I’m in my first year as a parish music director and would really appreciate some guidance from those with more experience.
Over the past year, I’ve made a couple of structural changes that I believed were necessary: We moved music to the loft (partly out of necessity with parish choirs being formed, partly to support the formation of clearer understanding of the role of musicians in the liturgy).
I introduced a seasonal rotation of generally well-known Mass settings, since previously it was essentially a free-for-all depending on who was playing.
Since then, we’ve experienced some turnover: One set of musicians left, largely due to the move to the loft and not being visible.
One of our accompanists passed away, and her daughters (who also sang) have understandably not returned.
Another accompanist recently stepped down due to workload.
Several remaining musicians prefer to serve only about once a month.
We didn’t have a lot of musicians to begin with (especially accompanists). Now, we are stretched very thin trying to cover three weekend Masses, and I am personally taking on as much as I can while also feeling increasingly overwhelmed.
I’m also running into challenges with the seasonal Mass setting rotation. Some musicians are uncomfortable learning multiple settings and aren’t willing to take the time/ don’t have the ability to learn more than the one singular setting they picked and have stuck with from the get-go. I’ve been trying to be flexible by allowing that while gradually introducing the others, but I worry about pushing too hard and losing more people. I don’t want to go back on the effort to have seasonal rotation, but maybe I should??
At the same time, I know I need to begin preparing the parish musicians for a longer-term transition from OCP to Source and Summit (targeting Advent 2028). That will require: Ongoing formation in the purpose of sacred music
A clearer understanding of liturgical appropriateness
Gradual exposure to new materials (antiphons, different repertoire, etc.)
I’ve started introducing some of this in small ways, and the move to the loft helped frame the conversation, but I’m very hesitant to add more right now when people are already stretched thin.
I feel caught between: Not wanting to overwhelm or lose more musicians
Knowing that I still need to lead, form, and move things forward
Have any of you navigated a similar situation? How did you balance necessary change with limited volunteer capacity? How did you introduce new musical or liturgical expectations without causing burnout? What would you prioritize in a situation like this: stability, formation, or gradual change? I would really appreciate any practical advice or perspective. Thank you.
Your musicians will respond to your interest in their service and how much you can appreciate what they already know. Do not let any one know you are changing anything. my experience: Using one set of psalm tones for the last 18 years has helped our whole parish. We are equipped to take on any liturgical text on the spot and sing it with dignity.
Are you an organist? If not, are there any paid organists on staff? If they are paid, they need to accept your changes and practice the new music. Seasonal ordinaries are hardly a difficult burden. I guess maybe I don't clearly understand the situation? Personally I wouldn't sweat the turnover. Just hire an organist, if you are not an organist. Maybe I'm just hardened, but in my opinion, real musicians should pretty much just go along with the program. Older "choir ladies" who've been there forever and always talk about Phil, the greatest director they ever had - well, they'll complain about anything and everything.
Also, you are far better off not having those "musicians" who quit because they were no longer able to be seen during Mass, due to the move up to the choir loft. That is repulsive.
Maybe providing a little more information about your personal musical background and skills would help? And about what the scope of your job responsibilities are?
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