Tuesday, January 21, 2025

New Leadership for the CMAA

Dear Friends of the Church Music Association of America and The New Liturgical Movement

We know that, along with those of us on staff and on the board of directors, you have been mourning the recent death of our beloved president, William P. Mahrt. Thank you all for your messages of condolence and remembrances that have been shared. 

In striving to move forward in the leadership of the organization Dr. Mahrt loved so much, the Board of Directors has elected Rev. Robert Pasley as our new President of the CMAA to lead the organization as we move forward.

Fr. Pasley has acted as an officer of the board for many years. After first becoming introduced to the beauty of sacred music in the liturgy by Fr. Richard Schuler, of St. Agnes Parish (St. Paul, Minnesota), editor of Sacred Music, he became a loyal member and was identified early on as a leader. As Vice President many years ago, when Fr. Robert Skeris was the Association’s President, he was there, signing the documents for the CMAA’s incorporation in Virginia. He attended the very first Sacred Music Colloquium and has attended nearly all of them in the years since. Eighteen years ago, when Dr. William Mahrt was elected as CMAA board President and Dr. Horst Buchholz as Vice President, Fr. Pasley took the position of Chaplain. He has served faithfully as a spiritual guide and officer ever since.

As many of you know from your attendance at the Sacred Music Colloquium, both in-person and online, Fr. Pasley has been a leader and source of encouragement to all of us in our work to promote sacred music, through his input on the planning of all our events, the management of all our liturgies, and his sharing of his experience with us through breakouts, talks at our events, and online spiritual reflections. We are so grateful he was willing to accept this new leadership role. He will also continue to serve as Chaplain.

After eighteen years of service to the Church Music Association of America, Dr. Horst Buchholz has decided to retire from his position as Vice President. The entire board of directors is so grateful for his generous gift of his time, valuable guidance and experience during these many years. 

The board has elected Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka to take on the job of Vice President, and she has also been assigned the position of Director of Publications by Fr. Pasley, as one of his first actions as our new president. In these new roles, she will continue to assist the president in the management of the organization and will also continue her work in creating and promoting new publications for the benefit of church musicians. 
Dr. Donelson-Nowicka has been a “member-at-large” of the Board of Directors since 2014. Since 2012, she has served as managing editor of the Sacred Music journal, working closely with editor William Mahrt to faithfully publish the journal in the years since. She has also worked on all our recent publications and new projects (such as The Parish Book of Motets and the Parish Book of Chant recording project, as well as our upcoming new publication, a collection of three-part motets). She has long been a member of the faculty at our events and has been a member of the event planning committee for several years. Known for her ability to accomplish more in less time than seems humanly possible, the board is very appreciative for her willingness to accept these new roles. 
We ask for your prayers and support of our new officers as they take on the leadership of the organization in this new year.


Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Call for Participation - Special Issue of Sacred Music Dedicated to Dr. Mahrt

Call for Participation - A Special Issue of Sacred Music Journal, Dedicated to Dr. William Mahrt

The editorial team of the Church Music Association of America’s journal Sacred Music will dedicate the upcoming first issue of 2025 to the life and work of its recently deceased editor, Dr. William Mahrt. Submissions from readers are welcome, and may be of a varied nature:

  • Short stories about Dr. Mahrt, his teaching, scholarship, or life
  • Articles about a particular aspect of Dr. Mahrt’s life or work
  • Articles dedicated to Dr. Mahrt about any topic suitable for the journal, though not necessarily citing his work.

The length may range from 500 words to 6,000. Submissions must follow the journal’s style sheet, available here. Submissions must be made as a Word document, with embedded footnotes (if applicable) via email to: submissions@musicasacra.com.

Deadline for submission: February 15, 2025.

Saturday, January 04, 2025

Dr William Mahrt, RIP

NLM’s parent organization, the Church Music Association of America, has issued the following notice of the death of our publisher, Dr William Mahrt, on January 1st.   

With great sorrow, but with hope in the resurrection and confidence in God’s providence and mercy, we announce the passing of Dr. William P. Mahrt on January 1, 2025, the Octave Day of Christmas and Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God. Dr. Mahrt died peacefully, having received the sacraments of the Church and the apostolic pardon, and surrounded by faithful friends and students who sang and prayed the liturgical offices in which he had so many times directed them.

Dr Mahrt holding a large decorated folio with the introit of the St Ann Choir’s patronal feast.
Born in 1939, Dr. Mahrt dedicated his life to the study and performance of the Catholic Church’s sacred music, leaving an indelible mark on the field of musicology, as well as on the hearts and souls of those who knew him. His insights into the characteristics of the various forms of Gregorian chant elucidated the nature of the chant as integral to the sacred liturgy, even explicating the nature of the sacred liturgy itself. His exposition of the nature of beauty and its embodiment in Catholic sacred music, liturgical gestures and symbols, and architecture has served as an important guide in the Church’s understanding of the purpose of artistic beauty in divine worship. His work with medieval and Renaissance polyphonic masters illuminated the performances and scholarship of many choirs and students.

