.
I read a lot online; probably too much. I am very interested in people & want to know what they have to say. Every now & then, you read something that really stops you in your tracks. Something that commands your attention & points you toward ultimate realities in an unexpected way.
The writings of the Franciscan Friars of the Renewal - who celebrate their 25th anniversary this year - are a source of great wisdom, hope, & joy to me. I encourage you to read all of the gems there, but THIS particular story really got me. I'm curious what you think.
You can also listen to Fr. Andrew Apostoli's homily for the order's anniversary Mass HERE. As you can hear & read, they are growing fast. This is the fruit of all those prayers for vocations for priests & religious you've offered up. Support them as you are able. God bless.
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Saturday, July 28, 2012
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
William Byrd
Obviously, I have been totally out of blogging mode for some time. Just. Simply. No. Time.
So, what's been keeping me so busy? Well, it may sound mundane, but mostly family, home, work, church, & school. In other words, nothing different from anyone else. Though, I guess putting obscure Italian motorcycles back together & organizing Gregorian chant workshops isn't on everyone's to-do list.
Here's an embellished piece of a draft of an old post...
Musically, the Knoxville Latin Mass Schola (informally known as the Blessed Hermann Contractus of Reichenau Schola) has been working very hard to learn William Byrd's Mass for Three Voices, which we will sing tomorrow for the Ascension Thursday/Sunday/Saturday Mass at my home parish of St. Thomas the Apostle, & again at Holy Ghost for the various upcoming feasts & solemnities. I think it's beautiful, & has some very complex chordal arrangements that sound like they could have been written last week. Such is the power of true sacred music.
[ed: we actually did learn & sing that Mass several times, both with EF Masses at Holy Ghost & also OF Masses at St. Thomas, where - in combination with Adam Barlett's Simple English Propers - it seemed very welcome. We sang it at the wedding of the sister of a several members of our choir - the most beautiful & enjoyable wedding I've ever had the privilege to attend. Byrd's genius as a composer carried the day(s), even when our talent or execution wasn't perfect.]
William Byrd lived in "interesting times." Read his bio on Wikipedia. He was a Catholic who loved his Faith, but found it increasingly precarious to practice it during Elizabethan times. I've often thought about his exquisite Agnus Dei arrangements, & how he must have felt penning "dona nobis pacem," even as his beloved priests & other faithful Catholics were arrested & publicly tortured & executed for refusing to burn incense to Ceasar. Perhaps he understood the power of suffering & dying for the Faith.
It was a privilege to spend time with Byrd, learning his personality through his work. Our choir is now learning his Ave Verum Corpus, which we are also loving.
.
So, what's been keeping me so busy? Well, it may sound mundane, but mostly family, home, work, church, & school. In other words, nothing different from anyone else. Though, I guess putting obscure Italian motorcycles back together & organizing Gregorian chant workshops isn't on everyone's to-do list.
Here's an embellished piece of a draft of an old post...
Musically, the Knoxville Latin Mass Schola (informally known as the Blessed Hermann Contractus of Reichenau Schola) has been working very hard to learn William Byrd's Mass for Three Voices, which we will sing tomorrow for the Ascension Thursday/Sunday/Saturday Mass at my home parish of St. Thomas the Apostle, & again at Holy Ghost for the various upcoming feasts & solemnities. I think it's beautiful, & has some very complex chordal arrangements that sound like they could have been written last week. Such is the power of true sacred music.
[ed: we actually did learn & sing that Mass several times, both with EF Masses at Holy Ghost & also OF Masses at St. Thomas, where - in combination with Adam Barlett's Simple English Propers - it seemed very welcome. We sang it at the wedding of the sister of a several members of our choir - the most beautiful & enjoyable wedding I've ever had the privilege to attend. Byrd's genius as a composer carried the day(s), even when our talent or execution wasn't perfect.]
William Byrd lived in "interesting times." Read his bio on Wikipedia. He was a Catholic who loved his Faith, but found it increasingly precarious to practice it during Elizabethan times. I've often thought about his exquisite Agnus Dei arrangements, & how he must have felt penning "dona nobis pacem," even as his beloved priests & other faithful Catholics were arrested & publicly tortured & executed for refusing to burn incense to Ceasar. Perhaps he understood the power of suffering & dying for the Faith.
It was a privilege to spend time with Byrd, learning his personality through his work. Our choir is now learning his Ave Verum Corpus, which we are also loving.
.
