Responsorial Psalm
  • I've never seen this before...

    1. Cantor (or somebody) from the loft sings the refrain
    2. Everyone repeats the refrain
    3. Seems pretty normal, right?
    4. ENTIRE CONGREGATION reads the verse aloud
    5. Everyone repeats the refrain
    6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 ad nauseam

    Unless I'm completely mistaken there is no way this is appropriate.
  • A thing can be quite common and still inappropriate.

    Ideas like this one proceed from a broken notion of "active" participation.
    Thanked by 1francis
  • Indeed. GIRM 61 states:

    "It is preferable for the Responsorial Psalm to be sung, at least as far as the people’s response is concerned. Hence the psalmist, or cantor of the Psalm, sings the Psalm verses at the ambo or another suitable place, while the whole congregation sits and listens, normally taking part by means of the response."

    And the General Introduction to the Lectionary 20 says about the Responsorial Psalm:

    "In responsorial singing, which, as far as possible, is to be given preference, the psalmist, or cantor of the psalm, sings the psalm verse and the whole congregation joins in by singing the response."
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,482
    licit and ridiculous?
    Thanked by 1Ben
  • I'm pretty sure I know what parish this is. It's in my backyard ... literally.
  • If it's against the rules, I understand that, but as a method (licit or illicit) of praying the psalm, I don't know what about it can be termed ridiculous.

    Our Book of Common Prayer (Episcopal) lists four suggested ways of saying or singing the psalms: responsorial, antiphonal (back and forth, verse by verse, between two groups), responsive (back and forth between leader and all), or unison. Unison is recommended when reciting the psalm without music after the first reading at Mass. Would that all of these methods (and more) could be licit in GIRM and other Roman Catholic liturgical rules. I like the Notre-Dame de Paris method at Vespers (I know this isn't Mass, but it could work well at Mass): refrain sung and repeated; cantor chants first verse, people chant second, through the whole psalm, and then refrain at the end.

    I don't like responsorial psalmody unless the refrain and the music for it are provided to all. Having to remember the words and music is a big distraction.

    Yes, I realize this is the only licit way to do it in RC rules. (I remember saying the responsorial psalm in the RC parish of my youth: no music...everyone said the refrain together and then recited the psalm, plowing through the text to the end, not repeating the refrain...even then I thought that was odd, but then a lot of things were odd when we got the Monthly Missalette in 1970).
  • Yes, I realize this is the only licit way to do it in RC rules.

    Interesting that in the NO Mass, this is the place that they draw a hard and fast rule.
  • ronkrisman
    Posts: 1,394
    Interesting that in the NO Mass, this is the place that they draw a hard and fast rule.

    Really? The "it is preferable" in GIRM 61 is an accurate translation of the Latin praestat. Both in English and in Latin, when some course of action is "preferable," there is some (at least implicit) alternate course of action which, in this case, is reciting.

    If the GIRM had intended to "draw a hard and fast rule," it would have used the Latin verb debet/debent (it/they must). There are 20 norms in the GIRM which use that verb.

    Chanting the responsorial psalm is preferred, but reciting it is not illicit.
  • It's the mixture of sung and read in one prayer that seems so odd and ridiculous.
    But I feel that way a lot at the OF of the mass. The most jarring (sometimes plain funny) IMO is when the Embolism is spoken by the celebrant, and followed by an uptempo, extended and loud choral Amen (amen!!! amen! amen!! aaaaaameeennnnn!!!) with organ.
    It's like saying hello to a neighbor and getting a high-pitched brass quartet and soprano mini-aria back at you. Weird.

    It's a problem of fluidity and proportion, of elevated cantillation and more commonplace spoken delivery. And it's bound to happen in a "now we're singing and now we're not" off-and-on, my turn, your turn approach to the mass as we try and progress to actual sung liturgy.
    Thanked by 2ScottKChicago BruceL
  • It's a problem of fluidity and proportion, of elevated cantillation and more commonplace spoken delivery. And it's bound to happen in a "now we're singing and now we're not" off-and-on, my turn, your turn approach to the mass as we try and progress to actual sung liturgy.


    That used to be (and maybe still is) a common experience in Lutheran liturgy, where a fully chanted service is provided but the pastor speaks his bits, answered by all singing with organ.
  • matthewjmatthewj
    Posts: 2,700
    The parish I grew up at in Canada did this during Advent and Lent. The rest of the year the entire Psalm was read by everyone, including the refrains. It wasn't until I became a Music Director at 16 that I found a place where the Psalm was sung every weekend - and only because I insisted upon it.
  • canadashcanadash
    Posts: 1,501
    The parish I grew up at in Canada [read] the entire Psalm ... including the refrains.


