The market for recordings of polyphonic music is highly competitive, with ever more groups jumping into the sector with increasingly impressive performances. A CD I picked up recently is of the British singing group Stile Antico. The CD is called Song of Songs (Harmonia Mundi, 2009). It presents musical settings of text from the Song of Solomon, by some of the greatest composers of the 16th century, including Palestrina, Gombert, Lassus, Clemens non Papa, and Victoria. It seems that composers tended to reserve their most luxurious art for these particular passages of scripture that famously discuss love in such vivid terms.
But what is particularly striking is how this group features the distinctive quality of the music in the management of the ensemble itself. Unlike modern music, there is no “master/slave” relationship in the score, which is to say that there is no easy division between the melody and the accompaniment parts. Each voice plays a critical role in contributing to the overall effect. As a singer, one knows this when performing this music. The effect is strangely empowering.
Stilo Antico takes paradigm of what we might call radical equality and steps it up even further: the group has no director waving hands or even keeping a beat. Even for entrances, cutoffs, and tempo changes, anyone watching them sing detects not a single dominant person in charge. The singers come to understand each other and achieve what resembles perfect coordination. Now, someone in the know recognizes that there is an underlying pulse in operation that keeps everyone singing together, a pulse you feel but do not hear. And yet the audible effects sound completely seamless across time and space, like a variety of shapes of clouds in the sky moving from place to place.
Yes, it is all quite mystical and enchanting. I’ve never known anyone who isn’t dazzled by this type of music, performed with this level of perfection. If a person has never heard of this type of music before, the result is astonishment. Of course, this music is performed and marketed as what we might call art music. However, Catholics know that it is more than that. It is liturgical music, a music that elaborates on the text of the Roman Rite. It is the music of the faith. It is the music specifically mentioned by the Second Vatican Council as a worth extension of Gregorian chant, especially suitable for liturgy.
It is for this reason that a vast number of professionals and non-professionals have started groups for singing this music in its proper context: in Church, at Mass. The point is not to record it and sell it. The point is to provide a dramatic enhancement of the liturgical experience for both the people attending services and also for the transcendent purpose of glorifying God. No, these groups will never sound as perfect as a CD by Stile Antico, and that is fine. There is no something oddly artificial about a recording in any case, the way the listener can infinitely repeat what came before. In real time, every note passes through time to become part of our own history as soon as it happens; in liturgical time, every note passes into eternity as a gift with Divine purpose.
Is it any wonder that people are ever more aspiring to sing polyphonic music of this type, and in their own houses of worship? And let there be no doubt that this is happening. I’m preparing right now to attend the Sacred Music Colloquium XX, sponsored by the Church Music Association of America. This is a training program in chant and polyphonic music. This year it is being held at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. It isn’t only about classroom work; the music is sung also in authentic liturgical settings. The purpose is not only art; it is also worship at morning prayer, vespers, and Mass.
I’ve been attending for many years but the level of participation and the intensity of interest has never before been like this. The first year I attend, there were 30 people. This year, the CMAA had to cut off registration at 250, simply because the program structure and the facilities could not handle any more than that. There is no way to know how many people might have come had the registrations not been closed long before the official deadline.
The people who are attending include full-time church music directors and some professional singers. But I think it is fair to say that most of the attendees are actually non-professionals who are seeking to improve their talents as an offering of praise to God, returning home to contribute to the parish liturgical programs.
Many are making large sacrifices to attend. They pay tuition and travel. They give up their vacation time from work. Since most Catholic musicians are not famously wealthy, they have had to raise money from friends and family. It is a pinch no matter how the bill is paid, and yet they do it. This year, some attendees are receiving small scholarships made possible by generous donors.
As for the CMAA itself, it is a very old organization, with roots in the 19th century, but it has no endowment. It has no large financial base. It raises money program to program. Most remarkably, it has no one who is paid a regular salary to work for the organization. There are no employees on its payroll. Its energy comes from volunteers and people with a range of talents who contribute in every way possible, providing services for free or absurdly discount rates. The workload grows and grows, simply because the demand is there for the CMAA’s services. Sometimes it seems nearly impossible that such an organization could exist in our times, and yet it does, and somehow not only gets by but thrives.
Does this structure for an organization make sense? Is it viable over the long term? Is it secure? Something tells me that that answer to all three questions is yes. Something that takes root this way from decentralized human energy has the greatest possible hope of having the largest effect on the world around us. No one is involve for any other reason than love of music and love of liturgy and the faith. As St. Augustine said: “Cantare amantis est.” Singing belongs to one who loves.
I could listen to CDs of amazing polyphonic music by professionals all day. But as great as these are, there is nothing to compare with being among 250 extremely passionate church musicians who are discovering, many for the first time, the secrets of this mysterious, glorious music, and learning how to weave it all into the most important part of our lives.
The Church Music Association of America is pleased to extend an open invitation to all liturgies and events scheduled to take place at Pittsburgh’s Church of the Epiphany as part of Sacred Music Colloquium XX. The dates are June 21-27, 2010.
This is a unique opportunity to participate actively, internally and externally, in liturgies in which sacred music, Gregorian chant and polyphony (and beyond), resume pride of place in their native setting. Both Ordinary Form (OF) and Extraordinary Form (EF) Masses will be celebrated during the week, as well as Gregorian and polyphonic vespers and night prayer.
