Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Tucker on: The Future of Catholic Music Is Bright

The new English Missal is being delivered this week. The changes for the people improve accuracy and poetry but they are minimal. The changes for the celebrant are extensive and epic. The implications for music are far reaching. Indeed, this Missal marks a new epoch for the Roman Rite. It is a vast improvement over anything experienced by anyone under the age of 60, and it is going to change the religious life of millions in the process, not immediately but gradually over time.

The language itself is a dramatic upgrade, much closer to the Latin, and much more formal and liturgical in its tone. The music of the Mass is embedded in the text as integral to the Missal’s presentation of the Mass, and the reports of the sheer dignity and beauty of the Missal music have been sensational so far.

This alone is a good reason to be optimistic about the future of Church music. But even if when Advent comes, you are underwhelmed by what you hear at your local parish, and it seems like the same old thing as it ever was, know that there are forces at work today in the Church and in the world that are moving toward change.

There is theological improvement all around, a sounder sense of purpose among the clergy, and young generation of priests that is very alert to the liturgical question, and of course the changes made in the pontificate of Benedict XVI are having an effect. All of this will be heard in the music you experience in the Catholic liturgy of the future.

But there is another dramatic change in the making. It comes down to this: new communication technologies have provided new opportunities for liturgical musicians to share with each other and learn from each other, and this creates the conditions for continual improvement going forward.

Composer Charles Culbreth pointed out that a quick arrangement that he wrote for a chanted Gloria is now being used in Canada by people he has never met. This gave him a real kick, and he noted that this would have been impossible back in the day. Working from his laptop computer, and without even leaving his desk, he can be a provider of liturgical music for the whole world. The supply and the demand once lived in isolation. Now they can come together.

Another example. It was only six years ago when the Liber Usualis went up online for the first time. It was the first major book of Gregorian chant to achieve that universal and limitless level of distribution that the Internet makes possible.

How well I recall the hysteria! There were threats of lawsuits. People said that I was going to bring the world crashing down on my head. I had anonymous emails telling me that because the “ictus” (if you don’t know, never mind) is a copyrighted marking added by Solesmes that Interpol was going to come to my house and drag me away in a burlap sack. (I called the Library of Congress to ask if a tiny tick above a square note could really lead to legal penalties, and the lady on the phone couldn’t stop laughing.)

None of it happened (and I knew this was not going to happen because I had done about twelve months of homework before going live). Instead, vast swaths of the Catholic world had its first look at the amazing reality: the Church has assigned specific music for all liturgical action that takes place throughout the year.

We don’t have to make up music every week. Every feast, every Sunday, every prayer throughout the day had an assigned song and Psalm attached to it. The Liber Usualis, a brilliant book that served the Church well for a century before a generation of know nothings gathered them all up and threw them in the dumpster, was our own Dead Sea Scroll, the text now digitized that opened up a new window to our history as worshipping Catholics.

That was just the beginning. Hundreds of books followed. Then there were new opportunities. People made shirts of the chants, and large-scale poster to enable an old-fashioned method of singing. There were iPhone and iPad applications produced for profit. And then individuals starting making recordings of their versions of the chant and posting them on audio and vidoe. Then tutorials went online, and then databases of chant, and then other aids to make the music of the faith ever more accessible.

People who only knew of the chant through legend were suddenly surrounded by it and they imagined for the first time that they might be able to play a part in its revival. They flocked to workshops, seminars, and colloquia. Scholas were founded up all over the country, from the smallest rural parish to the biggest big-city Cathedral. It was a beautiful scene, and, if you think about it, it all happened very quickly.

Then there were new tools created to enable people to create their own chant editions. At first, this involved recreations. But over time, it became obvious that more was needed. The vernacular had come to the Catholic liturgy in 1965, and yet there was a gigantic shortage of chant music in English. The entire liturgical year was crying out to be translated into song! And these efforts began in earnest.

People who had been quietly working for decades along suddenly emerged out into the open, and their work put online. People like Fr. Columba Kelly and Fr. Samuel Weber became overnight heroes, as the corpus of their work was given away for free.

The International Commission on English in the Liturgy was watching all this very closely, and, when it came time to produce music for the new Missal, a visionary there had the idea of putting that music online and giving it away for free. And this was done - and it was something truly revolutionary and incredible. The methods that were used by the folk musicians of the 1960s - distributing free of charge and uses any and every technology possible to evangelize - were now being used by the establishment to promote truly beautiful renderings of the Church’s own corpus of work.