Dr. Mahrt’s academic journey began at Gonzaga University, near his family’s wheat farm in rural eastern Washington (near Reardan), where he earned his B.A. in 1960. He went on to receive an M.A. from the University of Washington in 1963 with a thesis on the keyboard fugues of Schumann. Driven by an insatiable curiosity and a deep love for music, he continued his studies at Stanford University, where he completed his Ph.D. in 1969 with a dissertation entitled “The Missæ ad organum of Heinrich Isaac.” Throughout his illustrious career, Dr. Mahrt held prestigious teaching positions at Case Western Reserve University, the Eastman School of Music, and Stanford University, where he inspired countless students as an Associate Professor, teaching courses on medieval notation, the modes, medieval and Renaissance repertoire and analysis, and the music of Johannes Brahms.
William Mahrt served as the President of the Church Music Association of America starting in 2005 after first joining the board in 1977. Under his editorship of the CMAA’s journal (2006–present) Sacred Music, the oldest continuously-published music journal in the United States, the publication expanded in length and breadth to serve as an important locus for the study and praxis of the Church’s music. The editorials he wrote for the journal evince a profound understanding of both the sacred liturgy and its music and were remarkable both for their integration of scholarship and Catholic theology, as well as for the wide range of topics covered. As president of the CMAA, Dr. Mahrt played an important role in the discussions of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops which led up to the 2007 publication of guidelines on music in the liturgy, Sing to the Lord. At the initiative of his friend and the CMAA’s then-director of publications, Jeffrey Tucker, a collection of his essays, The Musical Shape of the Liturgy, was published in 2012.
Known for his expertise in Gregorian chant, medieval performance, and the works of composers such as Machaut, Dufay, Isaac, and Lassus, Dr. Mahrt’s scholarly contributions earned him numerous accolades, including the NEH’s Newberry Library Fellowship in 1976, the Albert Schweitzer Medal in 1991, and the Thomas Binkley Award in 2010. He served as President of the Northern California Chapter of the American Musicological and Chairman of the Bay Area chapter of the Latin Liturgy Association. He was a frequent presenter and attendee at the International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo, the International Fota Conference, as well as the conferences of the Society for Catholic Liturgy, International Musicological Society (IMS), and the IMS’s study group Cantus Planus. In demand as a teacher, Dr. Mahrt was a regular faculty member and plenary speaker at the CMAA’s annual Sacred Music Colloquium, Cantores in Ecclesia’s annual Byrd Festival in Portland, Oregon, the Lumen Christi Institute of the University of Chicago, the Singers’ Retreat in San Anselmo, California, the Renaissance Polyphony Weekend in Dallas, Texas, the Sacred Music Institute of America, and the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park.
In addition to his scholarly achievements, Dr. Mahrt was a founding member of the St. Ann Choir in 1963 and served as its director for most years since 1964. Under his leadership, the ensemble developed an extensive repertory of medieval and Renaissance motets and masses, singing each Sunday and principal feast day a Missa cantata in Latin, with Gregorian propers, two motets, and a mixture of Gregorian and Renaissance ordinaries at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Palo Alto, California. Dr. Mahrt played an organ prelude and postlude for every Mass in which the organ was permitted. The choir, in response to an initiative by Dr. Mahrt several decades ago, also sings Sunday Vespers and Compline, with Vespers usually at the St. Ann Chapel, the choir’s original home in Palo Alto. The ensemble is one of the few in the world which has a continuous tradition of singing the Church’s treasury of sacred music, all the while implementing the reforms to the sacred liturgy called for by the Second Vatican Council’s Sacrosanctum concilium and the 1967 Instruction Musicam Sacram.
Dr. Mahrt was a graceful and compelling advocate for the place of Gregorian chant and sacred polyphony as the central music of the Roman rite, especially in the celebration of the modern Roman missal. He carefully collected and produced editions of important and interesting polyphonic works, teaching them to his choir with love and enthusiasm for the music in all its aspects. The choir continues singing from these editions, as well as the large choirbook-style score of the Gregorian chants from Annie Bank Editions, even inspiring the production by longtime choir member Susan Alstatt of beautiful illuminations of the choir’s patronal feast’s propers. The extensive library of the St. Ann Choir, complete with its elegantly accurate translations of many motet texts, was a core part of the early formation of the Choral Public Domain Library by one of Dr. Mahrt’s students at Stanford, Rafael Ornes.
Many of Dr. Mahrt’s students from Stanford joined his ensemble to augment their experience of the music, in its proper liturgical context, about which they were writing dissertations and theses. Singers flocked from all backgrounds to sing with him in this unique ensemble, and they are the core of those who attended Dr. Mahrt’s bedside until his hour of death. The friendships formed in the choir by Dr. Mahrt served as an anchor in his life and the lives of so many others. His leadership of the St. Ann Choir and the Stanford Early Music Singers was a testament to his unwavering commitment to sacred music, the true and deep bond between the highest levels of scholarship and praxis, and a fervent love for his Catholic faith.
To celebrate his life and legacy, a conference entitled “The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt” was held in November of 2023, marking the 150th volume of Sacred Music and honoring the establishment of a new chair in sacred music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park under the leadership of Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka. Scholars, musicians, and friends from around the country gathered to celebrate Dr. Mahrt’s remarkable accomplishments and work.
His contributions to the field of musicology and his passionate dedication to sacred music will be remembered and cherished by his family, friends, students, colleagues, and the countless lives he touched through his work. His legacy will continue to inspire and guide future generations in the pursuit of beauty and excellence in sacred music.
More than just a scholar and a musician, Bill—as he liked to be called—was a gentleman, a colleague, and a dear friend. Highly respected by his students, singers, and all who knew him, he was a very modest man and always remained a humble worker in the vineyard of the Lord. After a year of several health problems, Bill suffered a stroke while in the hospital receiving care for other matters. He was preceded in death by his mother, Evelyn, his father, Peter, and his sister Kathryn. He is survived by his sister Susan Perkins, brothers-in-law Tom Brannon and Norman Smith, nieces and nephews, and their children and grandchildren.
Bill, you have been a shining light for so many of us, and you shall never be forgotten. Requiescas in pace!
NON NOBIS DOMINE SED NOMINI TVO DA GLORIAM
Funeral arrangements are being handled by Duggan’s Funeral Service. Those wishing to send flowers should contact Duggan’s (https://www.duggansfuneralservice.com/). The wake will take place at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Palo Alto, California (751 Waverley St.) from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Thursday, January 9, 2025. All are invited to come at any time during the wake. Vespers will be sung at 6 p.m., a rosary will be prayed at 7 p.m., and Compline will be sung at 8 p.m. The funeral is at noon on Friday, January 10, 2025 at Mission Dolores in San Francisco, California (3321 16th St.). Parking is available in the school lot, with an entrance on Church St. A reception will follow the funeral. Burial arrangements are TBA.
Anyone who would like to sing for the funeral is invited to do so. Required sign-up is available here: https://forms.gle/R68wXzBQ3P9ux9Xa8. A required rehearsal will be 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the basilica church at Mission Dolores.

Saturday, August 17, 2024

Online Workshop Series Catholic Institute of Sacred Music: Building Programs, Chant Accompaniment, and Byrd

After wrapping up a fantastic summer of graduate courses in sacred music held on the campus of St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, California, the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music is pleased to announce its Fall 2024 Online Workshop Series.
Three different topics, all well-suited to online content delivery, are announced for the Fall 2024 term, and accessible all over the world in live instruction via Zoom, or optional archived access, taught by CISM’s wonderful faculty.
Starts September 16 
Mondays, 5:30-6:30 p.m. Pacific Time (8:30-9:30 Eastern)
Online Via Zoom 
$50 for 3 topics or $20 per topic, optional $10/topic add-on for archived access 
Faculty: Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka, Christopher Berry, and William Mahrt 
Blueprint for Building a Parish Sacred Music Program: Foundations, Structures, Personnel, and Resources 
Topic #1 of Fall 2024 Workshop Series 
Mondays, September 16, 23, 30 – 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PDT 
Does your parish music program need some new initiatives or a complete overhaul? Join Dr. Donelson-Nowicka as she takes participants through the outline of a strategic planning process. Discover ways of assessing your program and goals, brainstorm ideas, and set short- and long-term goals for the future. Ideal for parish music directors and pastors. 
Chant Modality at the Keyboard and Chant Accompaniment 
Topic #2 of Fall 2024 Workshop Series 
 Mondays, October 7, 14, 21 – 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PDT 
Are you an organist who’s new to chant, or could use a refresher on how to approach chant at the keyboard? Join Professor Christopher Berry and Dr. Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka as they discuss the basics of understanding chant modality at the keyboard, as well as the rhythmic and harmonic principles behind the main schools of chant accompaniment. Registration and texture will also be addressed. 
The Cantiones Sacræ, Masses, and Gradualia of William Byrd 
Topic #3 of Fall 2024 Workshop Series 
Mondays, October 28, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PDT and November 4, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PST 
Join Dr. William Mahrt as he presents an overview of the most well-loved music of English Tudor composer, William Byrd.

