But this setting sounds like something from an early-80s Chicago album.
I could hardly believe the composer acknowledged that movies were the inspiration for a Mass setting. Does he not realize the inappropriateness of using music inspired by pop entertainment and pop musical soundtracks for a setting of the Mass ordinary?
"braveheart meets back to the future" ?
Does he not realize the inappropriateness of using music inspired by pop entertainment and pop musical soundtracks for a setting of the Mass ordinary?
8. Indeed, though we are sorely grieved to note, on the one hand, that there are places where the spirit, understanding or practice of the sacred liturgy is defective, or all but inexistent, We observe with considerable anxiety and some misgiving, that elsewhere certain enthusiasts, over-eager in their search for novelty, are straying beyond the path of sound doctrine and prudence. Not seldom, in fact, they interlard their plans and hopes for a revival of the sacred liturgy with principles which compromise this holiest of causes in theory or practice, and sometimes even taint it with errors touching Catholic faith and ascetical doctrine.
To be fair, this isn't something alien to music prior to the Council. One example, di Lasso's Missa Entre vous filles is based on Clemens non Papa's 16th century equivalent of "Baby Got Back".
Jeff Ostrowski has commentary on what he has dubbed "Missa Back to the Future".
It's like the composer couldn't decide between duple and triple meter, so he said "Why not both?"
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