bird – but given that the psalm itself in no wise presents this as a logical conclusion, the next most reasonable conclusion, Scripturally speaking, is that of one diving from the temple, which was the Devil's temptation: prove you're who you say you are by throwing yourself off the temple. Christ rejected the temptation and, for that reason, surely the follower of Christ should follow His example.
It's not badly written according to the "conventions of music theory", it's poorly written according to the author's belief of how music must function, which is essentially constrained to the "rules" you would learn in a first-year theory course.Regarding that article, is the entire argument that because it is badly written according to the conventions of music theory, it must be demonic?
This question wasn't directed at me, but I'd rather live in sacred silence than hear OEW at any type of liturgical function, and even (especially) adoration.rules are good. Do we follow them so rigidly that if it comes to OEW for a funeral (or mass) or nothing sung, which is preferable, in your opinion?
I think there's a difference between making sacred music more accessible (fewer polyphonic or "difficult" Ordinary settings can go a long way, you just have to give the PiPs a chance) to encourage audible participation and creating new, oftentimes sappy if not irreverent or could-be-interpreted-as-heretical compositions to be forced on people as a "valid" interpretation of a document.modernized music was also encouraged so as to increase laity participation
I generally thought it in poor form to argue with others over the bodies of their deceased relatives.
The mass is the public worship of the church. The church has the right and responsibility to set rules for that worship.
That sounds like a good argument for converting more funerals into a funeral service without Mass
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.