Monday, July 23, 2012
Not To Us, But To You Be The Glory
I heard a talking head on network news this evening say that what all America was talking about this weekend was the shooting in Colorado. That is not, in fact, true. This entire weekend, I was thinking of, working for, teaching about, & worshiping God from sun up to sun down & even in my sleep.
Our parish hosted a sacred music workshop for our middle- & high-schoolers taught by the Knoxville Latin Mass Schola. On Friday, I gave a presentation on the historical development of sacred music, especially chant, & the proper role of sacred music in the liturgy according to the Church itself as largely articulated in Dei Verbum & Sing to the Lord: Music in Divine Worship. After this, we watched the clip from the Sound of Music where Maria teaches the kids to sing using Do-Re-Mi, because a) it's really entertaining, b) that really is the basic method of chant. Then we actually began to sing starting with childhood songs & nursery rhymes that I had set to chant notation.
Our parish hosted a sacred music workshop for our middle- & high-schoolers taught by the Knoxville Latin Mass Schola. On Friday, I gave a presentation on the historical development of sacred music, especially chant, & the proper role of sacred music in the liturgy according to the Church itself as largely articulated in Dei Verbum & Sing to the Lord: Music in Divine Worship. After this, we watched the clip from the Sound of Music where Maria teaches the kids to sing using Do-Re-Mi, because a) it's really entertaining, b) that really is the basic method of chant. Then we actually began to sing starting with childhood songs & nursery rhymes that I had set to chant notation.
Saturday was the big day & I dreamed anxiously about the workshop all night long. There was a mad flurry of activity in the morning, from picking up the snacks at the store, making the coffee, greeting the kids & parents, to stuffing the music folders. Once things got underway, they really got underway! The whole day seemed a blur. It was exhausting for students & teachers alike, but it was one of the happier entanglements I've been a part of lately. We handed on a heretofore unknown aspect of the faith to a new generation!
At 4:00pm, we gathered in the church for solemn sung Vespers. I intoned "O God, come to my assistance.." & the Spirit took over from there. It all went beautifully. The prelude, interlude, & postlude organ pieces were exquisite. The whole atmosphere was solemn, prayerful, & beautiful. I could not have anticipated how well it all came together. And I dreamed about the beauty of the liturgy all night long.
I was able to make a recording of Vespers, which I hope to post on the St. Thomas web site soon.
The last intercessory prayer at Evening Prayer is always for the repose of the souls of the dead in God's mercy. I offered this for the victims of the Colorado shooting. Other than this, it was not really discussed. We did not give glory to murderers by dwelling on them; we gave glory to God this weekend by trusting in his love & rejoicing in his presence.
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Sunday, July 15, 2012
Sacred Music Workshop this weekend
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"Sacred chant is intimately bound up with this celebration [of the
liturgy], clothing it as with a garment…” Dom Saulnier, OSB, Gregorian Chant, p.20
This Friday, I will be giving a presentation on sacred music in the Roman Catholic liturgy. This talk (from 6:30 to 8:00pm, everyone invited) with its accompanying short practice will be the opening event of a Sacred Music Workshop for the parish youth this Saturday (beginning at 9:00am).
"Of all the sounds of which human beings, created in the image and likeness of God, are capable, voice is the most privileged and fundamental." Sing to the Lord 86
"The Church recognizes Gregorian chant as being specially suited to the Roman Liturgy. Therefore... it should be given pride of place [principem locum: first place] in liturgical services." Vatican II - Sacrosanctum Concilium 116
The Youth will learn how to read & sing Gregorian chant notation & a simple piece of polyphony through instruction by the Knoxville Latin Mass Schola. They will understand the genuine role of music in the liturgy as spelled out by the Church herself. They will learn to worship more fully, & they will be transformed by the experience.
"All who take part in the divine office are not only performing a duty of the church, they are also sharing in what is the greatest honor for Christ's bride; for by offering these praises to God they are standing before God's throne in the name of the church, their mother." Vatican II - Sacrosanctum Concilium 85
What they learn will be put into practice at a 4:00pm Vespers service (again, all invited). I believe this will be quite memorable for all in attendance.
"Faith grows when it is well expressed in celebration. Good celebrations can foster and nourish faith. Poor celebrations may weaken it." Sing to the Lord 5
A very influential someone in the parish greatly upset me with the comment, "they really don't take it very seriously here," meaning the liturgy & that my efforts to make sacred music better known & appreciated were a waste of time. Perhaps we could clothe our Holy Mother in a more solemn, beautiful, & prayerful garment. Perhaps it will take a new Spirit-filled generation to make it so.
The full bulletin notice can be found at the St. Thomas the Apostle homepage.
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