Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Breaking Bad! Missalette Music Is A Significant Cause of Shrinking Congregations

Why has church attendance dropped off so dramatically in the last 50 years? There are a whole range of reasons, I am sure, and nearly every article in this blog addresses the issue in one form or another, but if you ask me one of the main contributory factors is the music that is generally heard at Mass. And in my opinion, it is the style of music offered by the most common pew missalettes that is contributing most powerfully to that decline.


I am talking about a style of music that seems to have started to develop around the late 1960s, and sounds to me like a sort of fusion of American folk (vintage 1967), 19th century pop classics, Broadway musicals, with a hint of Victorian hymnody thrown in for good measure. Whatever you call the genre, it is responsible, I believe, for many fleeing the pews.


Before anyone writes me to say how much they like the music they hear each Sunday, or tell me how high is the quality of the pianist or band that plays, and how heartily those in the congregation that do attend join in, I want to say one thing: my argument is not based upon the assertion that this is bad music. I do have strong opinions on that, but my personal taste has no bearing on the conclusion that I draw. My argument is that the whole philosophy that has contributed to the composition of such music is fatally flawed and causes the damage.

So, for argument’s sake, let us assume that the music we hear in Mass is of the highest quality within its genre. I would say that it would still have the same effect, which is to drive most people away from Mass. And I would say the same even when the standard of the musicianship is of the highest order, and the choir consists of the best trained professional singers.

The problem, in my opinion, lies in the whole ethos that underlies the creation of music for the missals. The goal, it seems, is to connect with people by giving them music that is derived from already popular forms. The problem with this approach is that it can only connect to those people who actually listen for enjoyment to that style of music out of church. But today’s western society is so fractured that tastes vary hugely, and there is no style of secular music that has universal appeal. As a result, whichever style we choose, and however well it is done, it can only ever hope to appeal to a small part of the population. The rest will be driven away because they do not like it. So, if we create music that appeals to those who were young in the late 1960s, it will be detested by those who were young in the 1970s (like me) and all people who are younger.

If we go for something that is actually cutting-edge today and takes its form from current youth culture, even if it connects with the 17-year-olds who listen to that style of music, it will drive away all the older generations and even most other youth, because youth culture is itself fractured, and there is no single style that all 17-year-olds listen to. I just think of what was going on when I was seventeen. The sixth form in Birkenhead School in northern England in the 1970s (for Americans, the sixth form is the upper two years of high school) was divided between punks, heavy metal fans and progressive rock fans, with a few who liked disco, funk and soul.

(Just in case you’re interested, I liked obscure progressive rock and jazz fusion, such as Return to Forever, Frank Zappa and Be Bop Deluxe. I used to like being seen with the LP covers tucked under my arm to show people I had highly developed musical taste.)

There was a little crowd of Christians who were trying to be cool and had their own Christian rock music; After the Fire was the name of the group they all liked. To me they seemed to be a sad bunch who obviously “just didn’t have a clue” if they thought that stuff was any good. We all used to make fun of them.

I didn’t start to take the Faith seriously until many years later, when I was 26 and met a Christian who was just as disparaging of “cool” Christianity as I was, and who obviously didn’t even care about trying to be cool, hip and trendy at all. He just wasn’t playing that game.


What appealed to me was a Faith, and an associated culture that I saw at the Brompton Oratory, that spoke of a world beyond the petty, secular concerns that had absorbed me up to that point. I don’t think I’m the only one. (I would refer you to the recent Tradition is for the Young articles by Gregory DiPippo on this blog to back up my case.)

But before we get too smug, traditionalists aren’t totally exempt from bad music either. Much “traditional” church music has the same fault, especially if hymns are chosen. Holy God We Praise They Name or Immaculate Mary are really just the On Eagles Wings from your great-grandmother’s day. Many of these hymns, even the vast majority of non-chant hymns in hymn books that are considered fairly traditional, such as the Adoremus hymnal or the St Michael hymnal, sound off-puttingly “churchy” to most people outside church, and just like the missalette music, drive more people away from church than they attracts for the same reason. It is a genre that is not universal and so only appeals to a small part of the population.

I for one can’t bear any of these hymns; they sound just like what I grew up with going to Methodist church; I didn’t like them when I was eight and I don’t like them now. It is one of the main reasons that I chose to escape from going to church when I was given the choice at 13 years old. But even if this weren’t the case and I had grown to love traditional Methodist hymns, and therefore now loved 19th century Catholic hymns, it would be no argument for their inclusion in the liturgy. Most other people would not like them, and they are not intrinsically liturgical.

I would argue that music derived from 19th century operatic styles, so strongly criticized by St Pius X, is just the same. We may feel that it is a higher form of music than that provided by Christian rock band liturgy, but it will still only appeal to very narrow group of people and will drive all others away. This is true, even if it was written for a Latin Mass.

If the argument about the music at Mass is raised, very often the counter argument is that we have to be “pastoral.” It will be said that most of those attending church like the music they are getting. There would be a revolt if we changed what is so familiar to them, so the argument runs, and so we can’t risk changing the music even if we wanted to.

