With new hymns, I have found that I need to repeat much more often than I would like, in order to get strong singing.
If you have an opportunity to teach children, I have found that to be a very effective way to introduce change.
Don’t transition faster than the church. Push for following the missal; get interpretations of the girm in writing from the diocese to back what you say. Chatechize the committee. Reconcile yourself to them first.
I'm surprised at the advice not to do catechetical sessions--it's something the priest has encouraged, as well as the faith formation staff here.
I've been trying repeating hymn tunes with different texts and cycling them so there's at least some chance at variety.
I have said this before, but before introducing a new hymn I would play it for several weeks as an incidental piece during offertory or communion. Then I would have the choir or cantor sing it from time to time. Lastly, the congregation would recognize it and eventually start singing it. Takes time, often longer than you would think.
I'm not convinced that this is a good idea. The association between tune and text is a key part of what makes hymns catechetical: hearing or humming the tune brings the text to mind.
It works with trained choirs and musicians, who can cope with the disconnect. But for ordinary people, a hymn needs strong associations to become well-loved. And that's what it needs to become to maintain congregational singing.
I have said this before, but before introducing a new hymn I would play it for several weeks as an incidental piece during offertory or communion. Then I would have the choir or cantor sing it from time to time. Lastly, the congregation would recognize it and eventually start singing it. Takes time, often longer than you would think.
It works with trained choirs and musicians, who can cope with the disconnect. But for ordinary people, a hymn needs strong associations to become well-loved. And that's what it needs to become to maintain congregational singing.
Generally letting go of trying to get people to sing the antiphons and just getting them used to them happening at all makes a lot of sense to me, and I think there's a chance people will sing as they get more used to them.
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