    I attended a parish in Canada where this was the norm too. It was very awkward and strange.
  • The psalms were sung then....but the music is lost and the words have been translated so the even the simple rhythmic pattern of the original psalms is gone.

    Are there those up in heaven above listening in torment to what we, both unable to sing them in the original language and having lost the original melodies, do to them?

    Do they rant and rave saying...just read the words. I mean, should Beatles song lyrics be translated and set to new melodies? Should a Wagnerian opera be sung in French to new melodies? Are these not examples of perfection....as were the sung psalms?

    Protestant churches read the psalms frequently - I am subbing for my wife at the Episcopal church Sunday and they read the psalm. It is more effective and represents a higher degree of active participation than the mess it is now.

    No place in the Mass are the people EVER expected to participate with a changeable text. The idiots who came up with this are genuinely stupid and attempted to create something in their own image/imagination rather than merely change the language of the Mass from Latin to the vernacular. How come no one ever says this? Don't you agree?

    מה הם עשו לשיר שלי?
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • Four words:

    Bring Back the Gradual


    Participate in the chant(s) between the reading through meditation.
    Since when was meditation not participation, anyway? Why did I never question this until Prof. Mahrt explained the purpose of the Gradual and I got to meditate on it during the Colloquium?
    Thanked by 1francis
  • canadashcanadash
    Posts: 1,501
    Protestant churches read the psalms frequently


    Do they read the refrains too? I found it awkward because I wasn't used to it, but it was reading the refrain that I found strange, perhaps because the psalms don't have refrains?

    I do agree that singing the refrain is difficult, especially if the cantor isn't great and the congregation doesn't have the right text or melody. Then there is the fact that most people don't read music, which we as musicians often forget. I noticed this a lot this summer when I was away from my parish and found it difficult to participate in the psalm.
  • Good point - they read the psalms as written in most situations....none of this insertion business...I mean, if the psalms were meant to have responses wouldn't they have passed them down that way?

    Some read antiphonally one side than the other....
  • Protestant churches read the psalms frequently

    Do they read the refrains too? I found it awkward because I wasn't used to it, but it was reading the refrain that I found strange, perhaps because the psalms don't have refrains?


    In the Episcopal Church, the Book of Common Prayer contains the complete psalter for liturgical use, and no refrains are given. If the psalter is read from the BCP, typically it's done responsively (leader reads first verse; everyone reads second, and that alternation continues) or in unison (reader reads up to the first asterisk in the middle of verse 1, and everyone reads the rest of the psalm from there).

    Sunday's psalm was 112 (Hebrew numbering). Ten verses to alternate, nice and neat. There should be a distinct pause at the mid-verse asterisk. Some congregations ignore this; others do it very carefully, and newcomers get caught out by barging ahead.

    There is a set of books called Gradual Psalms that gives the Mass psalms for Sundays and holy days in responsorial form in Gregorian-style chant using traditional psalm tones. We used these in my previous parish where I was head cantor, and they worked well there. In my current parish, the schola chants the Gradual (and all the other propers) in Latin from the Graduale Romanum. We do recite the psalms responsively at daily Morning and Evening Prayer in the church, though.
    Thanked by 1canadash
  • Adam WoodAdam Wood
    Posts: 6,482
    One of the issues with Psalm-praying is the issue that all methods of public prayer suffer from: If done perfunctorily, no one gets anything out of it.

    You can have the whole congregation read it in unison, or have a back-and-forth response, or sing it in Swahili to a calypso beat. You can't force people to be engaged.

    In a smaller gathering, or especially at an "optional" gathering (Morning/Evening Prayer, for example), it makes sense to me to have the congregation pray the psalm- either in unison reading or to a simple Psalm tone.

