Southeastern Liturgical Music Symposium - Reviews?
  • I spoke to a very dear friend of mine who was in Atlanta for the Southeastern Liturgical Music Symposium. We talked about how the weekend went. This would have been wonderful to attend. My only misgivings about the event was that Bob Hurd had been invited to speak. The two big draws for me would have been Fr. Lang and Adam Bartlett. I am curious to see if anyone here had gone and what the feedback was, especially for Fr. Lang's talk.
  • PaixGioiaAmorPaixGioiaAmor
    Posts: 1,473
    Don't know about this event specifically, but don't write off Bob Hurd. He wrote some really really awful stuff years ago, but he's written some very legitimate stuff too. He did a mass setting, published by OCP, that is based upon the UBI CARITAS chant.
  • I wish I could be convinced, PGA, but, after hearing Ven al Banquete tonight at Mass, I am not. His Misa del Pueblo Imigrante is something that I was happy that we got rid of in favor of Fr. Spencer's Spanish setting.

    I forgot to mention that Jeff Ostrowski was also a presenter. I would have loved to have heard him, along with Adam and Fr. Lang.

    If Adam and Jeff are reading this, I would love to hear their insights and if they could relay what Fr. Lang said. Maybe CMAA could get Fr. Lang to give a presentation at Colloquium.
  • ryandryand
    Posts: 1,640
    "A is good."

    "No it's not, because B is bad."


    Really?
    Thanked by 2MarkThompson Gavin
  • I'm going to go all broken-record here warning-Just because I don't "like" the contributions of this or that composer to the treasury, doesn't give me the right to stand in judgment of his/her integrity and value to a conference. What does it mean to confer? Do you really want to assemble just among those whose resonance matches your own in groupthink? Please, this is the catholic/Catholic Church.
    Bob Hurd, PhD or not, is not equal to, nor resembles, nor is forensically disabled by his association to "Ven al banquete." Neither is Joncas to OEW.
    When is that reality going to be acknowledged by some stalwart true believers here?
    Yeesh, or in the words of the inimitable Adam Wood, "Goodness!"
    Thanked by 3kevinf Adam Wood Gavin
  • TCJ
    Posts: 990
    I'm guessing never because I think most composers are judged by their works. Just saying...
    Thanked by 1benedictgal
  • Sheer nonsense, TCJ. King Henry VIII was a composer among other things which included adulterer, self-coronated Prince of his own church, a patron of many arts and artists. Which of those hats are you going stand in his judgment? Charles Ives was a life insurance salesman/executive, family man and enjoyed composing in his spare time. Same question.
    If, by that assessment, you were hosting a conference and wanted only a panel of aesthetes whose professional accomplishments were only matched by their lofty manners and tastes, be sure to invite Dr. Hannibal Lecter rather than Blessed Theresa of Calcutta or St. Therese of Liseaux, as their resumes are rather one dimensional and bland.
    Again, yeesh and goodness.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 990
    Depends. If you wanted to to invite Henry VIII to a conference dealing with the best ways to execute one's wife, then of course he'd be a good choice! I guess I can work with your logic.
  • I am not discussing the person of Bob Hurd; I am just wondering why, given his body of work, he would be included in a discussion that pertains to Sacred Music? A lot of his compositions just are not suitable for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Ven al Banquete and O Love of God are more along the lines of the horizontal than the vertical. There is some fuzzy theology going on there, even if some scriptural references are made.

  • RagueneauRagueneau
    Posts: 2,592
    Fr. Lang was incredible.

    I am about to make a post, in case anyone wants to hear the Presentation I gave:



    Given at:

    http://www.archatl.com/offices/odw/events/slms.htm
  • Cool, JMO. I definitely want to hear your presentation. I also want to hear Fr. Lang's. How was his talk received?
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,482
    General Note, regarding the further propagation of sacred music:

    I would suggest that I am representative of the kind of people who are the best "target" (in that regard) for the CMAA, the Chant Cafe, this forum, and the traditionalist movement generally. That is to say: I am a swing voter. I grew up with all the music that gets complained about (Bob Hurd has stayed at my house) and I still like it. On the other hand, over the last few years, my tastes and practices have evolved, largely because of this forum, the Cafe, and the CMAA.

    All of that is preamble to this:

    When I hear examples of amazingly beautiful music, it makes me want to program it. When I find resources for bringing sacred and beautiful music into my own work, I take advantage of them. When I read about the Church's musical ideals, when I learn more about our traditions, and when I get to experience truly sacred liturgy- it makes a huge impact on me and helps "win" me to "the cause."

