communion practicalities
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,490
    Alright, I know that there are a million threads on this, but:

    I've read this one, which applies to the NO, but we have a TLM high Mass, and when we do the NO, we don't have EMHCs, both at the weekly NO Mass and when we must supplant a high Mass with the NO.

    Currently we are not in the loft. The schola men receive after the acolytes (and any seminarians, because of their dignity) but before any boys just sitting there "in choir". We start the proper with verses. That is sufficient time for the lay Catholics to start; we have enough non-Catholics and schola men to cover the voices of the motet, either a setting of the communio like the Isaac propers, or something else, to which we sometimes add psalm verses (a bit odd, but hey, the timing has worked well).

    There is also no organ.

    But we will return to the loft at some point (well, I hope):

    my plan would be short 3vv motets (SSA would be nice, but also SAT or SAB, because we have schola men and should have a paid section leader who can cover the male voice) while the men receive, then we sing the proper with verses while the women receive, and by that point we can start a motet of some kind, then organ.

    On holy days, this should work, as we get a Sunday-like crowd albeit on the low side. Weeknights that are not a HDO…it's tight. I'm thinking of moving organ to the front, receive at once, do fauxbourdon verses (especially days where a good communio hasn't been put up on CPDL: Holy Thursday, where there's no organ anyway, Corpus Christi, and St Joseph in Paschal Tide/votive Mass of St Joseph are great examples…), then do the motet.

    So there are really two questions here particularly for TLM folks or very high Brompton-style NO: one, how do you do communion? two, do you have a subset do a motet (equal or unequal voices alike), and how does that work out? We've never done that before, and frankly, I'd also like to have the men singing motets as well, we just haven't had the right mix as we don't have enough voices to support each part. But I think that we have a paid singer who is quite capable, and we also wish to train up one of the women parishioners who's an excellent musician and needs some experience.
    Thanked by 1tomjaw
  • We are in the loft and everyone goes down after the Agnus Dei to receive first, with the men of the schola in front. Fortunately the organist has usually received at an earlier mass, so he plays a meditation until the schola is back upstairs and we've caught our breath. If he hasn't received earlier, or it's Lent or Advent, there's quiet for two to three minutes. Then the communion chant with a few verses, then usually an SATB motet during the ablutions.

    It's a just get 'er done approach. I don't particularly want to organize and time different groups, which might change from Sunday to Sunday, and then worry about singers being held up in a line somewhere.

    Imho, whatever the choir's placement, we shouldn't be too concerned about a minute or two of quiet.
  • MatthewRoth
    Posts: 3,490
    We sometimes have a million people in choir for no reason which is why this is a problem, and while we don’t have the biggest church by any stretch it does take a bit to get back up and down.

    I also don’t like to cut off the organist and I try to keep that to weeknights with just chant when we have the organ (so, not right now) where we do the whole psalm as provided by Solesmes with the proper.
  • We sing from the choir loft. During communion, we sing the antiphon once only, followed usually by several motets. I give my singers the option to skip one of the motets. But most of the singers opt to sing everything, and then we have time for the reception of Holy Communion after Mass. The clergy know to expect this, and we have time carved out for it in the Sunday schedule.

    I typically receive at the early-morning Mass, which I play/sing by myself. For that Mass, which is NO, I just go down right after the Agnus and receive first, and come back and do music later. The silence works nicely especially at that Mass.

    Sometimes if we have time after the last motet at the TLM, i will play the organ quietly (when in season) and the singers who are so inclined go down then. Most often, this only covers the ablutions, and the singers receive afterwards as described above.
    Thanked by 1tomjaw