In the latest steps in this direction, and based on the discovery that most of the Church’s most beautiful hymnody was legally in the public domain, new websites started appearing to distributed hymns as well. Now we are even seeing masterful hymnals being produced on single desktops and being distributed through digital channels.

And keep in mind that this is all in the last five years. Ten years ago, such things would have been unthinkable. This truly is a new world and it is refashioning the Church that is ever old and ever new.

This is all glorious but this is not just a story of the triumphant of one side of the debate above music. Just as crucial is that everyone involved in this world has left their respective isolated sectors and started talking to each other and thereby drawing from each other's experience to improve what they are doing.

Think of all the material progress that came to the world in the mass migrations out of the countryside and into the city. Since the early middle ages, this has been a trend that coincided with the rise of new levels of prosperity. This not because the city automatically makes wealth. It is because people in the city can talk, learn, share, and test new ideas against old ones. Ideas flourish in the city because there is a larger pool of thoughts that everyone can draw from and apply. The end of intellectual isolation is the beginning of progress.

In the digital age, all Catholic musicians have moved to the city. We are newly aware that there is a huge Church out there and we are all desperately in need of stimulating conversation so that we can do a better job at what we do. Praise musicians have found themselves talking to chant experts and being forced to come to terms with Church legislation and history, as well as the demands of the liturgy for decorum and dignity. Chant musicians have realized that if they wanted to make progress they had to do more than hold implacably strict poses; they had to speak to the whole Church in the modern world and adapt their message and their presentations of the music in light of current realities.

In the course of all of this, we have made new discoveries of our relative ignorance of this huge area of the faith, and found that we need to draw on the insights and experiences of everyone else. We have found new opportunities to learn and to listen to each other. The chant expert has realized that perhaps the guitar strummer is on to something with his or her desire for the music at Mass to connect with people in a meaningful way. The strummer has realized that the text of the Mass does indeed matter and that style is not something wholly arbitrary and external to the liturgical structure.

All this talking and communicating has been good for us all, personally and spiritually. It has led to more tolerance, more civility, more humility. We no longer need to proceed forth with the secret desire to destroy each other; we have a much greater appreciation of our mutual dependence on every point of view in the course of finding our way toward the ideals that the Church has laid out for us.

Back in the 1960s, Msgr. Francis P. Schmitt would often express profound frustration that serious chant musicians spent more time arguing with each other over rhythm theories and other minutia than they did actually working toward their larger goals. Msgr. Richard Schuler often echoed this concern.

They were absolutely right about this. As the musicians argued with each other, their world was falling apart around them. It’s almost as if they could not see the big picture for the focus on their own tiny slice of life. The only way this could have happened is for their communication and their awareness to have been limited. They had sealed themselves off from the larger Church and world, thinking that all would be well so long as they burrowed down and kept propounding the teaching. Meanwhile, everyone else moved on.

A similar kind of myopia affected the musical establishment as it came to be in the 1980s and1990s. The big publishers kept producing their copyrighted manuscripts and collecting their royalties while figuring that their was no credible opposition to the domination of the liturgy by pop music of their own creation. They fooled themselves into believing that anyone who complains about what had happened to Catholic music was surely some old codger who will be dead in a few years. Unknowingly, they too had sealed themselves up into a tiny sector that was sealed off from larger trends in the Church and the world.

Now they wake up to a new world in which their paradigm is being seriously questioned by Catholic thinkers and musicians of all ages and at all levels of the Church. At first they bristled. But now they are listening. And this is the first stop to genuine learning and improvement. In fact, we now live in a world in which Catholic musicians from all over the world are listening, sharing, learning, improving.

We all need to do this. This does not mean that all points of view will be compromised to become a giant opinion blob or that everyone must avoid arguments and differences. Communication can also mean sharpening a point of view, improving in in light of criticism, refining an intellectual point of view or a practice in light of objections that come our way. I know that my own convictions concerning chant have only intensified as I’ve tangled with its opponents, and, in this sense, every interlocutor has been my benefactor.

In the end, we musicians must all strive to be servants of the liturgy and its divine purpose. No one person has the one correct way that applies to every cultural context, every parish, every person in the pew. We must stay engaged, talk to each other, test our dogmas and theories against practical realities, be open to new approaches, and maintain the broadness of mind that keeps us all thinking about the future.