    However- when I hear disgruntled traditionalists rant about songs I grew up with, the only affect it has on me is to make me want to figure out the soonest opportunity to program them.


    We now return you to your regularly scheduled grumbling.
  • RagueneauRagueneau
    Posts: 2,592
    To my knowledge, Fr. Lang's talk is not available to the public. From what I saw, his talk was very well received.
  • BG, first of all, blessings upon your family in this time, and upon your return to the boards.
    Now, the other shoe.
    You're speaking out of your league here, and you must revisit your own words. You said you'd have misgivings (presumably about attending the conference) BECAUSE BOB HURD WAS INVITED AS A SPEAKER. You didn't mention his work, his lifelong career as a teacher of philosophy at DePaul and at St. Patrick's Seminary, the breadth of his compositional genres beyond that which disgusts you, or of which you remain greatly unaware. You simply dissed Bob Hurd without qualification. That is hardly exemplary of any basic Christian behavior, but particularly egregious because like him, hate him, like all his music, hate all his music, he is a worthy witnessing Catholic Christian who doesn't do what he does to prop up the litmus industrial complex. He's a "good man" with very good theolotgical and liturgical sensibilities. He and Dr. Mahrt would and likely have (had) congenial and concurrent discussions about things liturgical.
    I'm sorry for the rant, but ALL of us need to stop lobbing our refuse from the bleachers, if we want to be invited back to the ball park.
    And yeah, I'm biased, Hurd's slept at our houses in Oakland and in Visalia as well, when Adam was in diapers. He's the real deal, no poseur.
  • The Liturgical Music Symposium was a wonderful event, though I was told that attendance was down from previous years.

    I presented on the Antiphons of the Advent Season and nearly everyone in my sessions seemed to leave with a very strong appreciation for the Propers of the Mass. I took an approach to considering the propers that gets away from the somewhat tired historical critical and legal focuses.

    While I did a lot of ad libbing in this talk, I'm looking at putting together a print version so that others can benefit from this as well.

    The panel discussion at the end, in the words of my friend Jeff Ostrowski, was... unforgettable! (Imagine myself, Jeff, Fr. Lang, Bob Hurd and Ed Bolduc fielding the same questions!).
  • First of all, I would have loved to have heard Fr. Lang, Jeff and Adam speak. Second, one could very well have advanced degrees and teaching experience at various universities, but, that would not necessarily make him the best person to speak on a particular subject. It would almost be likened to having Archbishop Pietro Marini give a presentation on the reform of the reform.

    I grew weary of having to listen to Bob Hurd's compositions week after week in my parish. Not a few of the things that I have had to listen to are more along the lines of the horizontal aspect and scant of the vertical. Furthermore, when OCP uses engaging and dynamic when it comes to promoting Hurd's work, it makes me question it. Charles, if Hurd does have liturgical sensibilities, I wish they would be a little more visible than what I have seen and heard in "Pan de Vida", "O Amor de Dios", "Ven al Banquete" and "Misa del Pueblo Imigrante", as well as "Mass of Glory."

    Maybe I do not have the qualifications that you have or others in this panel possess, but, having had to endure Hurd's compositions for a very long time, it seemed rather odd to have him in the same venue as Fr. Lang, whom I deeply respect and admire and who has some very solid credentials to back up his positions.

    I must commend the Archdiocese of Atlanta for having speakers like Jeff, Adam and Fr. Lang. Maybe Colloquium could consider bringing Fr. Lang to its next gathering.
  • On a more positive note, I am hoping that Fr. Lang's talk will be made available. He is one of my heroes.
  • Adam, maybe it's because I am tired and very discouraged. The musical situation in my parish is deteriorating rapidly and there is no real hope in sight. When one has to put up with Spirit and Song for two Masses and then a lot of Hurd, St. Louis Jesuits and the like, it is a lot to bear.