    At Mass, on the other hand, especially in a large parish, it seems to me that the difficulty of getting a whole congregation to "read it with meaning" is a hurdle that is unlikely to ever get cleared (in most places). For this reason, I am fan of either the Gradual, or something very like it, or Anglican chant, or something like it. That is to say- I think the Psalm in public liturgy should be done by people who are "pro." Those in the congregation who are apt to be engaged can still be engaged and pay attention (and maybe sing the antiphon/refrain/response/whatever). Those who not of a mind/spirit to engage will still get the benefit of the ear-wash and the general mode of meditation, and (if sung in English) might even pick up some of what is going on.
    Thanked by 1Andrew_Malton
  • Prayerfully one day singing the Gradual will return to its proper place of being the norm, and we can simply forego the Responsorial Psalm.
  • BruceL
    Posts: 1,072
    As MaryAnn said, the mix of sung-and-said is just awful. It is so disappointing when a parish begins this practice of deacon-or-somebody-says-a-petition and the congregation answers with a sung response. Not only has this never been part of the Latin Rite liturgy, but it doesn't make sense! Sing them both or say them both. Don't be unnatural.
  • Just like the issue of a cantor giving a small cue for the people to come in, I've never understood why the responsorial pslam - and the loathing of it - has become one of the darling causes of those who view themselves "traditional," "conservative," or "orthodox."

    And I'm not sure what makes the gradual better; Chant the psalm with psalm tone verses and a singable refrain. Not sure what about that does violence to the traditional roman rite.
    Thanked by 1Gavin
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    PGA, it might have something to do, on the part of those who view themselves "traditional", "conservative," or "orthodox," with a kind of PTSD as regards certain genres of music used for the responsorial psalm, particularly those involving bongo-drums.

    I don't think any of us would regard Anglican Chant, Parish Book of Psalms, Chabanel Psalms, Lumen Christi Missal psalms, etc., as being inappropriate.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • PGA -

    I won't speak for anyone else, and I don't have a dog in the race because my parish (EF) doesn't have the situation to address, but the problem can be understood from a variety of vantage points.

    1) The Mass is an organic whole, not a mish-mash of unrelated stuff stuck together. It is not, to quote the then Cardinal Ratzinger, a perpetual workshop.
    a) There are elements which change, and the traditional name for these is "proper". This does not imply that other things are IMproper; other parts of the Mass are "ordinary", not in the sense of "mundane, dreary, boring", but in the sense of "fixed, set in place"
    b) Even those parts which change must respect the nature of the liturgy, which is public worship of Almighty God. If a Mass is sung, then it should be sung. If it is spoken, it should be spoken; if the "choir" or the "congregation" are required to sing their parts, then the celebrant should sing also, so that an organic whole is preserved. (Others have illustrated this.)
    c) The Mass is an organic whole throughout time, not merely in our era. Just as the Communion of Saints involves the saints of all generations past, and the doctrine of the Church is unchanging in essentials over time, so the liturgy is by its nature stable, and must be allowed to be so.

    Seen from this vantage point, speaking the psalm at a spoken Mass makes sense, and singing the psalm at a sung Mass makes sense, but singing only the antiphon makes none.

    2) "Finally, there must be no innovation unless the good of the Church surely requires it", says the Second Vatican Council.

    Seen from this perspective, the use of a Responsorial Psalm needs to be explained as surely necessary. Mind you, so must the removal of the prayers at the foot of the altar, the Leonine prayers, and all sorts of other "innovations", but I digress.

    3) There's a principle that nothing profane may be introduced into the Liturgy.

    Most of the new compositions (in this case, the psalms) are intentionally written not to sound like churchy music, stuff used to worship God, but rather to entice the participation of the faithful. I don't mean that I like or dislike them in themselves, but rather that however much I like the saxophone, there are places it would be utterly inappropriate. When Palestrina (to name just one) used melodies from secular (or, profane) sources, he - by his compositional work - made them worthy to bear the weight of the worship of God. If the last 40 years of composition had intended to make new melodies and forms suitable to the worship of God, this would be one thing; instead, mostly, they were written to serve "the needs of our own day" or "our community" or "the new Church" or whatever, but not God.

    St Patrick didn't introduce Gaelic styles of music into the liturgy, and the Mexicans and Spaniards didn't use mariachi bands at Mass. Then, the dam broke, and what was right and proper within its own sphere was suddenly introduced where it was not fitting, and did not belong.


  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    BruceL, I agree with your former ire with instructions for the deacon to recite the Kyrie tropes with a sung Kyrie/Lord... following, it is disrupting. I do not agree with your second scenario as the Universal Prayer, whether recited or canted, just requires clean elocution, which then can be finished by an intoned invocation "Let us (all) pray" sung 1-1-2-7, with "Lord, hear our prayer." 7-6-7-1." Smooth as silk and it works the first time and every time with any congregation.
    If we, for example, cannot persude the pastor or other celebrants to chant the Our Father (first degree of MS) then we can be licitly innovative in the brick by brick, progressive solemnity ideal such as I mention for the UP, just to remind folks that we chant our prayers. It is not always either/or.
  • OK, CGZ first of all I'm quite acquainted with what the proper and the ordinary are, although I understand not all are. Secondly, I agree with the assertions regarding spoken vs. sung liturgy - and namely, I think that the example in question which started this thread is absurd. I agree - either sing it or say it, not both. Although not illicit, it doesn't make sense either.