We’ve never been presented with better opportunities to share. This is why I’m optimistic about the future of Catholic music. May we all continue to use communication and openness to ward off pride, myopia, and sectarianism, those great killers of progress. With broadness of mind and the continued willingness to seek truth and work for it, the future of Catholic music is bright.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Reform of the Reform/In Utroque Usu Communities: Interview with the Missionarii Franciscani Verbi Aeterni

As part of our ongoing exploration of communities dedicated to the reform of the reform, the NLM is pleased to present the following interview with the Missionarii Franciscani Verbi Aeterni, or Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word -- who may be better known to many simply as the "MFVA" or "EWTN friars."

Within this interview we explore a bit about the mission of the MFVA, the history of their approach to the modern Roman liturgy in a spirit of continuity, their formation, their recent training experiences in the usus antiquior, and we explore the issue whereby St. Francis of Assisi, on the poverty principle, is used against beauty within our churches and the liturgy.

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NLM: Can you begin by telling us a bit about the particular character and mission of the MFVA friars?

MFVA: First of all, MFVA stands for Missionarii Franciscani Verbi Aeterni or Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word in English. Mother Angelica, who founded the Eternal Word Television Network, founded our religious community on May 2, 1987.

Our mission is to seek the lost and to bring back the stray and to strengthen and challenge the faithful to live out their vocation faithfully and perseveringly. We do this mainly through our consecration to God and through our apostolate (e.g. EWTN, providing the sacraments to our Sisters, Internet, Pilgrimage, etc.). As our profession of the vows articulate, we dedicate ourselves to preaching and teaching the Catholic Faith through the works of the apostolate so as to bring the lost sheep into the heart of the Church, close to Jesus in the Eucharist, to Our Lady, and to the Holy Father. We have a particular and special concern for the many fallen away Catholics out there; though we are not limited to only helping them come back to the Church, but also leading non-believers and non-Christians as well to know the beauty of the Catholic Church in order to know and to fall in love with her Spouse, Jesus Christ, the Eternal and Incarnate Wisdom, Who is the Way, the Truth, and the Life.

Where do the MFVA friars pursue their formation and seminary training?

Our religious community consists of Priests and Permanent Brothers. Currently, all of us begin our formation in the Annunciation Friary in Birmingham, Alabama. This is our main house.



We also have our own St. Joseph’s House of Studies for our pre-theology program. Our House of Studies is accredited through the Pontifical University in Ponce, Puerto Rico. For the theology program, we send those who are pursuing the priesthood to Mount St. Mary’s Seminary in Emmitsburg, Maryland. Currently, we have one friar in First Theology and three friars in Second Theology.

You are Franciscans and sometimes the person of St. Francis is invoked in suggesting that our churches and the sacred liturgy should be done without beauty or magnificence. How would you respond to that suggestion?

Yes, that’s a very sad conclusion and suggestion people make a reference about St. Francis, the holy man of God who is passionately in love with Jesus Who is truly present in the Most Blessed Sacrament.

The biographies of St. Francis relate that it grieved him when he found a church that was dirty. He would personally set about to clean it, gathering the clergy and instructing them on the cleanliness of the churches, altars and everything concerned with the celebration of the Mass (cf. Legend of Perugia #18; Mirror of Perfection #56).

St. Francis also had a great love toward the Blessed Sacrament and wanted his followers to provide the best for our dear Lord. “He wished at one time to send his brothers through the world with precious pyxes, so that wherever they should see the price of our redemption kept in an unbecoming manner, they should place It in the very best place…” (Thomas Celano. Second Life # 201)

St. Francis had a tremendous influence in bringing about a warmth of devotion and appreciation of beauty to our Catholic Faith. St. Clare, likewise, spent her final years in ill health making altar linens for all of the churches in the area.

In addition, following and observing the various liturgical laws and liturgical practices according to the mind of the Church is very much in harmony with the true Franciscan spirit. In fact, being in union with the Church is what St. Francis exhorted his followers to do. For some, this may not be considered “very important” topic. There is the principle of preferential option for the poor in social justice, but that does not mean we are to be ignorant of or not be concerned with the liturgy because the poor attend the liturgy as well (the poor in spirit and the poor in fact). They deserved to be fed with the riches of the Church. If we don’t provide them with a beautiful liturgy, then we are robbing the poor of what Jesus wants to enrich them with through the liturgy of the Church; instead, they would become more impoverished. In the old days, it was very typical that the poor themselves were the ones who built the church. They are the ones who sacrificed their time, materials, money, etc. The beauty of some of the older churches was because of the devotion of the poor whose faith was not dead.