Wednesday, January 10, 2024

Basics of Directing Chant, Tra le Sollecitudini Reading Group, and Introduction to Chant

The Catholic Institute of Sacred Music has announced its Spring 2024 term online workshop series. Presenting timely and helpful topics, the courses are presented via Zoom, starting with instruction and following with ample time for questions and discussion. They are an affordable option for continuing education for music directors, presenting a mix of topics for seasoned musicians as well as introductory topics.
Registration and more information are available here.

CISM is especially pleased this term to welcome Dr. Mahrt as a faculty member for the directed reading group on Tra le Sollecitudini. This topic is the first of a series of in-depth reading of important ecclesiastical documents on sacred music.

Topics are $20 per topic plus an optional add-on of archived access for $10 per topic. Workshops begin at 5:30 p.m. Pacific Time, starting January 29.
Chironomy Basics
Mondays, January 29 and February 5, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PST
Would you like to develop conducting skills for Gregorian chant that help your choir sing better and discover the nuances of phrasing that make the chant beautiful? Join Dr. Donelson-Nowicka for two one-hour sessions to cover the basics of directing chant (chironomy) according to the “Old Solesmes” method developed by Dom André Mocquereau. The first session will outline the theoretical basis for the method in practice through targeted exercises which help singers and directors understand the structure of some sample chants, and then develop a physiological basis for the conducting gesture from an understanding of the architecture of the examples. The second session will cover more sophisticated gestures which elucidate for singers the musical shape of more difficult chants. Tips on structuring rehearsals to meet the demand for learning quickly to sing in the liturgy will be discussed, as well as warm-ups and teaching techniques which develop singers’ awareness of nuances in conducting.

This workshop topic is an excellent introduction to the course content of Advanced Seminar in Gregorian Chant: Conducting (Chironomy) that will be offered in the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music’s Summer 2024 Term.
Tra le Sollecitudini – Directed Reading Group
Mondays, February 19, and 26, and March 4, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PST
Led by Drs. William Mahrt and Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka, participants will make an in-depth study of this important document which was seminal for the twentieth-century renewal of sacred music and the Liturgical Movement. Starting from the history and development of the document, the nuances of each of the motu proprio’s articles will be discussed in its historical, liturgical, musical, and canonical contexts. The evolution of the legislative status of various articles will be discussed, especially in light of dubia submitted in response to the legislation, as well as the documents of Pius XII and Vatican II.

This workshop topic is an excellent introduction to the study of legislative documents on sacred music, a study which can be furthered in the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music’s Summer 2024 Term course “History and Principles of Sacred Music.”
Introduction to Chant: Spirituality, Reading, and Style
Mondays, April 8, 15, 22, 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., PDT
Serving as an entry point for professional and amateur musicians alike, each session of this workshop topic will begin with a reflection on the spirituality of Gregorian chant, and what the chant can teach us about praying the sacred liturgy. Participants will then move through the basics of reading neumatic notation (square notes), prepped with some exercises which develop healthy vocal technique for singing chant. The modality and style of the chant will also be addressed.

Appropriate for new singers of chant, or those who wish to develop their teaching of new singers, this workshop topic will serve as a sort of mini-retreat for spiritual refreshment and professional development.

Friday, September 22, 2023

“The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life & Work of William P. Mahrt” – Conference in Menlo Park, California, Nov 7-9

