Insiders debate how to praise - church music standards
National Catholic Reporter, August 24, 2001 by Arthur Jones
Two practitioners on fine art of getting the church to sing
Music directors on the job since 1990 may recall a grand brouhaha in their field. It started when Thomas Day, music department chairman at Salve Regina College, Newport, R.I., propped on the Catholic music stand his book Why Catholics Can't Sing: the Culture of Catholicism and the Triumph of Bad Taste (Crossroad).
What, he asked, could possibly cause the odd behavior he was witnessing among American Catholics?
"To stand in the middle of a Catholic congregation, surrounded by row after row of people ignoring music they are supposed to sing, can be an unsettling experience," he wrote.
He Wondered if it might be a "sullen rebellion" against changes in the liturgy resulting from the Second Vatican Council (1962-65) reforms.
Disappointed Catholics "are not reactionaries who want to restore the old Latin regime completely and go back to public hangings as well," he wrote, "but they do show traces of bitterness at the way the church has abruptly changed a serious act of worship into a low-grade variety show."
In his book, Day criticized most severely the phenomenon of "Mr. Caruso" who "has such a lovely voice." Mr. Caruso (and increasingly Ms. Caruso) is the cantor with the microphone who drowns out the congregation.
"An amplified soloist (Mr. Caruso) belting out `Praise to the Lord' in front of a silent congregation produces one of the most unappealing sounds in Christendom," he said.
And what was the National Association of Pastoral Musicians, by then 15 years old, to make and say about Day's critique?
The National Association of Pastoral Musicians invited Day to their 1991 Pittsburgh meeting to debate the issue with Elaine Rendler, a founding board member of the National Association of Pastoral Musicians.
Fast forward a decade and renew the debate. Day first.
In 2001, Day said Mr. and Ms. Caruso are "still there on the altar. They are more victorious than ever, still a cogent reason for capital punishment."
Comparing today to 1990, Day said it "is hard to put your finger on the pulse and say it is XYZ." The state of Catholic music "varies from place to place. It has settled into a stable routine and, as far as I can tell, there is not much zip in most Catholic churches. They go through the motions, and there is a tired repertoire that is dragged out week after week. How much this has stained itself into the soul and lifeblood of people, I really don't know."
Day said he still receives calls from desperate people telling him how bad things are, and he has a collection of anecdotes to back their statements up. He spoke of two liturgies for students at Notre Dame, one by the music faculty and one a folk Mass, as "two rites almost."
Continued Day, "I think what I called `reformed folk music' is more triumphant than ever. Some Of my worst fears have been fulfilled. You have a younger generation now that has no reference point. Now when they want to sing `traditional Catholic music' they will sing, `The Church's One Foundation' -- an old Methodist hymn. That is their idea of tradition. I think, if I may be immodest, [in the book] I got it right.'
He said he has a lot of respect for the National Association of Pastoral Musicians as an organization, but is dismayed by its publication, Pastoral Music. "You can go for issue after issue and never tome across a technical article on music. It's all uplift, generalized meditation on worship. I think in some ways it is more of a liturgical organization than a musical one. The actual technique of music, the nuts and bolts of it, is pushed into a corner somewhere."
Rendler thinks Day had some things exactly right in his book (see below), but that doesn't mean she agrees on everything.
"He spoke from his experience," she said. "Most people's knowledge of `church' is their parish. Over the years I have come to know more parishes similar to his."
However, said Rendler, academic music "is its Own critter. It took Baroque music 200 years to form. Bach's Passion Chorale was, `O Innsbruck Now I Must Leave Thee,' so let's get on with it. I'm fascinated thinking of where all today's music will go -- in 200 years, not in 30."
Rendler, who in fifth grade, before Vatican II, was playing the organ for Benediction at St. Philomena's Parish in Lansdowne, Pa., has four decades of experience in Catholic music at the parish level. Currently on the music faculty at George Mason University, in Fairfax, Va., she is music minister for the Catholic campus chapel's four weekend liturgies.
"Judge [today's] music not with a classical yardstick, but as something in its own right. Doing workshops around the country is fascinating," she said. On the East Coast, a college choir chants to music by Hildegard of Bingen, the 12th-century Rhineland mystic. On the West Coast a mariachi band plays at Mass. Meanwhile, "distillers" are at work, bringing various Catholic traditions "into the entire church's music."
While attending college on a music scholarship, Rendler taught in inner-city public schools and experienced "a conversion ... through the African-American people."
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