    Now let's dig into the meat of your argument, which you present as numbers 2 and 3. You talk about innovation, but I don't believe that the psalm is innovation as suggested by the context of that quote. The psalm is the first choice of the GIRM and was placed into the liturgy by the Church. The removal of the prayers at the foot of the altar is not an "innovation" in the sense of a rogue innovation. They were removed by the Church, which surely has the right to change the liturgy, although priests, bishops, the laity, and anyone else do not have that right.

    As for number 3, I completely agree with you. Like settings of the ordinary or anything else, music composed for psalm responses must be worthy of the liturgy. In my own parish I use, primarily, the Gelineau and Guimont settings of the psalms. They, I believe, accomplish BOTH ideals: They are easy for the congregation to sing, thus they enable active participation, AND they use chant elements (modality) and actual chanted verses, which accomplishes the ideal that the music be truly sacred and bear resemblance to chant.

    So - again - what do you have against the psalm? It sounds like you have something against inappropriate SETTINGS of psalms, and rightfully so. But what about the CONCEPT do you not like? Do you claim that it is an innovation? I submit that it is a lawful one, made by the Church, and one which the Church had every right to impose on her own liturgy.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Wasn't the Gradual a corruption of what was originally a psalm? The psalm is not an innovation, but a lawful restoration by competent authority. That has nothing to do with certain composers writing terrible music for psalms.
    Thanked by 2Adam Wood jeffinpa
  • In case anyone thinks I'm a rad trad (that amuses me greatly!) I was speaking about the Gradual in the OF. It is perfectly licit and suitable in either form of the mass. It is still included in the 1974 Graduale Romanimum. If sacred music is the greatest treasure of the Church, the Gradual is by virtue of its elaborate beauty and meditative force, the crown jewel of that treasure.

    Wasn't the Gradual a corruption of what was originally a psalm? The psalm is not an innovation, but a lawful restoration by competent authority.


    With due respect, the view that the Resp. Psalm as we use it today was a widespread practice of ancient Christians is widely disbelieved among liturgical scholars, and has been for decades.

    Those interested in the origins and aim of the Resp. Psalm might do well to consult Prof. Mahrt and his papers on the subject.

    Lest I be dismissed as trad (not a very charitable or intellectually honest approach, btw), let me say that I sing Resp. Psalms when asked, and I've composed them. I'm not entirely anti. I just think the Gradual is far more meditative, beautiful, and authentic to the sung liturgy.
    Thanked by 1CHGiffen
  • PGA,

    Let me concede that not everything which has been composed since the most recent Council is hideous like Medusa.

    I'm glad that we agree that inappropriate settings are inappropriate.

    The responsorial psalm as it is practiced in a supermajority of parishes doesn't help the "active" participation of the faithful.

    "ACTIVE" doesn't require visibly doing something. In so far as the Responsorial Psalm contributes to the idea that it does require "doing something" -- like laymen distributing Holy Communion or girls serving at the altar on the grounds that the laity need to DO something -- it is a bad idea, regardless of how licit it is. Can it be sung well? I think it can, but it isn't in most places in part because of other extensions of Mass being about the people and their participation, most notably microphones. Are microphones, per se, evil? I don't think so. Does the liturgy require microphones? Absolutely not.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    I don't think the psalm as sung in parishes today was a widespread practice. The psalm as sung scripture was definitely widespread and authentic, as is still seen and heard in the eastern churches. The Gradual was a derivative of the psalm.

    Rad trad? Never heard that one before. Although I do think some EF folks I've met have an agenda that idealizes everything in the EF, whether authentic or a corruption of early church practice. It was a council, not some OF enthusiasts, that decided the Roman Rite needed reform. Restoring the Psalm was a great idea, I think. Perhaps the application has suffered a bit.
  • "Corruption" is the wrong word, to the point of outrage. If you know anything at all about the repertoire, however could you call the Graduals "corruption"? It means "rotting".