The Catholic Institute of Sacred Music cordially invites you to a timely and fitting conference celebrating the immense contributions of Dr. William Mahrt of Stanford University, who serves also as the president of the CMAA, the editor of the CMAA’s Sacred Music journal, and the publisher of NLM.
The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt
November 7–9, 2023
St. Patrick's Seminary, Menlo Park, California
More information and registration are available here.
Having devoted his life and scholarly activity to the study and praxis of the Roman rite and its music, Dr. William Mahrt has made his work a touchstone for countless scholars and active church musicians. His insights into the characteristics of the various forms of Gregorian chant have elucidated the nature of the chant as something integral to the sacred liturgy, and the nature of the sacred liturgy itself. His exposition of the nature of beauty and its embodiment in Catholic sacred music, liturgical gestures, symbols and architecture has served as an important guide in the Church’s understanding of the purpose of artistic beauty in divine worship. His work with the polyphonic masters of the Renaissance has illuminated the performances and scholarship of many choirs and students, and his devoted direction of the St. Ann Choir and Stanford Early Music Singers remains a pillar in the practice of sacred music in the United States.
On the occasion of the 150th volume of Sacred Music, which Dr. Mahrt has edited since 2006, and on the establishment of a new chair in sacred music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park in his name, as well as the 125th anniversary of the founding of St. Patrick’s Seminary, the organizing committee is very pleased to announce a conference entitled “The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt.”
The conference is open to all, and will feature presentations and lecture recitals by nearly forty scholars from around the country, covering a wide variety of topics within the Church’s treasury of sacred music, nearly all of which Dr. Mahrt has likewise written about with his typically insightful prose and genuine love of the music.
The four keynote spekaers of the conference are:
  • Dr. Joseph Dyer – “De Hierusalem exeunt reliquiæ – Music for the Dedication of the Church of Santa Prassede (Rome)”
  • Sr. Maria Kiely, O.S.B. – “O quam metuendus est locus iste (Gen. 28, 17): the Spiritual Foundations of Liturgical Prayer”
  • Dr. William Mahrt – “Dynamic Parallelismus Membrorum”  
  • Dr. Kerry McCarthy – “Low Style and High Style in Catholic England”
The other topics are:
  • Dr. Alison Altstatt – “Children in Anna von Buchwald’s Buch im Chor: Pedagogical Lessons from a Fifteenth-Century Convent”
  • Dr. Erick Arenas – “Mozart’s Requiem and Eighteenth-Century Liturgical Music Aesthetics Between the Church and the Concert Hall”
  • Fr. Brian T. Austin – “Music and Text in the Twelfth-Century Dulcis Iesu memoria
  • Br. Mark Bachmann, O.S.B. – “A Portrait of a Church Musician drawn from the Holy Rule of St. Benedict”
  • Jacob Beaird – “Chanting the Face of God: Iconography, Arvo Pärt, and James MacMillan”
  • Alex Begin – “Regional Music Team Buildling”
  • Dr. Horst Buchholz – “From The Old World to The New World: How Sacred Music in the U.S.A. was Shaped by European Composers “
  • Dr. Kevin Clarke – “The Pipe Organ in the Mass in Pre- and Post-Reformation England”
  • Kevin Faulkner – “Fulfilling Messiaen’s Prophecy, Resurgence of Chant and the Work of Charles Tournemire”
  • Duane Galles – “Canonical Aspects of Organ Care, Repair and Rebuilding”
  • Br. John Glasenapp, O.S.B. –  “Authoritative Problems: The Challenge of Chant History”
  • Dr. Jane Schatkin Hettrick – “Reforming Music and Liturgy in Catholic Worship around 1780 in Austria:  Prescriptions for Congregational Hymns”
  • Dr. William Hettrick – “Cantus Firmi in the Sacred Works of Johann Herbeck (1831–1877)”
  • Dr. Christopher Hodkinson – “The Ordo Cantus Missæ at Fifty
  • David Hughes – “Eucharistic Piety in the Earlier and Later Renaissance: The Agnus Dei in the Sixteenth Century”
  • Dr. Aaron James – “On the Legacy of Morales: Musical Shapes in the Polyphonic Magnificat”
  • Dr. Deborah Kauffman – “Music for the ‘Ceremonie du Sacre d’un Evesque’ at Saint-Cyr”
  • Christina Kim – “The Musical Shape of Exequies”
  • Dr. Ann Labounsky – “Jean Langlais: Servant of the Church”
  • Bruce Ludwick – “Shaping the Liturgy through Music: A Cathedral (or Parish) Journey”
  • Crista Miller – “Wonderful Splendor: A Survey of Newer Chant-based Organ Works”
  • Steven Ottományi – “Native Language Isochrony and the Rhythm of the Gregorian Chant”
  • Dr. John Pepino – “Louis Bouyer’s assessment of Sacrosanctum Concilium: retrieving the liturgical intent of Vatican II”
  • William V. Riccio – “One Man’s History of the Revival of the Traditional Mass (1963–Present)”
  • Dr. Jesse Rodin – “How Josquin Makes Chant an Engine of Invention”
  • Dr. Joseph Sargent – “The Magnificats of Bernardino de Ribera (c.1520-80)”
  • Roseanne Sullivan – “The Remarkable Sixty-Year Survival of Prof. Mahrt’s St. Ann Choir” 
  • Dr. Christoph Tietze – “Teaching Solfège to Children through Square Notation”
  • Dr. Edward Schaefer – “Chant and the Theology of the Mass”
  • Dr. Charles Weaver – “Dom Mocquereau and Music Theory”
  • Mary Ann Carr Wilson – “Melisma and Meditation: The Graduals of Advent”
Sung Lauds, Mass, and Vespers
Of course, the event will be anchored by the celebration of the sung liturgy, beginning with Vespers on Tuesday, and presenting Lauds, Mass, and Vespers on Wednesday and Thursday. Archbishop Cordileone will celebrate the opening (Tuesday) Vespers.
Pre-Conference
If you’re available to come early, we’ll have rehearsals on the morning and afternoon of Tuesday, Nov. 7th, to prepare the sung offices and Mass for Wednesday. Led by Dr. Mahrt and a team of other conductors (Horst Buchholz, Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka, and David Hughes), singers will prepare the chants of the liturgies, as well as the Byrd Mass for Four and motets by Ciprianus (Sicut Cervus), Isaac (Beata Viscera), and De la Rue (O Salutaris). In order to sing for the liturgies, you must be present at all the rehearsals on Tuesday and select the “Sing with St. Ann Choir + friends” option at registration. 
Hospitality
The registration fee includes several meals, and hotel options are provided as a convenience to attendees to find affordable accommodations nearby. Please see the registration page for more details. 
Conference Sponsors
  • The Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary
  • The Church Music Association of America
  • Stanford University Department of Music (Alexander Lecture)
  • The St. Ann Choir
  • The Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship
Registration for the event is $225. No clergy or student discounts are available, and the registration fee is non-refundable, though event insurance is available for purchase to registrants through the registration platform. The registration deadline is October 16th. 

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Celebrating the Life & Work of Dr. William Mahrt - Call for Participation: “The Musical Shape of the Liturgy”


The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: 
Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt
Call for Participation
November 7–9, 2023
St. Patrick’s Seminary, Menlo Park, California
Sponsored by: 
The Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary
The Church Music Association of America
Stanford University
The St. Ann Choir
Having devoted his life and scholarly activity to the study and praxis of the Roman rite and its music, Dr. William Mahrt has created a body of work which serves as become a touchstone for countless scholars and active church musicians. His insights into the characteristics of the various forms of Gregorian chant have elucidated the nature of chant as something integral to the sacred liturgy, and even explicated the nature of the sacred liturgy itself. His exposition of the nature of beauty and its embodiment in Catholic sacred music, liturgical gestures and symbols, and architecture has served as an important guide in the Church’s understanding of the purpose of artistic beauty in Divine worship. His work with the polyphonic masters of the Renaissance has illuminated the performances and scholarship of many choirs and students, and his devoted direction of the St. Ann Choir and Stanford Early Music Singers remains a pillar of the practice of sacred music in the United States.
On the occasion of the 150th volume of Sacred Music, which Dr. Mahrt has edited since 2006, following upon the establishment of a new chair in sacred music at St Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park in his name, and on the occasion of the 125th anniversary of the founding of St Patrick’s Seminary, the organizing committee is pleased to announce a conference entitled “The Musical Shape of the Liturgy: Celebrating the Life and Work of William P. Mahrt.”
This two-and-a-half-day conference will feature:
  • Keynote addresses (William Mahrt, Joseph Dyer, Kerry McCarthy, Sr. Maria Kiely, O.S.B.)
  • Papers, lecture recitals, and panel discussions on topics related to the conference theme
  • Masses and the sung Divine Office led by the St. Ann Choir and the Schola Cantorum of St. Patrick’s Seminary
  • Opportunities for informal discussions over included receptions and lunches on November 7, 8, and 9
  • Banquet on the evening of November 8
The conference committee welcomes proposals for papers, lecture recitals, and panel discussions related to the conference topic. Lecture recitals may be 20 minutes in length, while all other sessions will be either half-length (20 minutes paper plus 10 minutes for discussion for a total of 30 minutes) or full-length (45 minutes paper plus 15 minutes for discussion for a total of 60 minutes). Please specify in your paper proposal whether a half- or full-length session is intended. Panel discussions should have a minimum of three participants and will be 60 minutes in length, inclusive of questions.
To learn more about the conference, view, or download the complete call for participation, please visit the conference website. 

Friday, January 27, 2023

“The Beauty of the Sung Mass” - Public Lecture by Dr. William Mahrt

The Catholic Institute of Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, CA invites you to the first event of its inaugural public lecture and concert series.

