Adam… yes, I have been aware of the project, and I applaud your efforts. I would wonder about a couple of things however. I certainly am happy that the amateur choir at your parish is capable of this.. I am certain however, that much of its success has to do with your leadership, and your competence in this genre. I am thinking of the average choir director who comes to many workshops that I present, volunteer, not a great musical background, can sometimes barely stumble through “Holy, God We Praise Thy Name.” I see very little possibility of her, and many others in a similar situation being able to even READ the chant notation that you provide, let alone present in a way that would be pleasing at all, let alone possible for this assembly to join in.
Again – if these work, that is wonderful and I applaud it. But I still do not believe that this approach is necessary and the only possibility for “right worship.”
I am just so baffled as to why it is so difficult for some to embrace the wondrous galaxy of styles and expressions in our church, for which V2 by the way, affirmed and celebrated?
I mean it when I say, the project you are involved with is laudable. I am anxious to see how it is received as time goes by, and how it can be transfered in a wide variety of settings.
I am thinking of the average choir director who comes to many workshops that I present, volunteer, not a great musical background, can sometimes barely stumble through “Holy, God We Praise Thy Name.” I see very little possibility of her, and many others in a similar situation being able to even READ the chant notation that you provide, let alone present in a way that would be pleasing at all, let alone possible for this assembly to join in.
I am certain however, that much of its success has to do with your leadership, and your competence in this genre.
The keyboard accompaniments for most of David Haas's compositions are too hard for the average parish musician.
The propers don't need to be sung by the congregation. They are for the choir or cantor. The ordinary are the parts for the people.
I think that the only thing that would stop people from singing these is a refusal to learn.
They stick too slavishly to chant shapes that do not sit well with the English language. For example, an excessive use of the torculus which not only becomes tedious but sounds and feels artificial with an English text.
Now, I think that this can work if the torculus is not sung like three independent notes "ha-ha-ha", but is sung like an ornamented punctum, very smooth and legato, slightly quicker than three punctum. This is the way that I have trained my amateur choirs to sing the neume and the result is a beautiful flowing line that has interest and variety, and a degree of melodic ornament amidst such a simple idiom.
However... if singers were to sing the torculus like "ha-ha-ha" every time, I could see how it could become tedious.
They also have been pressured FOR YEARS to publish a yearly missalette publication, like most of the other publishers do. It would make them a lot of money to do so, yet they have resisted, because their philosophy is not in line with that kind of resource. In other words, they could make a lot of money with such a publication (as misalettes outsell hymnals by more than you could imagine), but they don't believe in it, and so they do not publish such a publication.
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