Furthermore, St. Francis is truly a holy man of God who loves the Church and who wants his followers to love Her, to be obedient to Her, and to think with the mind of the Church. This is obvious from his own Later Rule. Therefore, everything in it has to be understood in that context. So celebrating the liturgy with devotion and with beauty according to the mind of the Church and the spirit of the Church is to do so according to the will of St. Francis who loves Jesus Crucified passionately because the mind of the Church is the mind of Christ.

For a number of years now, the MFVA friars have been seen celebrating Masses on EWTN which were always characterized by continuity with our liturgical tradition, can you give us a little history and background on this?

Fr. Brian Mulady, OP came to EWTN to make a television series in the early 1990s. Televising the Mass began in 1991, and he suggested the Nuns learn Gregorian chant. They agreed and he gave them some instructions. They started with the Missa de Angelis and over the years continued to add other Masses and sacred polyphony to their repertoire. Shortly, thereafter, we began to use the little known booklet, Jubilate Deo.

In April 1974, Pope Paul VI sent to every bishop in the world a booklet of some of the simplest selections of Gregorian Chant, much of it drawn from the Graduale Romanum. This booklet, called Jubilate Deo, was intended as a “minimum repertoire of Gregorian chant.” It is, in other words, an official Latin “core repertoire” for the Roman Rite. It was prepared, the Pope said, in order “to make it easier for Christians to achieve unity and spiritual harmony with their brothers and with the living tradition of the past. Hence it is that those who are trying to improve the quality of congregational singing cannot refuse Gregorian chant the place which is due to it.” An expanded edition of Jubilate Deo was later issued by the Congregation for Divine Worship in 1987.

As regards a "reform of the reform," or the re-enchanting of the liturgy in the parish, what elements do you see as particularly important to that project?

Greater reverence in the liturgy and greater use of our heritage of sacred music. There should truly be a “sense of the sacred”. The liturgy should facilitate an encounter with God; hence, it should, through the beauty of music, art, architecture, liturgical actions, etc., help us to “keep our minds on things above, rather than on things of earth” (Col 3:1-2).



Recently, some of the friars also took training from the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius in the celebration of Mass according to the liturgical books of the usus antiquior, or Extraordinary Form. How was that experience?

It was a very good experience! We spent three continuous weeks with them. And with God’s grace, and everyone’s prayers, we survived the “liturgical boot camp training” there! By the end of the three weeks, we were able to offer the Low Mass, Sung Mass without incense, Sung Mass with incense, the Requiem Low Mass, and the Solemn Mass as the priest celebrant role and as the sub-deacon role. We were very pleased how much we were able to accomplish. God’s grace indeed helped us to make that possible.

Of course, the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius made all that possible for us to accomplish as well. We were trained mainly by Fr. Scott Haynes, SJC; however, the entire Canons (including the Brothers through their serving of the Masses) contributed to helping us to be trained in the Extraordinary Form.

We highly recommend any priests or any seminarians to get their Extraordinary Form (EF) training from the Canons Regular of St. John Cantius. They offer both forms of the Mass (Ordinary and Extraordinary). They have a very good balance of truly being with the Church especially in regards to the old and the new liturgy.

With the great assistance of the Cantius, we are now able to offer the Extraordinary Form of the Mass at the Shrine of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Hanceville, Alabama and anywhere else we are asked and available. As a matter of fact, the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration have decided to request us [the MFVA friars –SRT] to offer the televised Extraordinary Form of the Mass from now on (at least for this year of 2010). The following will be the televised schedule when we will be offering the Mass in the Extraordinary Form:

SPRING: May 8, 2010 (Our Lady, Mediatrix of All Graces) – Sung High Mass
SUMMER: Aug 7, 2010 (Votive Immaculate Heart of Mary) – Solemn High Mass
FALL: Oct 2, 2010 (Guardian Angel) – Sung High Mass
WINTER: Jan 8, 2011 (Votive Immaculate Heart of Mary) – Sung High Mass

Evidently, the MFVA celebrate both forms of the Roman liturgy, and we see both forms on EWTN, do you believe that a "both-and" approach as regards to the two forms of the Roman liturgy is important, and can you explain why?

As regards to the two forms of the Roman Liturgy, we do believe that a “both-and” approach is important. One reason is because to be a true orthodox Catholic is to embrace a “both-and” approach. Many heresies that came to birth in the history of the Church came about because one or more individuals subscribed to an “either-or” approach. The heretics tried to emphasize one particular point of our faith but unfortunately de-emphasize the others at the same time.


