The English language,with its monosyllables and barking/grunting diphthongs and fricatives, demands a different musical style than that composed for Latin, or Slavonic, or anything else.
If one wishes for something to sound beautiful he will render it so. If one wishes to discredit something he will, likewise, do so with a mocking and deliberately offensive example.
And it's true; English, as a descendant of Old Norse, is filled up with the sharps Scandinavian sounds.
English ... it's much more difficult to sing well.
So is English, but it's much more difficult to sing well.
http://hosted.verticalresponse.com/309773/f6b75c4fbc/1472628249/26053b7317/I would not be surprised if chant gains traction in the OF, English wins out over Latin. I say that, having witnessed a similar transformation in my Eastern Church. The chant texts were set to English and sung to the Slavonic melodies. I could be wrong, but...and who knows, really.
[Latin] It's a pleasant language to sing. So is English, but it's much more difficult to sing well.
In June of 1964, the Pittsburgh Diocese sponsored a national workshop with the World Library of Sacred Music (WLSM). Among the many features of this workshop were discussions about the challenges of setting English to music and the art of adapting Gregorian chant melodies to fit the English words.
To participate in the discussions on Catholic church music, sign in or register as a forum member, The forum is a project of the Church Music Association of America.