“The Beauty of the Sung Mass”
A Lecture By Dr. William Mahrt (Stanford)
About the Lecture: The fundamental beauty of the Mass is the action of Christ offering a sacrifice to the Father, in which the people are essential participants. The music of the Mass creates a sense of transcendent order and purpose, and in a dynamic motion, focuses upon the action of Christ. The various elements of chant and polyphony, of celebrant, choir, and people each makes a unique contribution to this Christocentric beauty. The lecture will focus on the beauty of the action of Christ in the Mass and the people’s participation in his sacrifice. Sung examples will illustrate the various ways in which music creates a dynamic motion supporting this action. The roles of celebrant, choir, and congregation will be described as each making a unique contribution to this Christocentric beauty.
Sunday, Feb. 26th
4:00–5:00 p.m. PST
(7:00-8:00 p.m. EST)
Sancta Maria Hall at St. Patrick’s Seminary
320 Middlefield Road., Menlo Park, California
Tickets and streaming access are available at beautyofthesungmass.eventbrite.com The in-person event will be followed by a reception. Ample guest parking is available on-site. Live-streaming and archived viewing of the event are also available. An RSVP (see below) is appreciated, but not required. This free event is open to the public.

About the Speaker
William Mahrt is Associate Professor and Director of Early Music Singers in the music department at Stanford University, President of the Church Music Association of America, and editor of Sacred Music, the oldest continuously published journal of music in North America. Dr. Mahrt grew up in Washington state; after attending Gonzaga University and the University of Washington, he completed a doctorate at Stanford University in 1969. He taught at Case Western Reserve University and the Eastman School of Music, and then returned to Stanford in 1972, where he continues to teach early music.

Since 1964 he has directed the choir of St. Ann Chapel in Palo Alto, which sings Mass and Vespers in Gregorian chant on all the Sundays of the year, with masses in the polyphonic music of Renaissance masters for the holy days. His research interests include theory and performance of Medieval and Renaissance music, troubadours, Machaut, Dufay, Lasso, Dante, English Cathedrals, Gregorian chant, and Renaissance polyphony. He has published articles on the relation of music and liturgy, and music and poetry. He frequently leads workshops in the singing of Gregorian chant and the sacred music of the Renaissance.

In 2022, St. Patrick’s Seminary established the William P. Mahrt chair in sacred music to honor Dr. Mahrt’s lifetime of commitment to scholarship, beauty, and the Catholic faith.
About the Series
The Public Lecture & Concert Series of the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music welcomes the general public to St. Patrick’s Seminary to hear from preeminent scholars about topics which have a profound impact on the Church and humanity, inviting them especially to consider the Church’s wisdom on matters related to the worship of God, the spiritual life, beauty, and works of art. The recitals in this series feature world-class artists performing the transformative music of the Church’s treasury of sacred music, presented in a concert format accompanied by a brief lecture and rich program notes.We invite you to join us for these important and inspiring events.

About the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music
Founded in 2022, the mission of the Catholic Institute of Sacred Music is to draw souls to Jesus Christ through the beauty of sacred music and the liturgy. The Institute offers a substantial program of accredited, graduate-level coursework designed to help church musicians and clergy better to know and love the Church’s treasury of sacred music and her teachings on sacred music. Our goal is to equip students with the theological, philosophical, and historical knowledge, as well as the practical skills (singing, playing, conducting, composing, organizing, fundraising) necessary to build excellent sacred music programs in parishes and schools. We aim to help others revitalize the faith of Catholics and instill vitality in parish and school life through a vibrant sacred music program.

We are committed to a faithful and generous service of the Church. We cultivate fidelity, resiliency, a healthy sense of creativity, and selflessness within our student body and faculty as characteristics of our service as we labor together in the vineyard of the Lord to bring in a rich harvest.

About St. Patrick’s Seminary
For the past 125 years, St. Patrick’s Seminary has successfully prepared men to become Roman Catholic priests in conformity to Christ. Its expansive park-like grounds, historic chapel, modern classrooms, and extensive library provide an ideal environment for prayer, meditation, and study, within close proximity to major urban centers that provide rich field education opportunities. The integrated process of human, spiritual, intellectual, and pastoral formation at St. Patrick’s Seminary revolves around our core values of spiritual fatherhood, fidelity, holiness, wisdom, evangelization, resiliency, and compassion.

Thursday, November 17, 2022

The William P. Mahrt Sacred Music Chair (Part 1): Guest Article by Roseanne T. Sullivan

We are very grateful to guest contributor Roseanne T Sullivan for this article about a new chair in Sacred Music, named for our publisher, and long-time president of the Church Music Association of America, Dr William P. Mahrt. The chair has been established by His Excellency Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco, at the archdiocesan seminary and university of St Patrick in Menlo Park, and its first holder is our contributor Dr Jennifer Donelson-Novicka. This post will be followed by a second part with an interview with Archbishop Cordileone.