In response, I say that it is very likely true that the people in attendance like the music they are getting, Those who attend do so because they like, or at least can tolerate, the music. Most of those who can’t stand the music they hear at Mass just stay away. They find the experience so excruciatingly, embarrassingly banal, that they go jogging or decide to read the Sunday papers over a cup of coffee instead. This is why, I suggest, the majority of teenagers leave the moment their parents give them permission to make up their own minds about attending church. And, for the reasons already described, it will be true even if we try to find a form of music that some teenagers love - because there is no form of secular music that most teenagers love. It doesn’t exist.

We can go further than this and raise another argument as to why the approach of the common missalette music, the aping popular forms, will inevitably cause a decline in attendance at Mass. Suppose we did have a society in which the wider culture was more homogeneous and tastes were more consistent across the generations; it would still be a flawed approach.

I understand that many African cultures, for example, are more homogeneous and less fractured than western culture. In such cases, even if the music of the Mass reproduced the popular African style perfectly, it would still not be the right approach. Although it might well appeal to a wider proportion of the population and you might find higher attendance at Mass, it would not facilitate a deeper and active participation in the liturgy.

This is because the liturgy is the wellspring of its own culture, and an authentic liturgical culture must be at the heart of any Catholic culture of faith. It is a separate world that appeals to what is universally human in us, and draws us to God in a way that is impossible for secular culture. The music that draws us to it and directs us to the Eucharist most powerfully is that which is derived from a liturgical culture, which, so the Church tells us, is Gregorian chant.

Secular forms might well draw us in, but if they are so far removed from the forms of an authentic liturgical culture, then even in the context of the liturgy they are inclined to lead us back to the secular values, not on to the Eucharist. Such music is less likely to draw us into a genuinely deep and active participation in the worship of God. In the long term, therefore, any secular music, even if it draws people to Mass, will inevitably lead to more people leaving the Church than staying because the music is distracting them from what is at the heart of the Mass. As a result, there is less of a force that draws us into a supernatural transformation in Christ. There will be fewer Christians, therefore, with the capacity for transmitting an authentic Christian joy to those with whom they interact in their daily lives, outside the Mass and the liturgy. With this reduced power for evangelization, we will lose our lifeblood.

This ultimately is how we get people back to Mass. The absolute priority is to make the encounter one in which there is the highest possibility of transformation of those present, however few they may be at this point. These people will in turn draw others to the Faith for the right reasons, and those they attract will find the source of what they seek when they get to the Mass.


This is why Cardinal Sarah said, in his address at the Sacra Liturgia conference in London, that even in Africa the liturgy is not the place to incorporate African culture. Rather, because the liturgy has its own culture, which is uniquely and universally Christian, it should seep into the wider culture and transform secular culture into something greater, something that is in some way derived from and points to the liturgy, while simultaneously being distinctly African.

The only hope we have for the Mass to be a true long-term draw, capable of touching the many who currently have no interest in attending, is to focus on making chant the dominant form. We must even be prepared to lose a few of those who are currently at Masses with missalette music, and who are there for the wrong reasons, to drift away or even be prepared to carry on in the face of strong complaints from these people if it is changed.

While having chant at all Masses would help, even then it is not going to be enough, in my opinion.

We must chant in such a way that is going to connect with the ordinary person, and this probably means singing at a pitch that is natural for men to join in. I have been told, for example, that men are less likely to join in if you have female cantors. This is not because of an inherent sexism, but because the female voice is a pure sound, and men find it difficult to come in at a pitch an octave below what the cantor is singing, because it is totally separate from what he is hearing. If there is a male cantor or an exclusively male choir leading the parts that the congregation are meant to sing, on the other hand, the men can emulate what they hear and the women still find it easy to join in because the male voice contains higher harmonics which allow for a connection with female voices. One way of approaching this, perhaps, is to have male or mixed voices for those parts that we are encouraging the congregation to sing along to, and female voices only for those parts where the intention is the congregation will listen or only women members of the congregation join in. Even if men are chanting, there is a style of chant in which a thin, strained, high pitch voice is encouraged. This sounds effeminate to me, and I suggest has the same problems for congregations - it is not only as difficult for most men to sing along to as a female voice, but it is also difficult also to listen to, as the hearer struggles to make a connection to a voice that is so alien to his own.

Were the approach to music correct and, (dare one hope for more?) our liturgies celebrated in the way that the Church truly desires, would this then bring huge numbers back to churches? In the long run, I would say yes, but in the short run, almost certainly not. But it would bring to the church immediately those who are genuinely looking for what the chant directs their hearts to - God. In the long term, this would have a domino effect. More people who attend Mass would be participating more deeply and become emissaries of the New Evangelization, shining with the light of Christ as they go about their daily business. This, in turn, would draw others to Christ. Because we have free will this is never going to be the whole population, but I do believe that it can be far more than we currently see in our churches today.

Has the throw-away missalette approach to church music had its day? Probably not yet, to judge from the support that so many bishops, priests and choir directors currently give to this style in the cause of a faux pastoralism that actually alienates most people. But because of this alienation, it does contain the seeds of its own destruction. Unless it is replaced by something else, under the influence of brave pastors and choir directors who are prepared to take the truly pastoral approach, one that takes into consideration the majority who aren’t at church, then we are doomed to steadily declining congregations until the generation that currently listens to this style of music grows old and disappears.

Faith tells us that the parasite will die before it has killed its host. The Church will remain; and so one has to conclude that at some point the music will change before it brings the whole edifice to collapse. I pray that it is soon.



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