  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    The responsorial psalm as it is practiced in a supermajority of parishes doesn't help the "active" participation of the faithful.

    cgz, what statistical evidence do you possess that enables you to know how the psalm response A. is actually practiced in any quantity of parishes, and; B. Any such practice helps or, by impllication, hinders the AP of the PiPs?
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Corruption has many meanings that are not so hysterical, although in context it could be used that way. When I use the term, I mean non-authentic changes that have crept in over time. It happens to language, art, and some would argue music, as well. It is an accurate term when used to note a deviation from the ideal.
  • And the ideal was what, the recitation of a whole psalm? and the Gradual is to be understood as a deviation? A departure from the ideal way?

    Of course changes occur over time, that's the glory of art and history, not to mention liturgy. But you still now have the Gradual (and we are discussing music, not just the low Mass practice of reciting the Gradual verse) being a "non-authentic" (unauthorized? unruly??) creature, of stealth and creeping.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Hardly that extreme. The Gradual did become something, although lovely, that the congregation might have great difficulty singing. That was one of the problems with the unrevised pre-Council liturgy. It was beautiful, but difficult enough that it became the realm of technicians who performed it. Granted, it was change over time, but was it ideal or even beneficial to the congregation? Opinions will vary on this, as I would expect.

    Have you looked at Chabanel psalms, or the works of other CMAA composers? I would hardly call those inferior in any way. They do a good job of reverently presenting authentic scripture texts to good liturgical music.
  • SalieriSalieri
    Posts: 3,177
    I want to say something about the congregation singing the propers and the purpose of the chants between the readings . . . But I'm just going to back slowly out of the room now . . .
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    If your congregation can and will sing propers, then great. Mine won't and they are strictly choir pieces for us. I don't see how it would be possible to fit a Gradual into the structure of an OF mass without ignoring the regulations for the Responsorial Psalm. The OF mass is not structured for some of the components of the EF, and they don't fit.
  • BenBen
    Posts: 3,114
    Well... the gradual is not from the EF. It's just as much of a part of the OF, despite popular practice.

    The introit is from the EF too, but that doesn't make it foreign to the OF. It's used almost as often.
    Thanked by 1Gavin
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    It is a component of the pre-1970 mass. I don't see how it fits with GIRM or any other regulations or directives for the Responsorial Psalm. From my standpoint, I don't see how to make it work on a practical level, or even why I should want to. Introits are a little easier to incorporate.
  • BenBen
    Posts: 3,114
    It is a component of the pre-1970 mass.


    So is the introit. And the consecration.
    Thanked by 2Gavin Adam Wood
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    Introits can be swapped out easily enough with entrance hymns. It can be an exchange or both can be used. The psalm doesn't swap out so easily. There is also a difference in degree between introits and consecrations. Without a consecration, there is no mass, as I understand masses. Without introits, the mass still occurs. Consecrations are of major importance, while introits are minor.
    Thanked by 1Gavin
  • chonakchonak
    Posts: 9,216
    The Gradual is part of the official music of the revised Mass too. The 1970 Ordo Cantus Missae says "After the first reading, the Gradual responsory is said [this includes singing] by the cantors or the choir" [my translation]. And GIRM 61 says (I'm translating from the Latin here): "In place of the psalm assigned in the lectionary the Gradual responsory from the Graduale Romanum, or the responsorial or alleluiatic psalm from the Graduale Simplex can be sung, as described in those books."

    But CharlesW has a point about the practical level: the authentic Gregorian melody of the Gradual responsory makes it a melismatic and reflective piece. It requires great preparation by the singers.
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    Despite adding to thread digression, Ben, I believe the elephant in the room problem is whether there exists any corresponding Graduals in the vernaculars? Sure, the GIRM endorses the use of the Gradual among the options after the first lesson, along with another that allows for the psalmist to chant all the verses in a single unit, so to speak, after the intonation of the response. I suppose one could "gradualize" those verses or somehow apply psalm tones, but in essence, wouldn't you be back to square one: a responsorial version in any case. Any improvised chanting, I would think, comprises an illicit interpretation of the GIRM options.
    Don't quote me on any of this, just remembering lessons learned by Mahrt, who, IIRC, may have endorsed the Latin Gradual usage in the OF should translations be provided.
  • Melofluent,

    I don't have statistics. I don't need them. Look at the giant publishing houses. (How did they get so large?) The music they produce, by its nature, can't help because it is designed to not lift our minds to the holy. (Don't take my word for it. If you ask whether the music is designed to help congregations adore and worship God, you're likely to get completely hostile results. Of course, you could just look at the music and the bowdlerized words of the psalter, but I digress.) Is the purpose of this music to lift the hearts and minds of the faithful to worship God? If it isn't, and if it isn't to worship God either, then how CAN it, by its nature or by its performance, possibly aid the active participation of the people in the pews? As we heard this Sunday, "God is not mocked".