His Excellency Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco has created an endowed chair in Sacred Music at St. Patrick’s Seminary and University, which forms clergy for the San Francisco archdiocese and for other dioceses throughout the West and the Pacific Rim. With the establishment of this new William P. Mahrt Chair in Sacred Music, many courses in the history and practice of the Church’s sacred music will be available to seminarians and to others who are interested.
St Patrick’s Seminary
The overall quality of music at the seminary liturgies will be enhanced by the musical direction and example of the new holder of the chair, Professor Jennifer Donelson-Nowicka. In her new role as Associate Professor of Music and Director of Sacred Music at the seminary, she will also serve as the director of sacred music, overseeing all the musical activities in the seminary chapel, and accompanying liturgies at the organ, while both developing and directing a schola cantorum, which will sing Gregorian chant (in Latin), chant in English and Spanish, and sacred polyphony.
Here are some quotations from her paper “Emotion, Intellect, and Will: The Fruits of Sacred Music in the Spiritual Life”, which was given on June 29 at the Sacra Liturgia 2022 Conference in San Francisco.
“The Church has long been the greatest patron of beauty, feeding Christ’s sheep. Beauty is food for the soul. The world needs the material charity of the Church, but also Her spiritual charity.”
“It is possible to get to heaven without understanding much of anything about music, thanks be to God. But to willfully cling to ignorance or even an anti-knowledge which prizes ugliness or mediocrity is to choose to be deaf to one mode through which God makes known His glory.”
“Mediocre music, banal music is not spiritually neutral. It has a numbing effect on the soul, feeding the senses with the mere shadow of the glory of God’s love, but never really piquing our interest or helping us see God clearly. ... Bad music is a sort of spiritual junk food—food that looks like food, but makes us fat and lethargic. Musical junk food has no place in the sacred liturgy.”
Prof. Donelson-Novicka speaking at the Sacra Liturgia conference this past June; to her right are His Eminence Robert Card. Sarah, Archbishop Cordileone, and Fr Mark Doherty, the rector of St Patrick’s Seminary.
Professor Donelson-Nowicka wrote this to me in an email: “The chair is named after Dr. Mahrt in honor of his decades of devoted service to the cause of sacred music, not only in the Bay Area through his work at Stanford University and with the St. Ann Choir, but also nationally and internationally through his leadership as president of the Church Music Association of America (CMAA), and editorship of the CMAA’s journal Sacred Music.
“His scholarly work highlights, for example, how the Church’s Gregorian chant not only fittingly conveys the texts it adorns, but serves an integral role in the Church’s worship by expressing the nature of the liturgy itself. An Introit is an integral component of the liturgical action, moving the hearts of worshippers to the altar, and the procession to the sanctuary, sounding in a music that likewise moves. The Alleluia, in its profusion of notes on a short text, affords the opportunity for contemplation and meditation which, as the Church points out for example in the General Instruction of the Roman Missal, is a dominant characteristic of the Liturgy of the Word. The Church’s polyphony, too, expresses a particular splendor, reminiscent of the glory of God in His creation.
“All these are insights that Dr. Mahrt has patiently developed in his own work and in the hearts of his listeners and readers. They are the thoughts of a man who takes seriously the worship of God as the center of his life, and who devotes his intellectual energies towards the probing of the gifts the Church gives her children to ‘worship the Father in Spirit and in truth.’
“Inspired by Dr. Mahrt’s work, the mission of the chair is likewise to bring together prayer, worship, theology, beauty, and academic and technical excellence in sacred music.”
Professor Donelson-Nowicka is also organizing an international sacred music conference to be held at St. Patrick’s seminary in November of 2023 celebrating the work of Dr. Mahrt.
The choice of Professor Mahrt is particularly exciting to me because I have been writing for years about his achievement of keeping chant and polyphony alive while it was out of favor. [1] I sang with the St. Ann Choir that he directs at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Palo Alto for a few years beginning in 2005, and was very impressed when I learned that he had persisted in directing that choir in the singing of Gregorian chant and motets at Sunday Masses, and polyphonic Masses on feast days, in liturgies where that kind of music belongs, even during the long decades when that kind of music was virtually banned in the Church after Vatican II.
Dr. Mahrt directing the St Ann Choir... 
and here, showing a large decorated folio with the introit of the choir’s patronal feast. 
Music at the Heart of the Archbishop’s B16 Institute
This exciting innovation is tightly aligned with the goals of the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Liturgy, which Archbishop Cordileone founded in 2013.
I’ve also written several articles on Archbishop Cordileone’s initiatives to promote more-reverent liturgies through the Benedict XVI Institute. On January 5, 2014, I was present when Archbishop Cordileone along with Father Samuel Weber, O.S.B., the original director, announced the founding of the new institute. During its “opening night,” the archbishop announced, “The heart of the institute is music.” Among other related goals, he said that he wanted “to reclaim the sacred music that is so much at the heart of our celebration of the Mass.”
To do this, he continued, the institute would promote “what the Church has been asking us to do for a really long time, beginning at the Second Vatican Council” and continuing with “so many documents since, including the current General Instruction on the Roman Missal: Gregorian chant is to have first place in music at Mass.”
Archbishop Cordileone speaking at the Sacred Liturgia conference.
After the archbishop’s introduction, Fr. Weber demonstrated that it is easier than generally imagined to train people to sing chant well without much instruction on how to read the chant notation. Rehearsing with a program he had prepared with English chants of his own composition, Fr. Weber prepared the 200 or so people who attended to sing hymns and psalms at Benediction and Vespers of the Epiphany. As one commenter on Fr. Zuhlsdorf’s blog noted, “Vespers was fantastic, presided over by Abp Cordileone, and cantored by Fr. Weber, chanted in its entirety. Before we went into the Church for vespers, Fr. Weber did a quick tutorial/run-through of the chants for vespers, and unsurprisingly, everyone picked them up quite easily.”
The scope of the activities of the Benedict XVI Institute has widened in the ensuing years. On July 26, 2017, Catholic San Francisco announced that the institute’s name had changed a little, replacing “Liturgy” with “Worship” and that it was expanding its focus from sacred music to include also Catholic art, architecture, and literature under the new executive director, Maggie Gallagher.
Part of the expanded focus is to promote the creation of new works of art and literature and to build community and recognition between Catholic creatives, potential patrons, and other lovers of Catholic sacred arts.
The importance of music to the institute is evidenced by Archbishop Cordileone having named Frank La Rocca to be the institute’s composer in residence. The institute has commissioned several Mass settings so far from La Rocca: the Mass of the Americas, the Requiem for the Homeless, and Missa Sancti Juniperi Serra (in honor of St. Junipero Serra). La Rocca's new Messe Des Malades: Honoring Our Lady Of Lourdes, will premiere in February 2023.
The first Mass setting La Rocca composed for the institute, Mass of the Americas, continues to be performed in more and more cathedrals and churches long after it first premiered December 8, 2018.
Another great indicator that the results of the institute’s initiatives are also spreading into mainstream culture is a new album with a studio recording of the Mass of the Americas by Grammy-winning producer Blanton Alspaugh. After the album was recently released, it quickly rose to the top of the Billboard charts.
The institute also frequently sponsors events where other music, also art, and poetry from talented living creative Catholics is performed. “Our artists need to know we value their work, including a creative genius like Frank La Rocca, but also young artists,” Archbishop Cordileone has said.
The creation of the new Sacred Music chair that is the main topic of this article emphasizes the vital importance of priestly formation in survival of the Church’s heritage of sacred music. It seems to me to be an exciting step forward in achieving the goals of the institute, perfectly in line with the archbishop’s plan from the beginning to foster reverent liturgies.
The ripple effects of this new program may continue to be seen in many places in years to come. The Vatican Council II document Sacrosanctum concilium states, “The treasury of sacred music is to be preserved and cultivated with great care.” Those who benefit from training and the example of music skillfully performed at St. Patrick’s by an expert in expounding and performing the treasury of the Church’s sacred music will in their turn go out to spread the good news to many more places.
[1] See my articles “Gregorian Champ,” (National Catholic Register, 18 November 2007) and “Palo Alto’s secret gift to the Church,” (California Catholic Daily, 20 December 2017.)

Friday, September 24, 2021

The St Ann Choir Celebrates Its 58th Anniversary

Thanks to one of our long-time guest contributors, Roseanne Sullivan, for this tribute to Dr William Mahrt (who is also our publisher) and the St Ann Choir, for the extraordinary work they have done over almost six decades to preserve the great tradition of Catholic liturgical music.