    I grew up watching Sesame Street and the Electric Company. However, just because I grew up on the stuff, that does not necessarily mean that I still use my fingers and toes to count. I am sorry if I sound harsh, but, some of you do not understand how dismal the situation is down here. The fact that the Archdiocese of Atlanta even had this conference was a good thing. I wish that Texas could have something like that.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,986
    I think there is a huge difference between saying that someone is a bad person, and saying their compositions are not suitable for mass. Hurd may be a splendid fellow, as I suspect are many other composers. Is their work suitable for liturgy? That is the important question.
  • BG and CW, respectfully you are both missing the point. This event was decidedly not a referendum on "Who's a worthy composer....who's got a lick of sense....who's catalog of work is bigger and better than than the other guy's/gal's? I don't give a rip whether if it's Bob Hurd, some PIP from Hoboken, Helen Hull Hitchcock or Gabe Huck, it's a conference, not a rally. And, in politeness, I'd rather "endure" the works penned by Hurd than by Montani, and even C. Rossini and many of the saccharine hacks whose works persevered well into the post conciliar years, if only because of a reactionary nostaligia. BG, I'm not busting your chops on pedantic knowledge or book cred, I'm saying your perspective only is informed by what you experience in south TX. It's your call. Get out and take in the world, or learn how to cope with your own (Cinderella's) "Little corner."
  • @Adam- that panel must have been a hoot! Envious.
  • Charles, I realize that this is a conference; however, if this is about Sacred Music, why should it have to feature more of the same? It's akin to having Peter Kolar and David Haufman. Why invite composers who only perpetuate the bad stuff?
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,986
    Cinderella was also a fan of "Ashes," wasn't she. LOL. I don't have to go to BG's place to find bad music. All I have to do is drive across town. It is everywhere. It would be easy to get discouraged, but do remember those bright spots where things are done as they should be. Adam, that print version sounds like "must" reading.
    Thanked by 1benedictgal
  • Fine. Keep us posted on all that's happening in your corners. It's a big world, it's a big Church, it's a big heaven. Bob Hurd is NOT the same old, same old in my black book. But, hey, taste is in the mouth, revel in what you prefer.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    Guys, I don't mind a good argument. But is there any way it could be a different argument, just once?
  • Hurd may be a splendid fellow, as I suspect are many other composers. Is their work suitable for liturgy? That is the important question.
    Easter Sunday: "I have seen the Lord" Bob Hurd. You know the tune and text? Dare you to lecture me, without resorting to GIRM beyond fourth option, how this isn't suitable for this and other Eastertide liturgies.
    Easter Vigil: "Ps.42 As the deer longs" Bob Hurd. How is this not acceptable, if not after Ezekial or during baptisms? Do you know the setting, truly?
    Similar content: "Come to me and drink" Bob Hurd. An allusion to both the Samaritan woman's encounter and Ps. 42. This isn't suitable how?
    Ubi caritas: perhaps the finest "bridge" setting wedding both the obvious beauty of the Latin maxim, and a healthy Eucharistic exegesis in the verses. Have you prayed over these texts and the elegance of the musical setting?
    "Gift of Love" from Hurd's first major LP, takes the nativity carol and connects it to Calvary, Epiphany to sacrifice? Not suitable enough to a medieval tune?
    Hurd also had his version of "Gaudete" for 3 Advent. Miss that one too?

    Look people, all I'm saying is if you've only looked at the Rotten Tomato's liturgical reviews, or the Cliff's Notes version of Who's Who in Sacro Pop, but you really don't know the extent of any composer's work, or you just associate a name with some really crappy local version of "Pan de Vida" that you endure every other Sunday, or you're an organist who thinks a carousel oom pah pah pipe organ on "Ven al banquete" is the extent of Hurd's invention and demeaning, then please continue to dwell in your ignorance if that keeps you comfortable.
    We have been handed the largest repertoire, such as it all is, of any worshipping community in the history of homo sapiens. Before you start burning books, you might want to look at their contents.
    Chuck, I would have thought you'd get this...
  • GavinGavin
    Posts: 2,799
    "I am just wondering why, given his body of work, he would be included in a discussion that pertains to Sacred Music?"

    Well, you'll never find out if you sit at home.
  • OK, Kathy, please move us elsewhere. What do you have in mind?
  • CenCA-san Charles: Probably the objection is to SacroPop as a whole more than any particular composer. Considering individual works guilty until proven innocent is a more helpful rule of thumb than the other way around.

    Not holding this position, because I can see how even a rule a thumb will besmudge an individual's good name, but surely you can agree that it's a sympathetic frustration.

    (And don't call me Shirley.)
  • Good try, EAF, (and great Airplane levity! Much needed. Thinking of the singing nun doing R-E-S-P-E-C-T during the turbulence.)
    No, I don't accept the premise that Sacropop is a quantifiable entity; I accept the premise that all "stand alone" works must be evaluated on its own merit. I would apply the same premise to Ockeghem or Gesualdo, much less Morales or Victoria.
    Thanks to Doug Shadle helping me see how Nicolai Montani single-handedly ruined his fellow Philadelphian, Albert RoSewig's reputation as a valid Catholic composer via pushing through his black list (with a happy by-product of positioning the St. Gregory hymnal to be among the turn of the century mega hymnals (sound familiar), I have a jaundiced eye towards whole-sale denoument of someone's name via "guilt by association." Be sympathetic when whatevers being led is being led POORLY.
    As a child of the sixties, and now in my sixties, having lived through enough anarchy and stupidity on gi-nourmous scales, I am not willingly drinking anyone's Kool Aid, thank you.
    I choose not to invalidate the exchange of Christhood with whomever knocks at my door. I would choose to worship at a Missa Solemnis or Cantata 10/10 times. But that choice isn't mine as just a DM at a local church. So, I have to think pastorally. And I do so thoroughly without prejudice.
    Thanked by 1E_A_Fulhorst
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    Did Hurd speak about his vision for the opening rites at Mass? The ministers sort of come in on their own, and find their seats in the sanctuary, and I think some things about bowls of incense? I heard that same speech twice, a number of years apart, the second time in 1999. Just wondering if he's moved on to something else. (Musically, obviously not.)
  • francis
    Posts: 10,850
    Tree. Fruit.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    This is not "elegant" music http://www.spiritandsong.com/compositions/16191

    It's purely utilitarian. It's periodic. It's uninteresting. It's not beautiful.
  • Wow, double droll thus twice helpful. "Elegant" also encompasses the aspect of "noble simplicity," a quality that I once thought was attractive to reasonable folk.
    That's taking the argument to a wholly new level and place, huh? I should have known, my bad.
    A proud moment in the CMAA analogs.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    The first word in "noble simplicity" is "noble." This isn't. It's barely music.
  • Helpful to know it's still on, sigh.
    With that surplanting discourse, I choose to withdraw. Live well and prosper.
    Roger, over and out.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    This is the argument that keeps happening here: someone says, gee this music is terrible, or gee, this is a ridiculous pointy-headed liturgical argument. Then, someone (either Charles or David Haas) says, everybody should be much more peaceful.

    The problem with that annoying real estate grab for a fantasy moral high ground is, IT WAS NEVER PERSONAL. It's about music, not people. It's not about meanness or niceness. It's about crappy music, period.
  • TCJ
    Posts: 990
    That Ubi Caritas Est sounds like a perfect target for one of my famous pop-song/hymnody medleys. Okay. Not so famous, but at least a few people know that I do them. Right now there's a movie theme that's on the tip of my tongue that it reminds me, but I just can't place it...
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,986
    Of course it is not about people, it is about the music. Charles, no one is attempting to lecture you. It seems that any question touches off a stream-of-consciousness ramble that may reach a point somewhere, if anyone can follow it for that long. I am not that familiar with Hurd or his work. So when I ask if his compositions are suitable for liturgy, I am asking a legitimate question for that information. Again, he may be a splendid fellow, but what about his music? Haas I am familiar with. I have heard many, many of his works. Not so with Hurd.

    Kathy, I guess we need to hold hands, sing Kumbaya, and hear no evil. The 60s - I guess you had to be there. The problem is that I was there, and it was totally nuts then, and even more absurd in retrospect. A sad time for church music and not a good example to follow. Just when I thought music had gotten as bad as it could be, the St. Louis Jesuits came along and the deterioration in church music continued. I hope it is turning around and getting better. I see an encouraging sign from time to time. But you are correct, it is about crappy music.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    Charles W, I don't think the St Louis Jesuits were a deterioration. Before them, we were literally singing Kumbaya, and Sunrise Sunset, and the Lilies of the Field Amen, and It's a Brand New Day. There was a low point, and it was before the St Louis Jesuits opened the doors to something that was at least scriptural. Hurd and Farrell moved things up a notch. Schiavone and Reza set the bar very high for the genre.

    But it is an inferior genre. It in no way resembles chant. It is not art. And it is hugely about money.

  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,986
    I didn't think so highly of the SLJs at the time, but in retrospect, much worse preceded and has followed them. I still try not to use anything by them. I like chant and fully support its use. However, I know some who can't stand it. It is good that there is a huge body of excellent work from the Anglican tradition that fills in nicely and goes over better with that crowd.
    Thanked by 2Gavin E_A_Fulhorst
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    What SLJ did was to mainstream the genre. Before their time, there was a choir Mass and a folk Mass. Now, in many parishes, there are effectively only folk Masses.
    Thanked by 1irishtenor
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    "To learn who rules over you, simply find out whom you are not allowed to criticize."

    - Voltaire
  • GavinGavin
    Posts: 2,799
    I just don't get what about that composition (which I kind of like) authorizes such nastiness, or a need for the composer (or his supporters) to be bound, gagged, and not allowed to speak.

    I studied organ with a composer of sacred music who has had horrible things said about him on here because of his compositions. So he's not the greatest composer. He also had a significant influence on the quality of music, sacred and otherwise, in the Detroit region. He's a scholar of chant, an extremely orthodox Catholic with a large family, and one of the top choral conductors in Michigan. But, alas, he wrote a few things in the sacro-pop style (which he too struggles to avoid at his own church just as we all do), and so I guess everyone here would skip a lecture where he's presenting, too.

    But you know what? People who would act in such an immature way do so to their own detriment. By all accounts, the SELMC advanced the cause of sacred music scholarship, even if people might have had to filter out some silliness here or there. You know who didn't help?

    Those who stayed home because "the Bad Man was speaking."
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    Gavin, how would you compare your teacher's body of work, his influence, as a whole, with Bob Hurd's?

    No one is suggesting binding or gagging, by the way.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    So I've been so circumspect (not) on this thread so far that I thought I would just come right out and say what I think.

    Sacred music is competing for market share, for airtime, for the time spent at Mass singing. Sacred music is losing. Sacred music has probably always lost. But in our time sacred music is uniquely disadvantaged, because there are financially interested structures of distribution that strongly favor sacred music's competition.
    Thanked by 1E_A_Fulhorst
  • kevinfkevinf
    Posts: 1,200
    My dear Kathy,

    Sacred music has made more gains in the last ten years than in the previous 30 (Okay, I am giving away my age). This is the BEST time I have ever experienced in the church since I entered our hallowed profession (1981). There are conversations going on that would have never happened 20 or even 10 years ago (note the gathering in Atlanta, from whence I just moved.).
    I do not disagree about market share. But if you think of it in those terms, than you have to be willing to market it in the same way as the other elements do. We have to represent ourselves clearly, charitably and positively in the marketplace. We are no different than anyone else. But our "product" has a power that can change lives, move people to action and lead souls to eternity. Not a bad product, I think.

    My .02 ( really only worth about .01)
    Thanked by 2Kathy CHGiffen
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,482
    >> But in our time sacred music is uniquely disadvantaged

    I disagree.

    Perhaps compared to the Middle Ages or something, yes.
    But compared to living memory...

    Sacred Music tends to be free (as in beer AND as in speech), which is a HUGE plus for people of my generation (on both philosophical/cultural and practical grounds), easily available, and (compared to the past) easy to learn on one's own.

    I don't have time to go on and on about it right now, but I think Sacred Music is stronger than ever. It may continue to be in the minority for a while, but doesn't mean it isn't gaining market share.
  • Gavin, I do not have the money nor have I acquired the necessary paid time off to go to conferences (as much as I would like to do so). What I have heard is what I have been subjected to in my parish week in and week out. There is only so much of Ven al Banquete, Pan de Vida and Misa de Pueblo Immigrante that a person can take.

    Charles in CenCa, this was never a personal attack on Hurd. My concern is that if we are to try and recover some semblance of the sacred back into our liturgical music, why invite composers whose work does the complete opposite and who works with a publishing house that does not seem to share in the same vision of sacred music as Pope Benedict XVI?

    When I started this thread, I was mostly interested in what Jeff, Adam and Fr. Lang had to say since they are the experts here. Fr. Lang is probably the most qualified of all because of his work and because of his experience.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,986
    I suspect the reason I am not so familiar with Hurd, is that I don't buy from his publisher. BTW, I have no idea who that publisher is. Although my parish has a GIA hymnal, all of my anthems, motets, etc. that the parish pays for are ordered through J.W. Pepper. I use tons of free stuff from CPDL. Didn't notice any Hurd works on CPDL.
  • Kathy
    Posts: 5,515
    "OCP administers more than 20,000 music copyrights, has published hundreds of collections of music and more than 1,500 octavos/sheet music. Currently, two-thirds of the parishes in the U.S. subscribe to one of OCP's missal programs. Besides its publishing efforts, OCP conducts more than 400 workshops each year in parishes and dioceses across the country. OCP also exhibits its products and services at many conventions, conferences and trade shows." http://www.ocp.org/about/history