Only with a return to the strict understanding of what Catholic culture was and putting it back into effect can culture in the Catholic church be restored.
Is it a good idea to cover more music than the choir can handle and sacrifice quality?
My choir director decided to program a different choral setting every Sunday last year. Many of the settings were a cappella setting, but our choir is not good with a cappella music at all.
in a co-dependent relationship [with a soprano]. Neither of them would want to leave because they won't find another church that pays so well. She brings in a big donation from a third party every year for the music program. He needs a place to stay over on Saturdays; her apartment is close by. In return, she gets many more solos/weddings/funerals than other professional choir members. It's all too complicated.
This is another reason why all of us long-time choir members can't do anything. We don't want the choir to collapse completely.
No, they don't...they sing music that they have sung before while learning some new music over a period of time. Rarely do they sing more than an anthem and responses. The hymns in protestant churches are rarely unfamiliar - if they are the person that chooses them gets chewed out, and your dislike for Anglican chant psalms indicates that you've failed to master and understand this glorious manner of singing psalms.Just pointing out that in most protestant churches,
No, they don't...they sing music that they have sung before while learning some new music over a period of time. Rarely do they sing more than an anthem and responses
No, they don't...they sing music that they have sung before while learning some new music over a period of time. Rarely do they sing more than an anthem and responses. The hymns in protestant churches are rarely unfamiliar - if they are the person that chooses them gets chewed out, and your dislike for Anglican chant psalms indicates that you've failed to master and understand this glorious manner of singing psalms.
Quite a few list members have worked and do work as professionals in protestant churches where it is rare for the music, even in the most humble ones, to sink as low as the guitar masses still pervasive in some Catholic parishes.
Catholic churches are often toxic places to work as musicians; protestant churches rarely are. It is as difficult to get fired in a protestant church as it is easy to get fired in a Catholic church.
Now you have music which is not sung well for the sake of variety. I'm not sold. It sounds very stressful.
My instinct is to go for quality instead of quantity. But I don't know if I'm being too picky here. Of course, we can't expect a non-professional choir to sing those a cappella Mass settings like the pros. Losing pitch is a common problem for non-professional choirs. Should I be content that we attempt them and can sort of pull them off at Mass? Is it unreasonable for me to expect a higher level of performance? Mind you, the average parishioners would not notice most of the mistakes and would be happy to hear most of the choral music. (A more likely complaint would be the organ being too loud.)
No, they don't...they sing music that they have sung before while learning some new music over a period of time.
Well, I'm sorry, but I bet I've sung in way more protestant churches than you have
licit AND ridiculous
Notice the rationale of the terminus of contentment that serves the programming of different ordinaries weekly. Look at the somewhat cynical regard for the faithful in the pews that abets the drive to exhibit talent and repertoire over service to the liturgical events and actions.
Have you shared among yourselves, even with the ringers and director, why you're doing what you're doing?
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