Lovers of the traditional music of the Roman Catholic liturgy may want to stop a moment and marvel about the St Ann Choir’s unique achievement: fifty-eight years of continual performance of Gregorian chant and polyphony at weekly liturgies in diocesan churches—even while this kind of music was out of favor in the Church.
Dr William Mahrt and the St Ann Choir
This coming Sunday, September 26, will be the choir's fifty-eighth anniversary; they began singing on the last Sunday of September in 1963, and have almost miraculously managed to keep chant and sacred polyphony alive as it should be performed, as part of sacred liturgies, during the long decades since then when the Church’s traditional sacred music was virtually banned. The choir now sings at St Thomas Aquinas Church, which is located at 751 Waverly St. in Palo Alto, California. Every Sunday at noon, the choir and congregation sing the ordinary chants of the Mass, at Latin Masses in the Ordinary Form, and the choir also sings the proper chants for the day of the Church year —in addition to polyphonic motets from great Renaissance composers, with organ preludes and postludes. For special feasts, the choir also sings polyphonic Mass settings by Renaissance composers for the ordinary, along with chanted propers for the feast. All are welcome to these Masses with their unique musical enrichment.
A poster advertising the choir’s patronal feast in 2018, with music by Josquin des Prez.
The choir is directed by Stanford Professor William Mahrt, who also leads the Stanford Early Music Singers, is president of the Church Music Association of America, and editor of the CMAA journal Sacred Music. Mahrt joined the St Ann Choir when he was a Stanford graduate student, and has directed it, with some breaks totaling about five years breaks, since 1964, its second year of existence.
“The main achievement of our choir is to have maintained the traditional music of the Roman Catholic Church. We began singing Gregorian chant and classical polyphony and included organ music in liturgies before the council, and our program is pretty much the same as it was when we started,” says Prof. Mahrt. “Our choir started one year before the language changed [from Latin to the vernacular]—if we had tried to start one year later, we might not have been able to do it.”
The choir got its name because they originally sang at the St Ann Chapel in Palo Alto, which was the Stanford University Newman Center at the time. In 1998, the diocese decided to move the Newman Center to Stanford Memorial Church and an on-campus office. After efforts to keep the chapel as a place for Catholic worship failed, it was sold to a conservative Anglican group in 2003.
The chapel has a remarkable history of its own. It was built by Clare Booth Luce as a memorial for her daughter Ann, who was a Stanford senior when she was killed in a car accident while returning to campus in 1944 after Christmas vacation. The loss of her daughter precipitated a crisis that showed Luce the meaninglessness of her own life. After months of instruction and counsel from then-Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen, Luce converted to Catholicism.
Luce intended the chapel to illustrate her conviction that modernity and sacred art are compatible. She commissioned artists to decorate the chapel with expressionistic (and experimental) painted windows instead of stained glass, painted Stations of the Cross, a cubist-inspired mosaic of the Madonna, and a steel mesh flat baldachino decorated with mosaics and Cubist-inspired angels. It was dedicated in 1951. For years after the chapel was sold to the Anglican group, the choir was allowed to sing Vespers and some occasional liturgies there, until COVID precautions suspended those arrangements. Prof. Mahrt says, “I anticipate that we will go back, not for the expressionism and cubism, but the acoustics.”
As Susan Benofy wrote in Adoremus 20 years ago, “It is rare to hear chant in Catholic churches, and it is rarely taught in Catholic institutions. Catholoics who are familiar with the chant and polyphonic repertoire are more likely to have gained this familiarity from listening to recordings than to have experienced this music as an integral part of the solemn liturgy.” (Adoremus Online: March 2001) Another very telling commentary comes from René Girard, Stanford Professor Emeritus, and one of only 40 members, or ‘immortals,’ of the Académie Française: “When I first attended, I assumed that the Catholic Church and the University actively supported this unique contribution to the spiritual and cultural life of the community. The truth is that ever since 1963, Professor Mahrt has been very much on his own in this enormously time-, talent- and energy-consuming enterprise.” 

Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Fall Courses Offered by Sacred Music Institute of America

The Sacred Music Institute of America is offering a range of courses for the fall, including a course taught by our publisher, CMAA President, Dr William P. Mahrt. From the Sacred Music Institute of America’s press release:

In today’s rapidly-shifting environment of changing regulations and guidelines, the Sacred Music Institute of America, LLC stands by its commitment to provide high-quality educational experiences to meet the needs of sacred musicians beyond the confines of traditional academic programs. This fall, we are honored to welcome Dr William Mahrt to the faculty for a ten-week online course in Gregorian Chant. “Gregorian and English Chant I” is a beginning course in chant which will proceed from reading and singing of the simplest chants and the study of their liturgical function and include chants of progressive difficulty for the priest, people, and choir in both English and Latin.

In all of these categories, the study will proceed through chants of progressive difficulty, with priest’s prayers, versicles and responses of priests and people, chants for the Ordinary of the Mass in English and Latin for the congregation, and chants for the proper of the Mass in English for the choir. For the proper of the Mass, chants of progressive difficulty will be studied, based upon The Proper of the Mass for Sundays and Solemnities of Fr Samuel Weber, O.S.B. (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2014). The beauty of the chants as integral to the liturgy will be a consideration.

Dr Mahrt also teaches musicology and the performance of Medieval and Renaissance music at Stanford University.

The Institute’s fall offerings also include online courses in “The History of Sacred Music,” “Music Theory I,” private lessons in organ, voice, and conducting, and mentoring for church musicians. All fall classes begin on August 24. More information is available at www.sacredmusicinstitute.org or by contacting the Institute at 614-395-7783 or administrator@sacredmusicinstitute.org.

The cost for registration in the 10-week courses will be $850, with various pricing for private lessons, depending on the teacher.

Thursday, November 21, 2019

Dr William Mahrt on The Mass of the Americas

Our publisher Dr William Mahrt attended the recent celebration of the Pontifical Mass in Washington DC, the first time Frank LaRocca's Mass of the Americas was performed with the celebration of the Extraordinary Form, and was kind enough to share this review with us. A complete video of the ceremony is included below, and several pictures of the Mass, courtesy of photographers Matthew Barrick and Jeffrey Bruno, and the Benedict XVI Institute.

On November 16, a Solemn Pontifical Mass in the Extraordinary Form was celebrated at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, D.C., by His Excellency Salvatore Cordileone, Archbishop of San Francisco. Sponsored by the Benedict XVI Institute for Sacred Music and Divine Worship, it was designated the “Mass of the Americas”; the idea for it came from the close occurrence of the feast of the Immaculate Conception and the San Francisco celebration of the Guadalupana, the festive observance of Our Lady of Guadalupe. The archbishop wanted a liturgical observance uniting the two traditions, and so he commissioned composer Frank La Rocca to produce music incorporating traditional Mexican tunes, especially “La Guadalupana,” into the music for the Mass in the manner of a Renaissance parody Mass. This was celebrated in the Ordinary Form on December 8 of last year in San Francisco, and will be celebrated again on other occasions across the country; its celebration in Washington in the Extraordinary Form was part of this project. While the Mass in San Francisco included some texts in the vernacular, the Extraordinary Form admits only of Latin, and so La Rocca revised some of the music to create one of the most beautiful and impressive celebrations of that Mass in a long time.

The ceremonies of the old Mass were extensive and highly significant. Assisting the archbishop was the assistant priest, four deacons—two of the throne, two of the altar—a subdeacon, a master of ceremonies, two miter bearers, and numerous acolytes; each minister was in a distinctive vestment which showed forth the distinct function of his ministry. Two familiares, who aided the archbishop in washing his hands, were vested in ferraiolae, black floor-length capes that showed them as the lowest, yet valuable participants in the ceremonies. A significant and rarely seen part of the ceremonies was the vesting of the archbishop. At least twelve distinctive vestments were brought to him in turn, each of which is donned as he says a prayer. Particularly interesting were the tunicle and dalmatic, the vestment of the subdeacon and deacon, and the chasuble, proper to a priest; that a bishop wears all of these symbolizes his possession of the fullness of the priesthood. The hierarchy of vestments of the ministers corresponded to the hierarchy of the elements of the ceremonies, which involved a complex of formal actions and gestures; even the congregation was included when they were honored with incense, when they sang the responses to the archbishop, and, of course, when they received Communion.

