For those who don't know or can't imagine what P&W music at adoration is like, click here:
https://youtu.be/IXXDUQWhv5M?t=3047
The musicians are adjacent to the altar and upstage the Eucharist. They sing for thirty minutes; skip around through the music. No opportunity for silent prayer. These sorts of things are just a P&W concert with adoration used as a pretense for the musicians to perform.
People who want PW music at adoration want to feel *emotions* from the music rather than connect their heart in contemplation with Our Lord... It's a totally misguided approach.
People who want Gregorian Chant at adoration want to feel *emotions* from the music rather than connect their heart in contemplation with Our Lord... It's a totally misguided approach.
This sentence has the same logical content as the original, I've just swapped Gregorian Chant for praise and worship. Presumably no one here would agree with this statement. I think that any style of music can be made a false idol of, but that doesn't mean that said music can't also be used for good.
It's intrinsic to the character of music that it produces emotion. The important moral category is whether this emotion becomes and end of itself or is used to point people towards an encounter with God.
As an aside, throwing cheap shots at bad praise and worship is equally as unfair as throwing cheap shots at bad Gregorian chant.
Praise and worship at adoration should be more like this, with Pope Francis and Matt Maher: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZa6spYqHsA&ab_channel=ThejasSebastian
I have some complaints about the lead singer but the song choices are decent and the band is pretty together
their services resemble a rock concert infinitely more than they do any form of liturgy.
P&W... OK for the car radio... and even that, I can't take the repetitive minimalistic THEMES...
Praise you, (put God title here)
You are (put God descriptive here)
I am (put God redemption action here)
and similar 8 bar CHORD structures over and over and over... (C, Am, F, G) or (C, Em, Am, G) or (C, G, Am, Am) or (Am, Em, F, G) or...
... and the beat goes on...
Seems like every year the song, "Mary Did You Know," rears its head. Would you call that P&W? I called it heretical.
It’s formally banned in our diocese and the diocesan director of liturgy sends out a reminder every year. I’m Im grateful.Seems like every year the song, "Mary Did You Know," rears its head. Would you call that P&W? I called it heretical.
Nice try, but gregorian chant is THE music of the roman rite, as formally enshrined by tradition and numerous formal teaching documents of the church spanning centuries, right up to our day.
P&W music is fundamentally secular music, with a veneer of religious text on top.
&W music doesn't sound like "church music" (in even the broadest sense). Don't believe me? take the kareoke version (sans text) of any praise and worship song and ask the average person walking down the street if it is religious music. It sounds just like everything else on contemporary radio stations except that it has religious words (and even this is rather loose at times).
And yet I've literally *never* experienced or witnessed a single instance of P&W that even approaches the dignity required of the temple. I have heard very professional sounding P&W groups and their music... but they are all protestant and their services resemble a rock concert infinitely more than they do any form of liturgy.
As well-executed as this example may be, I confess I still fail to see how having a full praise chorus belting out behind him during the refrain and blasting it all through refrigerator-sized speakers to a stadium full of people makes this any better. In fairness, the text of the song is decent; but it could have just as easily been led as an oration by the clergy.
Again, I reiterate: how is this man trying to sing? What is the style of music? It is fundamentally secular. It is entirely divorced from the musical tradition of the church. Entirely. This should trouble fans of P&W greatly.
I will also admit that Gregorian chant (and polyphony) is an acquired taste.
I find it telling to look at the difference between what Holy Mother Church (sic) says and does.
Chant is a great idea, for people of mature, disciplined faith. Unfortunately many of us worship in communities where the number of people who have reached this level of spiritual maturity is small. Giving meat to babies is a recipe for malnourishment.
But let me venture a proxy: an idiom of singing where omitting accompaniment would leave the music at a very significant loss is an idiom that has problems in Catholic liturgy.
you can't really grapple with why the Catholic Church has continued in its liturgical legislation to give chant pride of place
Just as you find it interesting to see a difference, I find it puzzling (and informative) that one side in this thread keeps coming back to the "fit for liturgy" argument, while the other latches on to the "emotional" or "personalist" approach to prayer.
Furthermore, as I've pointed out in previous discussion, this message board is full of people who love the mass settings and other liturgical music of Bach and Mozart. I'm curious how many people on this board are willing to be consistent enough with their stated principles to condemn the use of all this music for being secular.
I think this is a false dichotomy. I think that good liturgical music of any genre succeeds in meeting both of these objectives.
Please do not use OCP as an example of Catholic music. It is a money-making enterprise and is almost in the category of "he that should not be named."
. A profit motive should help them to make music that people want rather than push ideologically motivated music that people don't want.
and on the eighth day, G-d created Auto-Tune.
(I'm probably bringing nothing new to the table here.)
Good point, never-the-less. Much of that music is not "singable" for amateurs
Wished it had been like that this morning... I had a free Sunday and attended Mass in my own parish church for the first time in months, looking forward to the schola cantorum singing that I was member of for twelve years. It was like hell - they didn't even manage to keep the (by now) well-known tunes of the propers of Gaudete Sunday nor the 'old-Solemnes' rhythm (let alone anything more elaborate). Pastor thanked them afterwards for their inspiring singing, I guess there were not many PIPs who would agree... could have been quite different if only the choirmaster had asked me to join in after spotting me in the pew...I would joyfully abandon anything but chant if it meant that musical abuses ceased universally. A purely chanted monastic liturgy, with perhaps some organ, sounds absolutely heavenly to me
An aside: When we're speaking of the 'personalist' element in contemporary music, does that include the technical side as well as the emotional side? Because what I've noticed in singing from the WLP recently is just how virtuosic a lot of the entries are. The irregular rhythms, the word underlay changing from verse to verse, a lot of non-intuitive jumps - it's not that the music itself is bad per se, they just don't make sense as congregational pieces. (I'm probably bringing nothing new to the table here.)
one could with equal fairness argue that traditional choirs resemble classical baseball stadiums because of the organ
Hymnody is largely Protestant in origin, but most of us would say that hymnody has positively contributed to the life of the Church.
Going from music for the Mass to music for adoration according to this logic seems like a major stretch to me. Liturgy of the Hours is a liturgy of the Roman Rite, yet hymns are sung in the Liturgy of the Hours.
Liturgy of the Hours is a liturgy of the Roman Rite, yet hymns are sung in the Liturgy of the Hours. Basically, I don't think that chant having the pride of place in the Mass tells us anything about what kinds of devotional music are appropriate for adoration. In fact, it is customary to end adoration with Holy God We Praise Thy Name, which is very much not Gregorian Chant.
Be careful about setting standards that your own preferred styles of music can not meet. A significant amount of traditional liturgical music is secular music with a religious text. Some examples would be O God Beyond All Praising (set to the tune of Jupiter by Gustav Holst), What Child Is This (set to the tune of English folk song Greensleeves), Be Thou My Vision (set to the Irish folk tune Slane), and Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee (set to Beethoven's 9th Symphony). Furthermore, as I've pointed out in previous discussion, this message board is full of people who love the mass settings and other liturgical music of Bach and Mozart. I'm curious how many people on this board are willing to be consistent enough with their stated principles to condemn the use of all this music for being secular.
For those who don't know or can't imagine what P&W music at adoration is like, click here:
https://youtu.be/IXXDUQWhv5M?t=3047
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.