Modern Roman Liturgy


Usus Antiquior


Practically speaking, it does take a lot of patience and discipline to learn something “new” or to get used to something that has been part of the Church’s treasury for years if one was never brought up that way. Yet, with God all things are possible. Many people who were never brought up in the Catholic faith have responded to God’s special graces which He offers them to embrace the fullness of the truth by entering the Catholic Church. Reflecting on their process of learning our faith (not just doctrinally but also liturgically), it took them a lot of patience and discipline to learn and get used to our practices at Mass (i.e. standing up, kneeling, sitting down, etc.). Similarly, we who are already Catholics but who were never brought up with the Extraordinary Form may get frustrated in the beginning because we don’t know what’s going on during the Extraordinary Form of the Mass; or if we do know what’s going on, we may be frustrated because it appears that we can never “catch up” with the prayers the priest offers during the Mass; or we notice that it’s a different kind of “active participation” in comparison with the participation in the Ordinary Form of the Mass. All these reasons are legitimate reasons to be frustrated, but we have to keep in mind that there are answers to every question we may have.

If any young man is interested in exploring a vocation with the MFVA, or any young women with the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration, how should they proceed?

Any Catholic men, 21 to 35 years old, who is interested in finding out more about our way of life, he can check out our website: www.franciscanmissionaries.com or email at vocations@ewtn.com.

If any young woman is interested with the Poor Clares of Perpetual Adoration, she may check out the following website: www.olamshrine.com (Hanceville, Alabama). Some of the Nuns from Hanceville have either transferred or started a new foundation elsewhere; to meet them, one may check the following websites www.stjosephmonastery.com (Charlotte, North Carolina formerly in Portsmouth, Ohio), or www.desertnuns.com (Black Canyon City, Arizona); or www.texasnuns.com (San Antonio, Texas).

Monday, March 15, 2010

Reform of the Reform Communities and In Utroque Usu: Opus Mariae Matris Ecclesiae

In response to our recent feature on the Communauté Saint-Martin and the call for other communities who are actively pursuing the reform of the reform to come forward, we have received a few responses in recent days.

Today I would like to feature Opus Mariae Matris Ecclesiae, a priestly fraternity based out of Italy in the Diocese of Massa Carrara-Pontremoli -- and one that I cannot say I have been heretofore familiar with.

As will no doubt be the case with many of these entries, they are as equally part of the series on communities or parishes operating "in utroque usu" (that is, in both forms of the Roman rite) as they are part of the the reform of the reform communities series. Indeed, today more than ever these can be clearly understood as closely going hand in hand and most certainly "Benedictine" in spirit.

This particular fraternity does indeed use both forms and was founded by Don Pietro Cantoni and primarily operates in the aforementioned diocese. Their website offers this about themselves:

Although originally from the most diverse parts of Italy (... and not only in Italy) we were born in the diocese of Massa Carrara-Pontremoli and it is especially in this diocese that we exercise our apostolate. The Bishop gave us a house near Pontremoli... Our goal is to serve the spiritual life of the diocese and the whole Church.


Here is a selection of photos of them.


The community in 2007

Modern Roman Liturgy






Vespers




Usus Antiquior






Having now learned of this priestly fraternity, the NLM will be adding a link to the community in our sidebar.

Monday, March 08, 2010

Reform of the Reform Communities: Communauté Saint-Martin

We have featured the Communauté Saint-Martin on the NLM before, and I am delighted to be able to share a few more photos which I recently received from this community in France, whose particular focus is on the very important project of the reform of the reform.

This community celebrate Masses ad orientem as well as versus populum, very often employing the "Benedictine arrangement", and are perhaps particularly well known for their production of Les Heures Grégoriennes; a French-Latin publication "for parishes and communities who want to celebrate the modern Liturgy of the Hours in Latin..." In that regard, they are also assisting in the important project of the promotion of the Divine Office at the parish level.

One of the things which often strikes me as well about this community are the rather interesting and dignified vestments they use, not only those of a "Roman" style, but also some of the very best sort that came out of the revivals of the 20th century Liturgical Movement. (See more of these here.)

With that, I am pleased to present a selection of photos coming from various recent events in the liturgical year.















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As the title and tag of this post might suggest, the NLM would certainly be interested in featuring other communities who have been working for the reform of the reform, similar to the Community of St. Martin.

If you are a monastery or religious community who believe falls into this category, please write: stribe@newliturgicalmovement.org

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