    (Seeing the missiles coming in from various quarters)....

    What can, affectively, please the senses could theoretically be used for PRIVATE devotion, but not everything which can/could be used privately should be used publicly.





  • Melofluent,

    I believe the elephant in the room problem is whether there exists any corresponding Graduals in the vernaculars?


    The vernacular is optional. Base, common, popular, but optional.

    Why intentionally create second-class Catholics?

    Ben,

    And the consecration.


    You do know that there are some who want to downplay such a thing because it can't be done by all the people?
  • melofluentmelofluent
    Posts: 4,160
    Well, at least you reveal the true objective openly, and that is commendable, cgz. You'll have to have a seance to have your theoretical question above answered.
    Meanwhile, in the real world of now...
    The larger point is that none of us can make global pronouncements about the "state of the ....(whatever)" without being omniscient or having deduced a conclusion through the accumulation of data/evidence for the contention. On general terms, whether by the models of Gelineau, Alstott, Guimont, Oost-Zinner, Ostrowski, Esguerra, Bartlett et al, the responsorial/verse format does, in fact work to some degree. But, when you acknowledge, which you must, the pervasive use of the vernacular (the infamous "Vernie,") no one has produced any criteria for evaluating the "success" of the responsorial psalm, much less the worthiness musically of some over others.

    On your terms, here's where I see your argument is purposefully designed to argue on an uneven platform. Whether or not one agrees that the responsorial psalter texts are "bowdlerized," the exquisite chants of the Gradual in Latin clearly are superior vehicles in service of the texts, most notably when text painting occurs both in melodic motifs or even in the melismatic augmentation down to the syllables of primary words within a whole text. But again, this is primarily an EF thing with the caveat I offer above. Your maxim that the music alone should effectively "lift the hearts and minds of the faithful to worship God" has the cart in front of the horse. The texts we are provided are to be served best by the music we are inspired to create and then utilize. In the OF, not all musics are created equal, but we are the arbiters of whether the text is as artfully and adequately served by its setting. The chanting of the psalm, and for that matter, all the lessons of the Lit/of/Word, cannot solely be adjudicated by the intrinsic nature of the music. The lessons are not moments of performance; that would be counter-intuitive. And I know of at least four parishes whose audible response suggests otherwise to your contention, and I wouldn't presume to qualify that according to your criteria.

    OTOH, I have been to numerous occasions where Morning and Evening prayer is thoroughly rife with recitation of the LOH psalms in alternatim between PiP's on either side of an aisle. And I've never been convinced of that efficacy in the slightest. I just leave it there.
  • CharlesW
    Posts: 11,979
    There is a practical side to what we musicians do in the liturgy. Heaven forbid that we do anything to make the mass longer. As a Byzantine, I am accustomed to sitting through standing through (we don't have pews) liturgies that are 3 hours long. Latins would openly revolt, burn the building, and ride you out of town on a rail if you ran much over an hour. For the most part, they complain that one hour is too long.
  • CHGiffenCHGiffen
    Posts: 5,193
    The texts we are provided are to be served best by the music we are inspired to create and then utilize.

    Precisely.
  • Melofluent,

    As I have asserted before, and as Adam Wood has agreed (mirabile dictu): the volume of a response doesn't measure the "participation".

    Thanked by 1melofluent
  • BruceL
    Posts: 1,072
    BruceL, I agree with your former ire with instructions for the deacon to recite the Kyrie tropes with a sung Kyrie/Lord... following, it is disrupting. I do not agree with your second scenario as the Universal Prayer, whether recited or canted, just requires clean elocution, which then can be finished by an intoned invocation "Let us (all) pray" sung 1-1-2-7, with "Lord, hear our prayer." 7-6-7-1." Smooth as silk and it works the first time and every time with any congregation.
    If we, for example, cannot persude the pastor or other celebrants to chant the Our Father (first degree of MS) then we can be licitly innovative in the brick by brick, progressive solemnity ideal such as I mention for the UP, just to remind folks that we chant our prayers. It is not always either/or.


    Melo, I think this is just an area of taste. I just can't abide that sort of thing with the universal prayer. Yes, you can make it work, no, it is not illicit, but I'm not sure what it accomplishes. I don't believe it does enhance progressive solemnity: ultimately, whether we like it or not, I believe that has to come from the celebrant. I know it's just a difference of opinion, but it was always a novelty in places where I've worked...it never "bore the fruit" of more singing of dialogues, etc.