Of special note this year: Tuesday’s OF Mass in English with propers and ordinary chants newly composed in the Gregorian tradition by Fr. Samuel Weber, Bruce Ford, and Richard Rice; Tuesday evening’s organ recital by Montreal’s dazzling Isabelle Demers; Saturday’s EF Mass consisting in a chanted ordinary (Mass IX) and polyphonic propers by William Byrd, and Sunday’s outing of Schubert’s Mass in G with organ and orchestra. Other treasures of the week include Palestrian’s Missa Brevis, polyphonic vespers with music of the Roman renaissance,and and array of motets by Taverner, Tallis, Lasso, Guerrero, Bruckner and more.
The beauty of the liturgy . . . more than anything else it deserves to be called the splendor of the truth. It opens to the small and the great alike the treasures of its magnificence: the beauty of psalmody, sacred chants and texts, candles, harmony of movement and dignity of bearing. With sovereign art the liturgy exercises a truly seductive influence on souls, whom it touches directly, even before the spirit perceives its influence.
-- Dom Gerard Calvet, OSB (1927-2008)
A New Renaissance for Sacred Music
by Jeffrey Tucker, managing editor of Sacred Music
The market for recordings of polyphonic music is highly competitive, with ever more groups jumping into the sector with increasingly impressive performances. A CD I picked up recently is of the British singing group Stile Antico. The CD is called Song of Songs (Harmonia Mundi, 2009). It presents musical settings of text from the Song of Solomon, by some of the greatest composers of the 16th century, including Palestrina, Gombert, Lassus, Clemens non Papa, and Victoria. It seems that composers tended to reserve their most luxurious art for these particular passages of scripture that famously discuss love in such vivid terms.
But what is particularly striking is how this group features the distinctive quality of the music in the management of the ensemble itself. Unlike modern music, there is no “master/slave” relationship in the score, which is to say that there is no easy division between the melody and the accompaniment parts. Each voice plays a critical role in contributing to the overall effect. As a singer, one knows this when performing this music. The effect is strangely empowering.
Stilo Antico takes paradigm of what we might call radical equality and steps it up even further: the group has no director waving hands or even keeping a beat. Even for entrances, cutoffs, and tempo changes, anyone watching them sing detects not a single dominant person in charge. The singers come to understand each other and achieve what resembles perfect coordination. Now, someone in the know recognizes that there is an underlying pulse in operation that keeps everyone singing together, a pulse you feel but do not hear. And yet the audible effects sound completely seamless across time and space, like a variety of shapes of clouds in the sky moving from place to place.
Yes, it is all quite mystical and enchanting. I’ve never known anyone who isn’t dazzled by this type of music, performed with this level of perfection. If a person has never heard of this type of music before, the result is astonishment. Of course, this music is performed and marketed as what we might call art music. However, Catholics know that it is more than that. It is liturgical music, a music that elaborates on the text of the Roman Rite. It is the music of the faith. It is the music specifically mentioned by the Second Vatican Council as a worth extension of Gregorian chant, especially suitable for liturgy.
It is for this reason that a vast number of professionals and non-professionals have started groups for singing this music in its proper context: in Church, at Mass. The point is not to record it and sell it. The point is to provide a dramatic enhancement of the liturgical experience for both the people attending services and also for the transcendent purpose of glorifying God. No, these groups will never sound as perfect as a CD by Stile Antico, and that is fine. There is no something oddly artificial about a recording in any case, the way the listener can infinitely repeat what came before. In real time, every note passes through time to become part of our own history as soon as it happens; in liturgical time, every note passes into eternity as a gift with Divine purpose.
Is it any wonder that people are ever more aspiring to sing polyphonic music of this type, and in their own houses of worship? And let there be no doubt that this is happening. I’m preparing right now to attend the Sacred Music Colloquium XX, sponsored by the Church Music Association of America. This is a training program in chant and polyphonic music. This year it is being held at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. It isn’t only about classroom work; the music is sung also in authentic liturgical settings. The purpose is not only art; it is also worship at morning prayer, vespers, and Mass.
I’ve been attending for many years but the level of participation and the intensity of interest has never before been like this. The first year I attend, there were 30 people. This year, the CMAA had to cut off registration at 250, simply because the program structure and the facilities could not handle any more than that. There is no way to know how many people might have come had the registrations not been closed long before the official deadline.
The people who are attending include full-time church music directors and some professional singers. But I think it is fair to say that most of the attendees are actually non-professionals who are seeking to improve their talents as an offering of praise to God, returning home to contribute to the parish liturgical programs.
Many are making large sacrifices to attend. They pay tuition and travel. They give up their vacation time from work. Since most Catholic musicians are not famously wealthy, they have had to raise money from friends and family. It is a pinch no matter how the bill is paid, and yet they do it. This year, some attendees are receiving small scholarships made possible by generous donors.
As for the CMAA itself, it is a very old organization, with roots in the 19th century, but it has no endowment. It has no large financial base. It raises money program to program. Most remarkably, it has no one who is paid a regular salary to work for the organization. There are no employees on its payroll. Its energy comes from volunteers and people with a range of talents who contribute in every way possible, providing services for free or absurdly discount rates. The workload grows and grows, simply because the demand is there for the CMAA’s services. Sometimes it seems nearly impossible that such an organization could exist in our times, and yet it does, and somehow not only gets by but thrives.
Does this structure for an organization make sense? Is it viable over the long term? Is it secure? Something tells me that that answer to all three questions is yes. Something that takes root this way from decentralized human energy has the greatest possible hope of having the largest effect on the world around us. No one is involve for any other reason than love of music and love of liturgy and the faith. As St. Augustine said: “Cantare amantis est.” Singing belongs to one who loves.
I could listen to CDs of amazing polyphonic music by professionals all day. But as great as these are, there is nothing to compare with being among 250 extremely passionate church musicians who are discovering, many for the first time, the secrets of this mysterious, glorious music, and learning how to weave it all into the most important part of our lives.