The vestments were created specifically for the Mass of the Americas. They incorporate the turquoise color of Mary’s cloak in the famous Guadalupe image, as well as the sun behind her; twelve stars on three of the principal vestments derive from Mary’s crown in the Book of Revelation. A Scriptural verse visible on the vestments refers to the consequence of the revelation to St Juan Diego at Guadalupe—the conversion of Mexico to Christianity: “Non fecit taliter omni nationi” (Ps. 147:20, He hath not done thus for every other nation.)

Omni nationi!
It was the music that brought the whole liturgy together. All the music for the Extraordinary Form had to be in the ancient liturgical languages, and so some pieces were newly composed, for example the Kyrie, an alternation between Gregorian chant and polyphonic elaboration using the Kyrie cum jubilo for Masses of the Blessed Virgin. This stunning composition set the tone for the whole liturgy, where music ranged from traditional Gregorian chants sung by a schola of either men or women, to elaboration upon the chants, to settings incorporating the traditional Mexican melodies in music of transcendent liturgical expression. Some movements began with chant-like melodies, only to go far beyond them in extraordinary musical textures. Before and after the Mass, during the vesting and de-vesting of the archbishop, music in Latin, Spanish, and Nahuatl, the Aztec language spoken by St. Juan Diego, was sung.

All the music had a discernable focus in a harmonic language that could be understood by an intelligent listener; it could be called tonal, but it departed from traditional tonal techniques. There were familiar kinds of dissonance, but it took them far beyond conventional contrapuntal practice. It used some traditional harmonic language, but with new and exciting progressions and sonorities. At its most complex, it achieved a use of harmonic language that emerged from creative use of conventional contrapuntal and harmonic practices. This is the hallmark of La Rocca’s composition: he began as an academic composer of skilled but abstract music; then he realized that there was more to music than the esoteric language of academic composition. He now uses his skill as a composer to create music that is harmonic but innovative. This music is modern but comprehensible, classical but not archaic. He avoids, on the one hand, the slightly remote style of Arvo Pärt, and, on the other hand, the luscious, indulgent style of Morton Lauritsen.

The pieces of the Ordinary of the Mass are of remarkably different purposes: the Kyrie, drawn-out and hieratic, the Gloria, exultant and joyful with moments of lyrical introspection. The Sanctus is a most evocative anticipation of the mystery about to be enacted, while the Benedictus, which speaks of Him who has just come, is a warm but hieratic welcome to the presence of the Savior. The Agnus Dei reflects both the pathos of the sacrifice of Christ and the love by which that sacrifice was offered. Some of the Propers of the Mass were sung by a schola in pure Gregorian chant, but others were given eloquent polyphonic settings, either based upon chants or upon free melodies.

Eternal Word Television Network broadcast the entire liturgy, and deserves credit for many aspects of a very skillful presentation, not the least of which was the absence of any superimposed commentary: the liturgy and its music could be observed directly and speak for themselves. The entire church (the largest Catholic Church in North America) was filled with worshipers, including many young people.


Archbishop Cordileone’s sermon focused upon the intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary as a means of uniting—“that all may be one”—East and West, Old World and New, Aztecs and Spaniards, rich and poor. He approached the question of how one can mount such an elaborate liturgy as this in so beautiful a church, while the poor are in need. He quoted Dorothy Day: we must feed the bodies of the poor but also their souls—satisfy hunger for bread, but also hunger for beauty. Of the transcendentals truth, goodness, and beauty, beauty is most lacking today, and this leads to the purpose of the Mass of the Americas: to bring beauty to the life of the church.

Saturday, March 02, 2019

Interview with the CMAA Coming up on EWTN

The EWTN program “Church Universal” will feature two interviews with officers of the Church Music Association of America, Fr Pasley, Horst Bucholtz, and Prof. William Mahrt. They will be broadcast on Sunday, March 3 and 10 at 5 p.m. EST, with repeats on Tuesday, March 5 and 12 at 5 a.m. EST, and on Wednesday, March 6 and 13 at 6:30 p.m. EST. The interviews will be conducted by Fr Joseph Mary Wolfe and will discuss a range of topics related to the mission of the CMAA. The program can be viewed on the EWTN network on many cable services, but it can also be seen live at the above days and times on the EWTN website at www.EWTN.com.

Thursday, January 24, 2019

Stanford Gregorian Chant Workshop, Jan. 28 and Feb. 23

On January 28 and February 23, the Benedict XVI Institute’s Mary Ann Carr Wilson, an experienced teacher of chant and also a children’s chant specialist, will team up with eminent Stanford Prof. William Mahrt to offer workshops in Gregorian Chant on the Stanford campus. Everyone is welcome, space permitting; email mwilson@bxvi.org to apply, or register online at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chant-workshop-at-stanford-tickets-55111358557! A donation of $10 to cover the cost of food and supplies is requested, payable at the door. Learn this ancient and moving language of the Church with fascinating friends, old and new, then pray together the ancient prayers of the Church: Compline or Night Prayer, part of the Liturgy of the Hours.The event will be held at the Braun Music Center, Room 103, located at 547 Lasuen Mall, Stanford, California.


Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Summer 2017 Issue of Sacred Music

The summer issue of Sacred Music (vol. 144, number 2) will soon be appearing in mailboxes around the world. We are happy to publish in this issue and a few upcoming issues a number of addresses from a recent conference, as well as an excellent editorial by our editor, Dr. William Mahrt.

If you'd like to receive the journal, become a member of the Church Music Association of America by clicking here. Membership also offers the benefit of discounts on books and program tuition.

Summer - Volume 144, Number 2

Table of Contents

EDITORIAL
Ministry | William Mahrt

ARTICLES
Sacred Music Renewal Fifty Years after Musicam Sacram | Jennifer Donelson
A Pastoral Plan for Sacred Music | Rev. Jon Tveit
Is Beauty Subjective? | Rev. David Friel
A Sense of Solemnity in the Sacred Liturgy as a means of Catechesis and Evangelization | James Monti

REVIEWS
Sacred Treasure by Joseph Swain | Trent Beattie

CMAA ANNOUNCEMENTS

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

CMAA Colloquium Votive Mass of St Paul

Today's CMAA Colloquium Mass, a Votive Mass of St Paul, was celebrated by Father James Richardson at St Mark's Church in St Paul, MN. Some of the Chant and Polyphony Directors are pictured including Jeffrey Morse, David Hughes, William Mahrt and Melanie Malinka.








More recent articles:

For more articles, see the NLM archives: