Sacred Music, 104.4, Winter 1977 The Journal of The Church Music Association of America
Sacred Music, 104.4, Winter 1977 The Journal of The Church Music Association of America
Sacred Music, 104.4, Winter 1977 The Journal of The Church Music Association of America
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Dream of the Magi, capital from the Cathedral of St. Lazarus, Autun, France
Photography by Warren J. Wimmer, Jr.
5ACRED MUSIC
Volume 104, Number 4, Winter 1977
THE MUSICAL SHAPE OF THE LITURGY 3
Part IV: The Function of the Organ
William Peter Mahrt
SACRED MUSIC IN HOLLAND 19
Joseph Lennards
THE TWIN CITIES CATHOLIC CHORALE 27
Richard M. Hogan
MUSICAL SUPPLEMENT 31
REVIEWS 35
NEWS 42
FROM THE EDITORS 43
OPEN FORUM 45
INDEX 45
SACRED MUSIC Continuation of Caecilia, published by the Society of St. Caecilia since 1874,
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Front cover: The Flight into Egypt, Cathedral of St. Lazarus, Autun, France
Back cover: The Adoration of the Magi, detail of a capital from the Cathedral of St.
Lazarus, Autun, France
Photography by Warren J. Wimmer, Jr.
Copyright, Church Music Association of America, 1977.
Fight with a basilik, detail of a capital from the Cathedral of St. Lazarus, Autun, France
Photography by Warren J. Wimmer, Jr.
On these days one should play the offertory and the last Agnus longer, since the brothers
go to communion.21
The usual playing of these chants is thus extended to accommodate the time
required for the procession and the communion of the brothers.
Frescobaldi, in the preface to his first book of toccatas tells the player that
the individual sections may be played separately from one another, in order to enable
the player to make a conclusion at will . . ,22
Some of these toccatas are for the elevation of the Mass, and their main cadences
allow the organist to conclude the piece at any of the several different points, and
so to adjust the length of the playing to the progress of the celebrant.
The flexibility that the organist has in improvisation allows him to play a cer-
tain role in the liturgy. Just as the psalm and verse structure of the processional
chants (introit and communion) allow the duration of these chants to be suited
to the duration of the processions,23 so even more the organist is capable of
MAHRT: MUSICAL SHAPE
6
timing his playing to the duration of the action. Here, even in the absence of a
liturgical text, the organ bears a closeness to the liturgical action. As distinct
from the chant, it frequently does not determine the shape of the action, but
follows it.
The primary function of the organ as stated by the council, however, is not
precisely the manner in which it supports or embellishes the Gregorian music,
but in just what it adds to it in general by doing so:
it adds a wonderful splendor to the Church's ceremonies, and powerfully lifts up man's
mind to God and to higher things.24
This actually represents a consensus of writers over a very long period, but its
history is interesting and instructive for the present, and illustrates an impor-
tant principle: that the origin of a liturgical item may not indicate the proper
significance which it eventually assumes.25
The origin of the organ in the western liturgy is in the imperial liturgy of the
Byzantine empire. Pepin, Charlemagne's predecessor, received an organ as a
gift from the Byzantine emperor. In the Byzantine court, the organ was an
attribute of the emperor. It seems not to have been used in the liturgy except in
that unique ceremony in which the patriarch and the emperor met and ex-
changed ceremonial gestures, and it was restricted to accompanying the em-
peror.26 Charlemagne used it in a similar fashion, having the organ mounted
near his throne in the rear balcony of his court church at Aachen. It was not long
before other churches imitated the imperial church and installed organs of their
own. But there it was seen to represent the dignity and power of God, and
specifically as giving man a foretaste of heaven. By the thirteenth century
Durandus could write that the organ was particularly associated with the
Sanctus, recalling the Old Testament playing of the instrument during the sac-
rifice and the vision of the holiness of God with which the Sanctus text itself is so
intimately connected — both in its scriptural origin,27 and its significance in the
Mass; further it plays an essential role in the calling to mind the image of the
heavenly Jerusalem.28 Thus an instrument which was a sign of the dignity of an
earthly ruler, albeit in the Byzantine view a sacred one, was taken over and came
to be a sign of the sacred itself; since that time this function has largely remained;
it is the liturgical instrument par excellence, since it is understood to be a sacred
instrument.
In the later middle ages, the organ had a second sort of symbolism — it was
often an especial sign of the Masses in honor of the Blessed Virgin. In monastic
churches of the later middle ages, the "Lady-Mass" was a votive Mass said in
addition to the Mass prescribed by the liturgy for the day. Thus, singers who
were to sing the capitular Mass plus the whole office were also to provide for the
music of this votive Mass. Small wonder that it was not assigned to a whole
choir, but to a few singers, and with only a few singers, the organ was the most
efficient means of embellishing that particular Mass. Since the Lady-Mass was
the vehicle of considerable popular devotion, there was a concern that it be
provided with sufficient music,
because wherever the divine service is more honorably celebrated, the glory of the
Church is increased, and the people are aroused to greater devotion.29
MAHRT: MUSICAL SHAPE
7
Thus of the liturgical organ music in the Buxheim Organ Book,30 a large portion is
devoted to Marian texts. The three introits found there are Gaudeamus, Rorate
caeli, and Salve sancta parens, the first for Marian feasts, the second for votive
Marian Masses in Advent, and the third for votive Marian Masses throughout
the year. 31 Likewise, the only Gloria in the collection is thatde Beata Virgine, set to
include the Marian tropes then customary.32
In sixteenth-century England, it seems that the Marian Mass was still the locus
of such a symbolism, since the "Lady-Masses" of Nicholas Ludford33 show an
alternatim arrangement which is complementary to the conventional scheme of
the organ Mass described below for Buchner.
While the Marian association has not lasted into our own time, and the early
imperial association was thoroughly supplanted by a generally sacred one, the
sacred function is complemented by another function: the organ is also the sign
of festivity. Throughout its history the organ was to be played on the more
festive occasions, while it was not played on the ferial days. It was a sign of
festivity, of rejoicing, and of praise, rather than just of solemnity, since on some
of the most solemn days of the year, the organ was not played. The Caeremoniale
Episcoporum of 160034 codified the medieval practice; it specified that during
Advent and Lent the organ was not to be played except on important feast days,
and the one exceptional Sunday of each season, Gaudete and Laetare.35 Particu-
larly strict was the absolute prohibition of organ and bells during the last three
days of Holy Week. On Holy Thursday the organ was allowed at the Gloria as one
bit of festivity in the Mass of the institution of the Holy Eucharist, but not after
that until the Gloria of Holy Saturday. On these most solemn days, it was the
signs of festivity which were eliminated. The symbolism of it has always been
compelling, and the complete absence of organ and bells on those days serves as
well to enhance the festivity of Easter, when they are once again joyfully played.
The organ was also not played at funerals, with one interesting exception: for
funerals of important prelates or titled gentlemen; it was allowed that a single
principal stop could be played with the shutters closed.36 Thus a certain public
tone could be set for such an occasion, without implying the fully festive charac-
ter of the usual organ music.
The prohibition of the organ at funerals is often forgotten today, along with
some of the other solemnities of the traditional rite. While there is no question
that those close to a deceased person should recognize and rejoice in his hoped-
for destiny, the funeral is no guarantee of this, and it is still the occasion for
prayers for his soul. Further, the human need to mourn the deceased and to find
some objectification of that mourning in a liturgical ceremony is perhaps still
best found in the Gregorian Requiem Mass. 37 A quiet joy which elevates mourn-
ing is appropriate; but a festive atmosphere that undercuts it could easily be felt
as a betrayal of the deceased.
While the most important general features of the music for the organ are that it
elevates the mind to a contemplation of heavenly things, and it adds a note of
festivity to the celebration, these have been accomplished in the exercise of four
specific functions: alternating, replacing, intoning, and accompanying. Through
the history of organ music each of these has given the organ a role particularly
close to the liturgical action.
In the documented history of the organ through the mid-sixteenth century,
KYRIE
Organ Choir
1. Kyrie 1 2. Kyrie 2
3. Kyrie 3 - 4. Christe 1
5. Christe 2 6. Christe 3
7. Kyrie 4 8. Kyrie 5
9. Kyrie 6
SANCTUS
1. Sanctus, 2. Sanctus,
3. Sanctus Dominus Deus sabaoth. 4. Pleni sunt caeli et terra gloria tua.
5. Osanna in excelsis. 6. Benedictus qui venit in nomine Domini.
7. Osanna in excelsis.
AGNUS DEI
1. Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi,
miserere nobis. 2. Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi,
3. Agnus Dei, qui tollis peccata mundi, miserere nobis.
dona nobis pacem.
The general arrangement is that the organ begins and ends the performance of
the chant, thus framing the chant with the more festive organ music.47
Occasionally the Credo was set for alternation with the organ, although this
seems to have been less frequent, and was sometimes the subject of an express
prohibition.48 The text of the Credo being a series of explicit beliefs, it was
thought that all of this text should be expressly sung, while the texts of the other
movements of the ordinary are more general, include a good deal of repetition,
and do not suffer in assigning part of them to the organ.
Before the reformation, the musical content of each verse for the organ in-
cluded literally every note of that verse of the chant. In that sense the organ's
playing fulfilled the liturgical requirement of the singing of that particular piece.
Later composers sometimes followed this practice as well. Frescobaldi's Kyrie
della Domenica quoted below is an example of the literal setting of the notes of the
chant.49 By the late sixteenth century the organ verse sometimes only implied
the whole chant by treating its beginning motive in imitation. Andrea Gabrieli's
first Kyrie de Beata Virgine50 is an example of this, setting only the first eight notes
of the Gregorian melody in imitation throughout the whole verse. In the absence
of a clear presentation of the whole chant melody, the question of the text arose,
and the Caeremoniale episcoporum of 1600 required that when the organ verse was
played, the text be recited by someone in the choir.51 Finally another scheme
appeared, in which the organ played the same verses it had before, but now only
after they had been sung by the choir:52
MAHRT: MUSICAL SHAPE
10
Choir Organ Choir
1. Kyrie 1 2. Kyrie 1 3. Kyrie 2
4. Kyrie 3 5. Kyrie 3 6. Ozriste 1
7. Cfcrzste 2 8. Christe 2 9. C/msfe 3
10. Kyrie 4 11. Kyrie 4 12. Kyrie 5
13. Kyrie 6 14. Kyrie 6
This somewhat redundant scheme reflects a breakdown in the function of the
organ as actually carrying the performance of the proper liturgical melody. The
organ only reflects and amplifies its traditional portions, now sung first by the
choir.
While the alternatim organ Mass continued to be widely practiced in many
places hence, another way for the organ to support the liturgy became more
important: the organ served to replace a movement of the proper of the Mass.
Since the sixteenth century the organ had sometimes been assigned the role of
playing an entire movement of the proper without the participation of the choir.
This is represented in England by the particularly numerous complete settings of
the melody Felix namque, the offertory for Masses of the Blessed Virgin.53 Again,
the particular ancillary character of the Lady-Mass may account for relieving the
singers of some of their function in a second Mass of the day.
The traditional identification of the liturgical function of the organ by setting
the complete chant melody was sometimes continued by Italian composers of
the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. To this, however, another
means was added — that of affect and style. The character of the particular
movements for organ could be varied for contrast and to set the tone for the
parts of the Mass during which they were played. Such a variety of musical
styles might be better realized when the chant melody is not kept. Thus a
recognizable and well-established distinction of styles came to be a basis for
delineating the shape of a Mass in which the organ substitutes music in charac-
teristic styles for the specific chant propers. Though it is not immediately appar-
ent from the titles of the pieces, the three organ Masses of Girolamo Frescobaldi
actually follow this method.
Frescobaldi's three Masses in the Fiori musicali (1635)54 form a high point in the
playing of substitute propers based upon a distinction of affect and style. Fres-
cobaldi had a choice of the most opportune diversity of styles in the learned
counterpoint of the stile antico and in the expressive harmonies and rhythms of
the modern style of his time. The stile antico provided the cantus firmus and the
ricercar styles. By keeping one movement of the ordinary of the Mass, the Kyrie,
as a possible alternation piece, he based his practice in the centuries-old alter-
natim Mass; the specified Gregorian Kyrie is clearly set in the organ verse which
can be alternated with the sung Kyrie. By setting it in a cantus firmus fashion, the
link with the long tradition is maintained, and this forms one pole of expression
in these Masses: the ancient, the objective, the normative, the learned, the
tradition-bearing pole.
AA
\L C a V© ^ 1
ftff " r-
LJ M_LI LLJ
Example 1: Cantus firmus style: Frescobaldi, Kyrie della Domenica55
feE
u
fjgf fcmffi
Example 2: Ricercar style: Frescobaldi, Recercar dopo il Credo56
A somewhat lighter style is that of the canzona. It derives from the French
secular chanson of the sixteenth century, and it expresses a spirited kind of
movement. The humorous elements of the chanson have, however, been turned
to a somewhat more serious purpose in the greater use of counterpoint and
variation.
^
P
Example 3: Canzona style: Frescobaldi, Canzon dopo I'Epistola 57
The genre which represents the most modern style is the toccata. Short toc-
catas usually introduce the Kyrie and sometimes the ricercar after the Credo.
Their improvisatory character forms a point of contrast with the longer contra-
puntal movements with which they are paired. This improvisatory character
consists mainly in the application of a variety of soloistic passagework, but also
in the implied variety of tempo which Frescobaldi prescribes for the toccata.58 It
is also linked intimately with that direct sort of expression which was so charac-
teristic of the early baroque, and derived ultimately from the madrigals of the
late sixteenth century. The larger toccatas, for the elevation, epitomize that kind
of expression. They show less purely instrumental figuration, but rather, like the
late sixteenth-century madrigal, incorporate unexpected harmonic progressions
which often include chromaticism. They most often center around E, the Phry-
gian mode, suited to the expression of the mystical and the ineffable.59
1^ ) b j II 1
*—# l
^-fi—- H
1
1f o" "• " r
Example 4: Elevation toccata: Frescobaldi, Toccata cromatica per I'Elevatione60
The progression from the learned contrapuntal style to the more spirited can-
zona creates a kind of direction whose object is to lead to the high point of that
part of the Mass — the gospel. The Mass of the Faithful begins again with a
learned contrapuntal form (in two of the four, preceded by a short toccata). In
the middle of the progression of ricercar to canzona, the exceptional piece which
transforms the sequence has been placed; this emphasizes the toccata as the
most important piece. Since most of the organ pieces fall at points when the
propers would be sung, it may be surmised that they replaced those propers,
since a Kyrie in alternation with a choir singing plainsong seems likely, the other
parts of the ordinary were probably also sung in plainsong. Thus the whole
Mass would have the following shape:
| Toccata I \Cantus firmus 1 chant chant | Canzona] chant
introit Kyrie Gloria epistle gradual gospel
This scheme could well be used today in a church where a devoted volunteer
choir is capable of singing the ordinary of the Mass, but not the proper. Given
the current emphasis upon communion and the rubrical prohibition of music
during the canon, the elevation could conceivably be played during the com-
munion, and the canzona used as a recessional. The communion would thus be
the point of the most personal and expressive music. The canzona at the gradual
is sectional, and one section could easily serve to follow each of the minor
lessons of the new rite. The ricercar is also sectional, and one section might
suffice for the offertory, unless there is incensation. These pieces are sometimes
still played in the churches, but scarcely ever in the places for which they were
intended; they would be much more effective if they were used as they were
intended — to articulate the whole form of the Mass. Further, there is a larger
repertory of which they form only a part, which could constitute an extensive
but stable repertory in which the form itself could become familiar to the partici-
pants, and thus take its place as a musical support of worship.
Two other functions of the organ are more ancillary and practical, yet they
have had a significant role in the liturgy. The first, that of intonation, finds its
simplest form in the literal "pre-intonation" of the Gloria and Credo in the Mass.
MAHRT: MUSICAL SHAPE
13
Here the organ plays the same role as the cantors who pre-intone the antiphons
of the office. It is a purely practical function — to assist a celebrant who finds a
difficulty in imagining the proper pitch and scale with which to begin. This
function is more generalized in the first preludes for the organ.63 They are
constructed so that they can be played in whatever mode the organist needs:
they simply elaborate upon the scale tones of the piece to follow, setting the
pitch and scale, and making a graceful cadence. This function is also to be seen
in the intonationes of the early seventeenth-century, but they have yet an addi-
tional function. Praetorius describes their use. 64 The organist is to improvise
upon the notes which the strings need for tuning. Thus he plays a figuration
over the successive open notes of the strings while they tune, and his function is
to cover the sound of the tuning strings as well as to provide a setting of the key.
This kind of preluding is a stylistic antecedent of the toccatas, and in the hands
of such early seventeenth-century masters as Frescobaldi it becomes a substan-
tive musical style, whose musical function is to provide a contrast with more
polyphonic styles.
The most recent of all of the functions of the organ discussed here is that of
accompaniment. There is no question of organ accompaniment of chant in the
Middle Ages. Even at the time of the Caeremoniale episcoporum of 1600, when it
was beginning to be customary to use the organ as accompaniment of
polyphonic music, there is no mention of this function. The first extant accom-
paniments of plainsong other than hymns are from the eighteenth century, and
are basso continuo parts, which set a complete harmony to each individual note of
the chant melody.65 This approach to the accompaniment of chant seems to have
lasted until the Solesmes revival, and even influenced the polyphonic settings of
plainsong.66 Until the Solesmes method defined the possibility of plainsong
notes constituting only the parts of a flexible beat, composers set them as if they
were long notes. Solesmes' conception of the rhythm of the chant allowed the
placement of several plainsong notes to one harmony, and reflect a more ani-
mated style of performance of the chant.
This sketch of some of the history of liturgical organ music and its repertory
suggests several practical applications:
1) The treasury of Catholic liturgical music for the organ is very great; the organist
should seek out new pieces from this repertory and consider their suitability to both the
liturgy of their own time and that of the present;
2) from a knowledge of the repertory and its history, the skilled organist can apply the
principles seen there in his own playing, for example,
a) he can learn to improvise, first trying simple intonations, preludes, and toccatas,
and then variations on a figured bass, finally, adding some imitation, and developing
a sense for contrapuntal improvisation;
b) the choice of music can take into account the use of borrowed melodic material
which bears some familiarity and significance for the listeners;
c) the organist can develop a sense of the suitability of particular styles to particular
actions; it can be valid for his listeners if he educates them to it by exercising it
consistently;
d) the organist can attempt to supply music at those places where there is an action
otherwise musically unaccompanied, for example, if the kiss of peace is given, a
short improvisation upon the Agnus Dei melody might contribute a musical con-
tinuity to that action, as well as introducing the melody to be sung;
1. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Article 120. This statement is a refinement of that of Pius XII in
his encyclical Musicae sacrae disciplina (1955): "Among the musical instruments that have a place in
church the organ rightly holds the principal position, since it is especially fitted for the sacred chants
and sacred rites. It adds a wonderful splendor and a special magnificence to the ceremonies of the
Church. It moves the souls of the faithful by the grandeur and sweetness of its tones. It gives minds an
almost heavenly joy and it lifts them up powerfully to God and to higher things." Papal Teachings: The
Liturgy, selected and arranged by the monks of Solesmes, translated by the Daughters of St. Paul
(Boston: Daughters of St. Paul, 1962), p. 486-7.
2. Art. 112.
3. "The Musical Shape of the Liturgy, Part I: The Gregorian Mass in General," Sacred Music, Vol.
102, No. 3 (Fall, 1975), p. 5-13.
4. Cf. Theodore Gerold, Les Peres de I'eglise et la musique (Strasbourg: Imprimerie Alascienne, 1931;
reprint, Geneve: Minkoff, 1973), p. 123-134; and James W. McKinnon, "Musical Instruments in
Medieval Psalm Commentaries and Psalters," Journal of the American Musicological Society, XXI (1968),
p. 3-12.
5. Cf. St. Pius X, Motu proprio Tra le sollecitudini (1903), in Papal Teachings: The Liturgy, p. 185; and
Pius XI, Apostolic Constitution Divini Cultus (1928), ibid., p. 251-2.
6. The term a capella has not always meant simply unaccompanied vocal music; in the seventeenth
century the term was commonly used to distinguish choral music (in which the instruments may have
doubled the choir parts) from concerted music (in which instruments played independent parts
written specifically for them). Recent research, however, has shown that the unaccompanied practice
of choral music was the norm in Italy in the fifteenth century; cf. James Igo, "Performance Practices in
the Polyphonic Mass of the Early Fifteenth Century" (Ph. D. dissertation, University of North
Carolina, 1971), and Frank A. D'Accone, "The Performance of Sacred Music in Italy during Josquin's
Time. c. 1475-1525," Josquin des Prez: Proceedings of the International Josquin Festival-Conference . . . June
1971 (London: Oxford University Press, 1976), p. 601-618; further, the unaccompanied practice of the
Sistine Chapel was actually the model for at least one cathedral in the north, that of Cambrai; it seems
to have been a pattern that singers who were trained as boys in the northern cathedrals would have
careers as singers in the Sistine Chapel, and would then return to their home cathedrals as canons to
supervise the singing there; Guillaume Dufay is one of the most illustrious of such singer-canons; cf.
Craig Wright, "Dufay at Cambrai: Discoveries and Revisions," Journal of the American Musicological
Society, XXVIII (1975), 175-229; the role of the polyphonic vocal music of this practice in the liturgy was
the subject of the second part of this article, "The Interpolation of Polyphonic Music," Sacred Music,
Vol. 102, No. 4 (Winter, 1975), p. 16-26.
7. "The use of the organ . . . is . . . lawful,because one must regard the faithful who are still carnal
and imperfect;" quoted by Benedict XIV in his encyclical letter Annus qui (1749), Papal Teachings, The
Liturgy, p. 58.
MAHRT: MUSICAL SHAPE
15
8. It must be admitted that in this century the state of "liturgical" organ music has not always been
very high. "Theatrical" music, such as Wagner'sMarchfromLo/ze«gn« or Franck'sPanis Angelicus, were
sanctimoniously condemned and forbidden, and white lists were published providing approved
compositions. These white lists, however, were filled with pieces which were pale imitations of the
"forbidden" pieces, and expressed the same sentiments, but not as well.
9. Cf. William Peter Mahrt, "Gregorian Chant as a Fundamentum of Western Musical Culture,"
Sacred Music, Vol. 102, No. 1 (Spring, 1975), p. 3-21.
10. Ibid., p. 10.
11. Respons, antiffen, introitus, / Impnus, sequenz und responsoria, / Das tregt er als in seiner
memoria, / Ad placitum oder gesatzt. /. . . Sein haubt ist ein sollich gradual/In gemessen cantum mit
solcher zal, / Das es got selbs hat genotirt darein; Hans Rosenpliit, "Spruch von Niirnberg," Karl
Euling, Das Priamel bis Hans Rosenpliit Studien zur Volkspoesie, (Germanistische Abhandlungen, XXV;
Breslau: M. & H. Marcus, 1905), p. 46^7.
12. For example, the Winsem and Sagan fragments contain a Credo setting only the first verse and a
Gloria setting the first three odd-numbered verses; cf. Willi Apel, Keyboard Music of the Fourteenth and
Fifteenth Centuries (Corpus of Early Keyboard Music, I; American Institute of Musicology, 1963), p.
17-18 and 11-12.
13. Munich: Bayrische Staatsbibliothek, Ms Cim. 352b; modern edition, Das Buxheimer Orgelbuch,
ed. B. A. Wallner (Das Erbe Deutscher Musik, Vol. 37-39; Kassel: Barenreiter, 1958-59).
14. Basel: Universitatsbibliothek, Ms. F. 18a; modern edition, Hans Buchner, Samtliche Orgelwerke,
ed. Jost Harro Schmidt (Das Erbe Deutscher Musik, Vol. 54-55; Frankfurt: Henry Litolff, 1974).
15. Buchner's contract with the cathedral chapter of Constance specified that he play at the high
Mass on all duplex and higher feasts the introit, Kyrie, Gloria, sequence, Sanctus, and Agnus Dei, and on
high feasts also the hymn, Magnificat, and Nunc dimittis at vespers and compline, and the responsory,
Te Deum, and Benedictus at matins and lauds, and again at second compline. Cf. Hans Klotz, "Hans
Buchner," Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Vol. II (Kassel: Barenreiter, 1952), col. 418.
16. Hans Joachim Moser, Paul Hofhaimer, ein Lied- und Orgelmeister des deutschen Humanismus (Hil-
desheim: Olms, 1966).
17. Spiridion a Monte Carmelo, Nova Instructio pro pulsandis organis, spinettis, manuchordiis, etc . . .
Four parts (Bamberg: J. J. Immel, 1670; Bamberg: J. G. Seiffert, 1672; Herbstadt: J. Sallver, n. d.) Cf.
Bruce Alan Lamott, "The Nova Instructio pro pulsandis organis (1670-72) by Spiridion a Monte Carmelo:
A Source Book for Keyboard Improvisation," (M. A. Project, Stanford University, 1974).
18. For an example of such a piece, see Lamott, p. 35-37.
19. Johann Mattheson, General-Bass-Schule oder Der exemplarischen Organisten-Probe (Hamburg:
Johann Christoph Kissner, 1731; reprint, Hildesheim: Olms, 1968), p. 34-35.
20. Munich: Universitatsbibliothek, 2° Cod. ms. 153. Cf. Leo Sohner, Die Geschichte der Begleitung
des gregorianischen Chorals in Deutschland vornehmlich im 18. jahrhundert (Veroffentlichungen der grego-
rianischen Akademie zu Freiburg in der Schweiz, Heft 16; Augsburg: Benno Fischer, 1931), p. 4.
21. "An disen tagen sol man das opferent und das letst agnus dester lenger schlagen dy weil di
bruder zum sacrament gend." Ibid., the first (unnumbered) folio. The days were the first Sunday of
Advent, Christmas, Purification, Annunication, Pentecost, Visitation, Assumption, the Nativity of
Mary, and All Saints' Day.
22. Girolamo Frescobaldi, Das erste Buch der Toccaten, Partiten usw., 1637 (Orgel und Klavierwerke,
Band III; Kassel: Barenreiter, 1961), p. iv.
23. Cf. the present series, Part I: "The Gregorian Mass in General," Sacred Music, Vol 102, No. 3
(Fall, 1975), p. 8.
24. Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Art. 120.
25. We are often given an erudite history of a rite and its practice, with especial emphasis upon its
origins. This concern with origins has led some to believe that when the origin of a rite is known, the
rite may be purified by being, reduced to its primitive form; but if there is something suspect in this
origin, the rite may itself be suspect. It is frequently said, for example, that the chasuble was normal
secular clothing of a Roman in early times, implying that the priest should wear the normal clothing
of our times. This overlooks the process of the development of the liturgy, in which things secular in
origin are consecrated by their very assumption into the liturgy. There is a rite for the blessing of
liturgical vestments, and they are to be blessed before use. If, however, they are not, their use in the
liturgy constitutes the blessing. Things secular and imperfect can be made sacred and worthy by
being taken up and consecrated by use.
26. Cf. Edmund A. Bowles, "The Symbolism of the Organ in the Middle Ages: A Study in the
I was asked to give you a report on the situation of sacred music in Holland. I
will not shrink from this task, but general conclusions are very difficult to estab-
lish because the situation is different in each of the seven dioceses of my coun-
try. There are even differences from one church to another in the same city. It is
called by the fine name of "pluriformity." The same remark could be made about
the monasteries and convents. For this reason I must limit myself to comments
on several specific aspects. First of all church choirs.
Before the council each parish in Holland had a high Mass in Gregorian chant
or classical or modern polyphony, and consequently they had choirs.
A certain number of them disappeared either because the singers were dis-
couraged by a repertory without value, imposed by a dictatorial clergy, or be-
cause this clergy judged choirs now to be superfluous since, so it was said, the
council only wanted congregational singing. In certain cases these displaced
singers who are very attached to Gregorian chant have re-organized into travel-
ing scholae.
In universities located in large cities students have founded scholae cantorum,
and their number is growing. It is one of the signs of a healthy reaction which is
beginning to become evident among the young. Perhaps you heard the scholae of
Amsterdam and Utrecht when they sang recently in Paris?
Since it has not been possible to interest former choir members in singing in
the vernacular, the clergy has founded new groups alongside of the former
chorales, such as 1) choirs of women who sing at weddings and funerals in
Holland, 2) choirs that sing only in the vernacular, 3) choirs of young people
with their percussion instruments and guitars. Their repertory is without musi-
cal value, composed of imported pop songs and even sometimes music written
by the young people themselves.
In its naivete the clergy supported this type of music, thinking it would attract
youth to the church with experiences like those of dance halls and rock concerts.
But that infatuation only lasted for a short time because the young were soon
bored and began to turn their backs on the Church. I understand that Masses
using popular music are less popular now; it was an ephemeral style.
On the other hand some young people have turned their backs on the sound
of modern life. They visit contemplative abbeys and ask permission to stay there
for several days. There are some abbeys where the guest rooms are always full. I
noticed that at the Trappist monastery of Asbel. Young people are interested in
meditation, in Gregorian chant, and they buy chant recordings. They want to
know more about that mysterious, other-worldly music. They want to chant it
too, but no one has ever taught them how. All those who work with the educa-
tion of the young should take advantage of that situation to teach chant. Think
about it.
I can assure you that our singers are very attached to Gregorian chant and that
LENNARDS: MUSIC IN HOLLAND
19
true musicians have jumped into the breach to save the treasury of sacred music,
not just professional musicians from large churches, but also those who direct
small scholae. It is a fact that I have often noticed. If Gregorian chant has lost
ground, it is not their fault, but that of the clergy.
The Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy recommends the practice of music in the
seminaries. But in Holland, seminaries no longer exist. They have been replaced
by government supported theology schools. There are few candidates for the
priesthood there. Most of the students are preparing for a career in the social
sector. These schools also admit women.
It is with joy and pride that I tell you that my own Diocese of Roermond is an
exception because it possesses a flourishing seminary with 46 students. Church
music there is taught by a layman and by the Benedictines of the Abbey of
Mamelis (near Vaals).
In Utrecht there is an advanced institute of sacred music where organ, Grego-
rian chant, modern and ancient polyphony, and composition are taught. Grego-
rian chant is also taught in the conservatories.
I have little information about novitiates. I can only tell you that several Bene-
dictine abbeys in my country have given up Gregorian chant. Only the Abbey of
Mamelis of the French congregation has remained completely faithful.
In several cathedrals there are still choir schools where students receive an
outstanding musical education so they can perform the master works of sacred
music.
For several years chant classes for beginners and more advanced students
have been given here and there. They have produced good results, but there are
| too few of them.
And what about the Ward movement? We began it fifty years ago in 1927. You
know the principles of that method: 1) the use of chironomy and body gestures
to develop a rhythmic sense; 2) introduction of Gregorian modes; 3) use of this
idiom in children's improvisations; 4) building of a Gregorian repertoire from the
age of seven. In summary, the carrying out of the ideal of Pius X.
The interest shown by priests and teachers has been immense. Hundreds of
professors have participated in demonstrations and preparatory courses. The
results have been surprising. The Ward method gave birth to the Ward move-
ment, a national group of enthusiastic teachers. The government became in-
terested and provided a subsidy for the organization of a course to provide
pedagogical and didactic training.
The method crossed our borders and was established in Belgium, France and
Italy. The children participated actively in Sunday Masses in their parishes, but
also in pontifical high Masses in various national centers. At the international
church music congress in Cologne in 1961, 2,000 children from Holland and
Belgium sang pontifical high Mass in the Church of St. Andrew. The future was
full of promise. There was a growth in size and depth.
Then came the council. It set loose in Holland a real theological and liturgical
revolution. The new liturgists called Gregorian chant a monastic plainsong dat-
ing from the triumphalist period of the Church, a museum piece that people
cannot understand, etc. The Ward method that propagated this chant was
therefore based on old-fashioned principles. In 1964, there were still hundreds
of schools where the method was taught in its entirety. But little by little Grego-
LENNARDS: MUSIC IN HOLLAND
21
rian chant no longer was used in churches because of the clergy. This was a cruel
deception for the teachers iif the primary schools.
Little by little Gregorian chant disappeared from the program of studies. It
was replaced by songs and acclamations in the vernacular decreed by a clerical
Prussian-like militarism. For the young people who had just come out of pri-
mary school, they invented special Masses in which creativity would be able to
flourish. It is thus that they tore the heart out of the Ward method.
Naturally there are still some schools that use it. There are even certain indica-
tions of a turnabout, but for the moment there are only the ruins, and we can
sing Super flumina Babylonis. But when one has a high ideal that one knows can
be achieved, one does not despair. One waits for the reaction. It is certainly
going to come, even though it is possible that we must first sink even lower in
the mire.
Only a limited number of churches has Masses that are entirely in Latin and
Gregorian chant. A survey done by the Kaski Institute speaks of 2%. The As-
sociation for Latin and Gregorian Chant lists about 50 in its bulletin. These are
the churches where the liturgy is celebrated totally in Latin except for the
readings and the prayers of the faithful. There is a large number of churches in
which the proper and ordinary are sung in Latin and all the other prayers are in
Dutch. In my Diocese of Roermond this number reaches 70%, but these are for
the most part village churches. In the other dioceses this figure is lower (16%?).
This mixed form is not ideal, but it has permitted singers to keep the Grego-
rian repertoire.
The faithful are very attached to choir singing. The attendance at sung Masses
is much higher than at spoken Masses. Conclusion: We must support choirs and
establish new ones wherever it is possible.
Let me make several remarks on singing in Dutch. We have several competent
composers who have published good modern Masses in Dutch. Their names:
Herman Strategier, de Clerg, Bartelink, Pirenne. But most of the new composi-
tions don't even merit a pause. It seems especially difficult to compose music for
recitatives and psalms and texts whose structure is not rhythmical. The faithful
prefer strophic and metrical songs with simple rhymes. This opinion is shared
by musicologists who have studied folk music in Europe.
But the second class new composers have not studied folk music. They do not
know its laws of form, content of the text, or melody. This study would have
been very profitable to them. They preferred to change the old and venerable
texts according to their own taste.
Many Dutch Catholics are scandalized that the texts of a former priest, now
married, but who continues to say Mass, are on the hymn cards distributed each
week to the faithful in church. These texts have even crossed the borders. They
can be found in German hymnbooks. And the hierarchy lets it happen and does
not protest. In addition, after the council, our bishops published nothing in
favor of good church music. Those who know the situation are not surprised;
think of the famous Dutch catechism, called by one of them a "how to" guide;
think of the so-called council of Noordwijkerhout, of the wall of silence built
around the events of the Holy Year, of the Credo of Paul VI; and think of the fact
that the Kyriale Jubilate Deo which the pope sent as an Easter gift to all the
bishops, with the request that its use be encouraged, is unknown to the clergy
and most of the faithful.
LENNARDS: MUSIC IN HOLLAND
22
May I add a personal opinion based on long years of practical experience. The
clergy, in general, knows nothing about music. It has not studied it and does not
understand its high spiritual value. It considers it an attraction that will bring
people to church, perhaps a way to embellish the ceremonies, like the music that
is performed during a great dinner, but it has no idea of the formative value of
music for souls.
And all this results because the musical formation of future priests has been
neglected. St. Pius X had already noted this situation in his Motu proprio.
Twenty-five years later, Pius XI emphasized the same fact. Then a whole series
of decrees appeared, finishing with the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, the
instruction de Musica Sacra and the Third Instruction.
Nothing changed. What can be done about it? I ask you. In my opinion there is
a double remedy: 1) insist on a regular and systematic education of future
priests; 2) install a musical re-training for priests currently active.
Congregational singing in Gregorian chant has disappeared for the most part.
In most of our churches the people only sing in the vernacular. However, they
like to sing the Gregorian pieces they know by heart, for instance, Credo III,
Tantum ergo, the Requiem Mass, the responses, etc. I have recent proof of this
assertion.
My schola performed the chants of the Passion followed by Benediction in a
church in my city. The church was very full and everyone sang. It was a moving
experience. After the ceremony several people wanted to speak to me on the
way out; others wrote to me afterwards. Here is what they said: "You sang well,
thank you very much, but another time give us the opportunity to sing more.
We were so happy to sing the prayers we know again, like the Ave Regina
Coelorum, the Attende Domine, the Tantum ergo. We are counting on you." And
the young people asked me to teach them these melodies that they found so
beautiful, but that they did not know. They added, "It (the music) is so much
more beautiful than those Liedjesmisse, that is to say, those pop masses."
Article 118 of the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy prescribes that congrega-
tional singing be intelligently fostered. That could be translated to imply a qual-
ified director. However, in most parishes there is a priest who screams into a
microphone. His loud and off-key voice is amplified by the loud speaker; the
whole thing is accompanied by awkward gestures. It is grotesque.
What is neglected is to explain to the faithful what active participation is and
why it is necessary. It must be explained to them that the Mass is a sacrifice in
which they take part. They must be educated by articles in the parish bulletin
and by sermons. At the Chicago-Milwaukee QMS congress I gave the example
of the weeks dedicated to the Mass that were given in my country very success-
fully until about 1965. Here is a brief summary. Every day during a certain
designated week the significance of the Holy Sacrifice was explained. These
conferences were always combined with chant practice. Schools were visited,
there were meetings with the clergy, the organist, the choir director and the
singers. The culminating point was the Sunday Mass. A short time later each
parish was visited again to develop the repertory or to correct errors. Little by
little people began to sing with pleasure. Gregorian chant had become a natural
expression.
Since that time life has changed. I doubt strongly that it would be possible to
gather the parishioners of 1977 for a full week of meetings. That plan must be
LENNARDS: MUSIC IN HOLLAND
23
modified and adapted to current conditions, but the fundamental idea remains
the same; for successful congregational singing it is necessary to have a solid
musical preparation and a competent director. Good musical taste, technical
knowledge of the field, patience, discretion and talent in teaching are the re-
quired qualities.
An important piece of advice: the survival of congregational singing is
menaced by changing the repertory too often. They (the worshipers) want to
keep the repertory that they learned with such effort. Not only the music but all
active participation is more a question of tradition than change. That is what the
authorities who reformed the liturgy did not understand at all. Change is enemy
number one of congregational singing. Pierre Debray paraphrased this truth
very aptly when writing in his Courrier hebdomadaire. "Our reformers made the
mistake of disregarding one of the principal laws of psychology. Man does not
have an indefinite capacity for change. In order to preserve his emotional bal-
ance he needs certitudes, and, let us dare use the word, habits." Contemporary
Christians are condemned to perpetual motion and religious life ends up by
resembling the dance of Saint Guy. In the same vein, one can quote Una Voce,
no. 36. "The constant overturning of structures and rituals causes unrest, doubt,
and revolt in souls. In the long run, the faithful are so overwhelmed by innova-
tion that they refuse all change even when it is legitimate."
Church of Saint Agnes, Saint Paul, Minnesota. November 22, 1977, Feast of Christ the King. Twin
Cities Catholic Chorale and members of the Minnesota Orchestra. Beethoven's Mass in C.
Alto
Organ
ir\ P b fc
est pro no - bis o - be di ens,
ior, who gave of Him - self. for us,
J j m
no - bis o - be di ens,
gave of Him - self. for us,
I °J J J f J J ^
Org.
;;•• A J JJ ^ Jj
G-1974
31
I -tot-
us - que ad mor tern, fa - ctus est pro no - bis,
and died up - on the cross, died for our sal - va - tion,
us - que ad mor
and died up - on
r rr
fa - ctus est pro no - bis, fa - ctus est pro no - bis o - be di - ens,
died for our sal - va - tion, lov - ing Sav - ior gave of Him - self for us,
bis,
fir
fa - ctus est pro no
r'r»r
- bis, pro no -
r rir
bis o - be di - ens
tion, lov - ing Sav - ior gave of Him- self, of Him - self for us,
Org.
I 5EE =§= i
^^
I r r
us - que ad mor
and died up - on _
I r r!••
us - que ad - mor
and died up - on _
Org.
J^ J J J J N>-l J
32
For the Adult Choir, First Congregational Church, Burlington, Vermont
CRUX FIDELIS
CROSS SO FAITHFUL
for SATB a cappella
Alto
J. J
1. Crux fi - de lis, ter.
1. Cross so faith ful, great est.
Tenor
1. Crux fi de lis,
r "r r
in - ter
1. Cross so- faith ful, great - est
P
Bass
mm r r
1. Crux fi de lis, ter
1. Cross so faith ful. great est
Piano r^ m *=a
n
(for rehearsal
only)
33
.1. J1 J J J .J J j
ter om nes, Ar bor u - na no bi - lis:
est of all, Tree of no - ble maj es - ty,
J I J JJ
k om Ar
Tree
bor
of
u - na no
no - ble maj
bi - lis:
of all, es - ty,
If om Ar bor u - na no bi - lis:
of_ all, Tree of no - ble maj es - ty,
I
i.
j j
Nul la sil va, ta - lem pro fert, Fron de,
Gift of ture. for the Fa ther, Sad
!*•«
i A
34
tempts a quasi-polyphonic setting that could be effective
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motets are particularly useful for Lent and Holy Week.
That Easter Day with Joy Was Bright by Thomas Pulsifer.
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lation, the chances of a smooth and singable version are
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forge together an unchangeable melody and a fixed text. organ. The setting of a hymn from southern harmony is
There is no reason why both the Latin and the English mostly unison. Not until the last verse does a har-
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Lead Us, Lord edited by Howard S. Olson. Unison, a worthy of mention. The relation of text and rhythm re-
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35
Books age made by the symposium participants to the Abbey of
Kremsmiinster in Upper Austria which is celebrating the
Confitemini Domino, Internationales Komponisten- thousandth anniversary of its foundation. An article on
Symposion, Bozen vom 13. bis 17. April 1977. Johannes music in South Tirol by Josef Knapp and a tribute to
Overath, ed. Rome: Consociatio Internationalis Musicae Oswald Jaeggi are included also.
R.J.S.
Sacrae, 1977.
For the past several years the Consociatio Inter-
nationalis Musicae Sacrae has arranged and sponsored
Ferdinand Haberl. II Kyriale Romanum. Rome: Ponrificio
several symposia on subjects important to sacred music
Istituto di Musica Sacra, 1977.
in the post-conciliar period. For example, in 1972, musi-
cians from many countries met at Salzburg to discuss the Ferdinand Haberl. Das Graduate Romanum. Vol. I. Col-
liturgical music used in cathedrals, abbeys and major ogne: Allgemeiner Cacilien-Verband fur die Lander der
churches after the Second Vatican Council. The proceed- deutschen Sprache, 1976.
ings were published in a volume entitled Magna Gloria It may come as a surprise to some people who think
Domini, edited by Monsignor Johannes Overath. In 1975, Gregorian chant is dead and buried that two volumes
ethnomusicologists and missionaries met at Rome to have recently been published with the express purpose
consider the use of native music in mission lands. The of providing manuals of information on the new chant
proceedings were published in a volume entitled Musica books issued in connection with the reforms of the
Indigena, edited by Josef Kuckertz and Monsignor Over- liturgy inaugurated by the Second Vatican Council. The
ath. scholarly work of Ferdinand Haberl, president of the
The latest symposium arranged by CIMS met at Bozen Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music in Rome, gives
in South Tirol this past April, to discuss the work of the choirmasters direction through the new order of chants
church composer in the light of the reforms initiated by required by the new missal issued in 1969 and the Ordo
the Second Vatican Council. Confitemini Domino is the cantus Missae of 1972, which was put into concrete, prac-
volume of proceedings. It is dedicated to the memory of tical form with the publication of the new Graduale
Father Oswald Jaeggi, O.S.B., who spent his musical Romanum in 1974.
career as a composer and choirmaster at the Abbey of As the preface to the new edition of the Graduale
Muri-Gries in Bozen. Approximately seventy-five par- Romanum points out, only authentic chants are retained
ticipants assembled for the conferences, mostly from in the reform; further, many chants of the proper had to
German speaking lands and the countries of eastern be shifted to various positions because the larger selec-
Europe. The lectures are published in German with some tion of scripture readings has disrupted the former rela-
translated into English and Italian. tionship between the proper texts set to music and the
Werner Egk addressed the topic, "The Composer and texts proclaimed in the enlarged liturgy of the word.
his Work." He laments the direction musical composi- Haberl's studies of the propers in the Graduale Romanum
tion has followed since 1945 with its various experiments attempt to show the musician how the new chant books
that have gone almost to the absurd; he hopes that a new are accommodated to the demands brought about by the
direction has been launched that will bring the art back reforms.
toward absolute values. Henry Deku spoke about the Das Graduale Romanum is divided into two major sec-
"Philosophy of Composition," and Leo Scheffczyk about tions. The first is a brief presentation of the theory of
the "Contents and Demands of the Mystery of the Gregorian chant in the special matter of the relationship
Liturgy." The latter is concerned about the role of music of the Latin word accent and the melody structure as
within the mystery that liturgy expresses; he studies the found in the several forms that constitute the corpus of
words of Augustine and Aquinas and seeks to find the today's chant books. The second and far larger section
proper task of music in worship. He concludes that it is considers twenty-three introits and thirty-one commun-
to lead men to joy in God and to adoration of Him. ion verses, analyzing them in some detail for their struc-
Joseph F. Doppelbauer has a very practical lecture on ture, sources, history and interpretation. A choirmaster
"Problems of Liturgical Music." He speaks of the trivial preparing these pieces with his choir will find the infor-
kinds of music often accepted by some who wish to use it mation useful not only for his own knowledge and pro-
to attract people to religion; he considers the over em- cedure, but highly interesting factually for his singers. A
phasis on rationalism in some liturgical efforts, making second volume, presumably, will consider other parts of
the Mass a mere celebration of a common humanity and the proper, since this first volume is concerned only with
brotherliness and resulting in an interchanging of forms the introits and communion verses.
so that ultimately they are replaceable and meaningless, II Kyriale Romanum presents information on those parts
unless they are submerged in a subjectivity that is uncon- of the sung liturgy most often intended for the congrega-
trollable. Winfried Schulz contributed a treatment of tion. Haberl cites briefly the stated intentions of the
modern musical techniques: serial music, electronic council fathers, the post-conciliar decrees of the Holy See
music, concrete music, aleatoric music and computer and the words of various national conferences of bishops
music. repeating that the people should sing the traditional
The volume concludes with an account of the pilgrim- Gregorian melodies to the Latin texts of the ordinary. To
36
provide the musician with a handbook of information on in the forties, provides a good coverage of activity in
the chant is Haberl's purpose. most parts of Europe and agrees substantially with what
He studies all the settings of the Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, the writers in Sacred Music have pointed out in recent
Sanctus-Benedictus and Agnus Dei, both those in the issues. But other essays deal with more fundamental
grouping known by the familiar numbering system and concepts, including the use of Latin, Gregorian chant,
the titles originating in the medieval tropes, as well as translations into the vernacular, the various church
the ad libitum selections found in the Kyriale Romanum. music associations on international and national levels.
He cites the sources of the melodies and discusses their The essays are statements of opinion which is valuable
characteristics and modality. Since these compositions, and founded in great experience. No doubt, for anyone
by and large, are much simpler than the more elaborate in time to come writing the history of the events of these
chants of the proper texts, in many cases there is really past thirty years this little book will be a fine source. But
very little to say about them. for such a person the book will be just as much a frustra-
Lest one would object that most of the material for this tion, as indeed it can be for the present reader who may
handbook is not original with Haberl, it should be noted be seeking a more systematic exposition of facts and a
that he intends only to produce a handy manual chronological treatment of events. Too often occasions
for ready reference for choirmasters. However, several are alluded to but not explained; incidents are touched
chapters do provide new information and analysis, e.g., upon but not really made clear. For example, the six
a chapter treats the Kyriale Simplex of 1964, while others international church music congresses between 1950 and
deal with the various sung acclamations introduced into 1974 keep recurring in the text, but they are only tantaliz-
the new order of the Mass, the introductory prayers sung ing references that never satisfy the curiosity of the
by the celebrant, and the formulae for the lessons and reader. Footnotes attempt to give some brief biographical
the orations. information on some important personages whose
A very extensive bibliography and several indices are names are mentioned, but often it is far too little to eluci-
provided in each volume making practical use of the date the role of the person. Of course, publishers today
works very easy. The publication of these two studies, restrict the pages, even the lines that an author can use.
one in German and one in Italian, indicates that at least Perhaps what I am looking for is an encyclopedic work of
in Europe some Gregorian art continues. One wonders if great detail, and Monsignor Schmitt never intended his
their translation into English could find any market or chatty discussions and personal impressions to be any-
even a publisher. thing of the kind.
R.J.S. The fact remains, however, that someone should write
a factual history of the church music of this century,
Francis P. Schmitt, Church Music Transgressed. New York: beginning with the reforms of Pius X and continuing
Seabury Press, 1977. $7.95. through the efforts leading into the council and the de-
vastation that has followed upon it. Someone who has
Reading this series of twelve essays is like spending a
lived through much of that period and who has known
series of evenings chatting with Monsignor Schmitt on
the men and women who have peopled the scene could
the subject he is most interested in and most ready to talk
record the events and politics, the quarrels and confed-
about. Truly authentic in their style and philosophy,
erations, the compositions and performances, the
these chapters that range over the events of the past
achievements and failures of our century. Much of this
thirty years will make every one of those who have
information is not in writing but remains in the
known Monsignor Schmitt fairly feel that he is jumping
memories of those who made the history. Some of it is
right out of the page along with his ever-present cigar
put down in this little volume, which makes very de-
hanging from his lip. The editorials in Caecilia fifteen to
lightful reading.
twenty years ago demonstrated a manner of writing that
R.J.S.
was most characteristic of the editor of those years, and it
has not changed. It is here again after a silence of too
many years.
Names of people who passed across the stage of
church music both in this country and abroad come to
light again with incidents recalled to delight the reader Magazines
who may himself have known the person. The politics of
sacred music, before, during and after the council, show UNA VOCE (France). No. 75-76. July-October, 1977
how truly human much of the activity that determined This issue contains reports from the conference of Una
events really was. But always, the author's ability to see Voce France and the Association of French Liturgical Or-
through the petty politics and sometimes lack of know- ganists and Choirs held at Versailles, May 5-8, 1977. In a
ledge and ability marks his insight as valuable. conference on the role of the congregation in liturgical
Some of the subject matter is provided by the author's singing Father B. Orhant quotes articles 30, 31 and 114 of
journeys through the United States, Canada and Europe the Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, reminding his lis-
with accounts of musical events in the major churches of teners that "active participation" can be internal as well
those areas. Today's record, compared to what he found as external. The congregation can participate through si-
37
lence and listening to the readings and the music sung by demanding that Latin and chant be restored to their
the choir, as well as by singing and gestures. He also rightful place in worship.
reminds his listeners that the idea of active participation This issue also provides an update on the availability
is hardly an innovation of Vatican II, citing the words of of the Latin liturgy in France. In response to the Arch-
Pope Pius X in the Motu proprio which called for the bishop Lefebvre affair Cardinal Marty announced that
people to participate by singing Gregorian chant. three Parisian churches have a weekly Latin and Grego-
Moreover, the Second Vatican Council had no intention rian chant liturgy. To the knowledge of the editors of Una
of suppressing choirs. In 1970, the Holy Father said that Voce only St. Roch has such a schedule, and that only
the role of the choir is even more important now, both in since October 23. Commenting on the establishment of
supporting congregational singing and in performing the weekly Latin Mass at St. Roch, George Daix wrote in
that music which is too difficult for the congregation, for L'Aurore that the lay people who had been requesting it
example, the entrance, offertory and communion chants for twelve years believe it never would have come about
as well as the verses of the responsorial psalm. When without the occupation of St. Nicolas-du-Chardonnet. It
speaking to the Italian Cecilian Society in 1968, the pope is clear that the discord which is attacking an already
said that the essential function of sacred music is to put severely weakened Church in France could have been
the soul in contact with God. He cautioned against the avoided.
use of secular music in church because it does not ac-
complish the goal of sacred music which is to honor the
Divine Majesty.
Fr. Orhant emphasizes the fact that it was and is pos- SINGENDE KIRCHE, Volume 25, Number 1,1977-1978.
sible to train the faithful to sing Gregorian chant. He says Quarterly of the Church Music Commission of the Austrian
that this education should begin with the young and Bishops.
cites his experience fifteen years ago of having prepared This issue of Singende Kirche marks the twenty-fifth
800 children to sing the introit and alleluia for Mass on anniversary of this Austrian church music magazine. It
Pentecost Sunday. So well did they learn their lesson was founded in 1953 in Salzburg at a meeting of Austrian
that when he returned the next year to prepare them church musicians. They decided to combine their many,
once again they could still sing the introit from memory! small church music journals into one magazine and the
And they knew the meaning of every word! Children result has been a notable success. The editors have re-
grow up to become adults, and children so prepared in printed some of the articles which appeared in the first
chant would fill our churches with singing adults. issue and promise to continue to mark their anniversary
He also points out that at present people are crying out with special articles. The 1978 March issue will be en-
for traditional Latin music, paying good prices for con- larged and carry many articles on the anniversary.
cert tickets to hear music that they should be able to hear In addition to the articles concerning the anniversary,
in church. He makes the point that in this age of interna- Josef Schabasser has written a stimulating essay entitled:
tional travel Latin is the only logical choice for a real "Can we still be saved?" Schabasser notes that while all
community worship. The pope realized this when he would agree that church music must be performed well,
sent a copy of Jubilate Deo to every bishop in the world not everybody agrees on what this precisely means.
with the message that the faithful should have the op- What is "good" church music? Since the council, there
portunity to say or sing in Latin those parts of the ordi- has been an emphasis placed upon congregational sing-
nary that belong to them. ing, but is this better than the choral efforts of the past? If
Reports were given at the Versailles conference on the so (and many have come to this conclusion), we should
state of church music in Holland and Canada. Professor disband our choirs (as many have done). Perhaps this is
Joseph Lennard's discussion of conditions in Holland not what the council intended. It is possible, suggests
appears in this issue. Speaking about Canada, Father Prof. Schabasser, that both congregational singing and
Clement Morin, P.S.S., began with a resume of the great choral work could be incorporated into the same liturgy.
and sudden changes of January, 1965, with which we are The choir would then be obligated to assist the congrega-
all so familiar, and of the advance work done in the tion by singing its parts, but the congregation (and the
summer of 1974 by what he calls the "well-known trio," clergy) should recognize the important role which the
later identified as Gelineau, Julien and Deiss. Today the choir still has. The choir must also recognize, argues
center in Quebec, which formerly provided training in Schabasser, that it may have to adapt itself to the new
Gregorian chant, trains leaders for the new liturgy. To liturgy. To those who would argue that choral singing
study chant at present one must turn to the great secular deprives the congregation of participation, Schabasser
universities of Canada and the United States. Several remarks with common sense that the choir members are
religious communities in Canada continue to use chant also part of the congregation! When the choir sings, the
for divine worship. He cites in particular the Benedictine people are participating, because people are singing!
abbey of Ste. Marie des Deux Montagnes near Montreal. Rudolf Flotzinger has a long article discussing the 1200
Fr. Morin concludes by asking lay people to assume the year tradition of church music at the Benedictine abbey
role of leadership given to them in the post-Vatican II of Kremsmunster. There are eight shorter articles con-
Church by reading the conciliar documents and then cerning prominent men and women in Austrian church
38
music and another series of articles on upcoming church this way a communal meal could be eaten without expos-
music workshops in Austria. ing the Blessed Sacrament to the danger of sacrilege from
RICHARD M. HOGAN those unworthy to receive it.
This issue also has an article by Athanasius Kroger on
UNA VOCE KORRESPONDENZ, Volume 7, Number 5, the new rite of Baptism. Kroger is criticizing the German
September-October 1977 Bi-monthly journal of Una Voce translation of the Latin text.
(Germany). RICHARD M. HOGAN
This issue of Una Voce Korrespondenz begins with an
article by Paul Hacker on ecumenism. Hacker distin- BOLLETTINO CECILIANO. Vol. 72, No. 8-9, August-
guishes between the ecumenism suggested by the coun- September 1977. Review of the Italian Society of Saint
cil and the false ecumenism which is being undertaken in Cecilia.
many circles within the Church. Hacker suggests that the The post from Italy is slower and slower in arriving.
interconfessional discussions, agreements, and defini- That accounts for the date of this issue that has only
tions concerning controverted points or matters of faith recently arrived. Given over to the observance of the
for the Catholic members of the ecumenical team point to tenth anniversary of the liturgical renewal, a series of
a false ecumenism. The only task of an ecumenical dis- articles studies various areas affected by the reforms:
cussion, Hacker argues, is to explain the Catholic teach- composers, organists, choirs, seminaries and religious
ing on a given point and to eliminate any false im- communities. The various publications, congresses and
pressions which the non-Catholics might have about a activities of the Italian Society of Saint Cecilia during
particular doctrine of the Church. Further, Hacker ar- these ten years are noted and assessed.
gues that one can never lose sight of the basic error or Emidio Papinutti has an article on Pope Paul VI and his
heresy of any non-Catholic Christian religion. The pastoral concern for the church musicians. He says that
Catholic faith teaches that we have the full and complete Pope Paul will rank with Gregory the Great and Pius X as
revelation and that other Christian denominations share "popes of sacred music." During this pontificate more
in this truth, but also stray from it and believe error. attention was given sacred music than ever in the past.
Whether such a frankly stated position is the best one for He lists the instruction, Musicam sacram; the foundation
an ecumenist to take, sitting at an interconfessional dis- of the Consociatio Internationalis Musicae Sacrae; the
cussion, may be questioned. But it seems that Hacker is publication of the small chant collection, Jubilate Deo; the
correct in stressing this basic fact of life for all Catholic revision of the Kyriale and the Graduale; the publication of
ecumenists. We are right and they are, at least in some several new liturgical books. The Cappella Sistina has
part, wrong. new statutes and new quarters, and the new auditorium,
Klaus Gamber has two articles in this issue. The first Aula Nervi, with a fine organ can be considered a great
discusses the reform of the liturgy and the second treats concert hall. All this has come about under Pope Paul, to
Holy Communion. Many of Gamber's points in the arti- say nothing of his addresses on the subject of sacred
cle on the liturgy will be familiar to those readers who music, especially to the Italian musicians themselves.
have often read these reviews. Gamber points to the In the past ten years, Italian musicians have assembled
council and the intentions of the bishops when they in five national congresses: Rome in 1968; again in 1972;
voted for the passages in the Constitution of the Sacred Genoa in 1973; Vicenza in 1974; and Naples in 1976.
Liturgy which have been the bases for the liturgy reform. Sante Zaccaria gives an account of each of these meetings
The Fathers did not ever conceive the majority of and concludes with some words about the next meeting
changes which we have now taken more or less for to be held in Rome. The secretary of each of the divisions
granted. They wanted only minor reforms. Even as late of the society has a report on the progress made in the
as 1967, when the synod of bishops met, the majority of last ten years, and finally, the editor of the journal re-
the bishops did not want the wide-sweeping liturgical views his publication, now in its seventy-second year.
changes which were effected. Gamber discusses each R.J.S.
change in its historical context and justifies, historically,
many of the elements of the new Mass. However, he
deplores, not the new additions, but the elements ex-
cised from the old Mass.
In the much shorter second article, Gamber traces the
history of the reception of Holy Communion by the faith-
ful noting that it was received very frequently in the early
Church and less and less frequently in medieval times.
Today, especially since Pius X, the faithful receive the
Blessed Sacrament more often. Even non-Catholics come
to the table of the Lord. Gamber suggestes that it would
be better to adopt the medieval custom of sharing
blessed bread after the liturgy rather than allowing
everyone to receive the Blessed Sacrament at Mass. In
39
Recordings can actually hear the contrasting approaches which the
groups took in their exemplifications, something we
would have had to accept on faith from the printed ac-
Edward E. Lowinsky (ed.), Josquin des Prez. London and count of the panel discussions.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. One volume The volume is altogether a masterly assemblage of
and three 7" records, slipcased. $55.00. present-day research on the most important composer of
Josquin des Prez: Missa "La sol fa re mi"; motets, chan- his time. I was intrigued by Jeremy Noble's discovery of
sons, instrumental music. Capella Antiqua of Munich ecclesiastical benefices as a means of filling out undiscov-
directed by Konrad Ruhland. ABC Classics AB 67017 (2 ered details of Josquin's life; this was one of the three
record set). Recorded c. 1973. papers prepared after the conference. I was especially
Almost simultaneously we have received two impor- interested in Willem Elders' study of the plainchant ele-
tant documents of the 450th anniversary of the death of ments in Josquin's music. It is useful to have James
Josquin des Prez in 1971. The book is the proceedings of Haar's paper on the Missa "La sol fa re mi" in view of the
the International Josquin Festival-Conference, held in record album which is now available as a companion to
New York in June of that year. The record album pre- the proceedings of the festival. Lowinsky's own con-
serves the program of one of the four concerts given tribution was a study of Cardinal Ascanio Sforza, Jos-
during the festival. Unlike the spate of recordings mark- quin's patron. It was to be expected that Gustave Reese
ing the recent Dufay anniversary (see Sacred Music, (who just died this September), the longtime pathfinder
Spring 1977), there are few souvenirs of the Josquin year in renaissance musicology in America, should have
on records. taken part, but it was gratifying to hear him discuss with
Edward E. Lowinsky of the University of Chicago such authority and insight the whole genre of
spent two and a half years organizing a tribute to Jos- polyphonic Lady Masses as the background to Josquin's
quin. With the American and international musicological Missa de beata Virgine. Finally there is the keynote ad-
societies as sponsors, he raised money from government dress, "Josquin des Prez: the man and the music," given
agencies in six countries as well as educational institu- at the opening session by the late Friedrich Blume, the
tions and foundations, and at the last minute won a first president of the IMS and editor oiMusik in Geschichte
matching grant from the National Endowment for the und Gegenwart, whose presence was a measure of the
Humanities. Perhaps in deference to this change of magnitude of this conference.
heart, the account of Claude Palisca's witty welcoming It seems clear that the four concert programs were orig-
address omits the hilarious remark, "Some day I must inally to be recorded in performance. After that proved
tell you about the letter I received which began, 'You contractually impossible, it was hoped that each ensem-
can't imagine how little the United States govenment is ble would record the music it had prepared. The New
interested in Josquin des Prez'!" York Pro Musica disbanded, the Schola Cantorum
The splendid volume which the Oxford University Stuttgart does not concentrate primarily on early music
Press has given us, planned even before the conference at all, and nothing has been seen of the Prague Madrigal
opened, is the official proceedings of the event, and Singers' program on records (it would have included the
much more. All but one of the thirty papers on every first recording of the Missa Fortuna desperata).
aspect of the life and works of Josquin is here, all exten- The Capella Antiqua of Munich, however, which won
sively revised and annotated for publication. Three pa- a clear first place in my affections not only for their sub-
pers which could not be given at the time are added. The lime concert but for their splendid contribution to the
workshops are recorded both in print and on records. workshops, recorded their entire program for the Philips
The conference, held at the Juilliard School of Music Seon Series shortly after. Issued as Philips 6775 005, it
before 800 participants at an absurdly low cost of admis- has been hard to find, but now ABC Classics has just
sion because of the underwriting grants, lasted five days. issued it in this country. Besides giving us the first
Each morning was devoted to the musicological papers. recorded performance of the Missa "La sol fa re mi", it also
Four of the evenings were filled with concerts at Alice includes two of the most profound and moving motets in
Tully Hall by each of the four renowned performing the Josquin canon, Miserere mei Deus and Absalon fili mi
groups which took part. Three of the afternoons wit- (the latter an unforgettable moment as a mere demon-
nessed the most innovative part of the program, the stration in the workshop on motets).
workshops on performance practice. With a panel of In fact the records contain extra measure. Since the
several musicologists on one side of the stage and two of Mass occupies the first side, three additional motets (in-
the performing groups on the other, the performance cluding Absalon fili mi) are added to those on the concert
practice of Masses, motets and songs (in turn) was both program to make two full record sides, and the few secu-
discussed and exemplified. Lowinsky modestly de- lar pieces that Ruhland chose to include in his program
scribes this in his preface as "the model for a whole are filled out with five more to make the fourth record
number of musicological conferences." side. The original recording was excellent, and ABC is
Slipped in along with the volume of papers are three making an effort to press the records at the quality level
seven-inch records each containing about fifteen minutes of European pressings. The surfaces are unusually quiet.
of music, one record for each workshop. This way we It would be pleasant to report on a bundle of other new
40
recordings of Josquin Masses, but they are singularly Anton Bruckner, Requiem in D Minor. Laubacher Kan-
hard to find. Bruno Turner's new recording of Missa torei. Nonesuch H-71327.
L'Homme arme on Archive 2530 360 has not been issued in The Bruckner Requiem in D Minor was written when
this country yet, but it should prove a worthy competitor the composer was twenty-four upon the death of a
to Miroslav Venhoda's earlier recording, first released on friend. Forty-three years later he made a revision of it
Crossroads 2216 0094 and still available as imported Sup- with the comment, "It isn't bad." A recording has ap-
raphon SUAST 50553. Wilhelm Eschweiler, previously peared on Nonesuch by a provincial choir and orchestral
unknown, recorded the Missa Mater patris et filia last year ensemble, the Laubacher Kantorei and the Werner
on Da Camera Magna SM 94053, but the record is hard to Keltsch grouping under the direction of Hans Michael
find outside of Germany; like an older version on the Beuerle. It reveals the little Requiem as just what Bruckner
Carillon label, it includes the Brumel motet which pro- said of it, "It isn't bad." But the musical forces at hand,
vided the canus firmus. Only slightly older is Paul Wehr- although they are to be thanked and complimented for
le's first recording of the Missa Da pacem (no longer their bravery and dedication, are just not up to it. The
counted as authentic Josquin) on Camerata LP 30040, an choruses are forced and nervous, as if they are conscious
obscure label hard to find even in Germany. Alejandro of recording for all time to come. If only the work could
Planchart made the Missa Gaudeamus on Lyrichord LLST have had the attention of the Deutsche Grammonphon
7265 in 1972, but for an American label this is not much amalgamates under Herbert von Karajan as in the newly
easier to find than the French recording which came out offered Mozart Coronation Mass and the Bruckner Te
about the same time directed by Roger Cotte. Planchart Deum (DG2530 704) it would have been a different story.
also made the first recording of Missa Sine nomine on Whatever one might think of von Karajan as a musical
Lyrichord LLST 7214 in 1969. More accessible is Jeremy personality there is no faulting his accomplishment. His
Noble's first recording of the Missa L'Homme arme sexti work is perfection, sheer sheen and shimmer. He has at
toni on Bach Guild HM 3 SD, issued in 1972. his command the best orchestra in Europe, the Berliner,
Since most of the Masses discussed so far are first and the best stable of soloists. It is almost sinful to com-
recordings, and seven Josquin Masses have never been pare the little Laubacher group with the very top money
recorded at all, it is clear that only a few Masses have in the world of recorded music. The reviews speak of
enjoyed much attention on records. Josquin's supreme "blockbuster Bruckner," "Astonishing sonorities," "an
masterpiece, of course, is the Missa Pange lingua, which effect which can only be described as awesome." if you
has appeared in at least eight versions. The latest was have what it costs to purchase a DG record these days
made by Martin Behrmann on Turnabout TVS 34431 for buy this!
the anniversary year of 1971, but it faces stiff competition REV. JOHN BUCHAHAN
in the low-price field from Philippe Caillard on Musical
Heritage Society MHS 1000 (not to be confused with Cail-
lard's old version on a mono Westminster long ago). Its
full-priced competition comes from Venhoda on Tele-
funken 641259 (originally Valois MB 794) and the New
York Pro Musica record reviewed here in Winter 1968.
Four recordings of the Missa Hercules Dux Ferrariae have
come and gone; the Gillesberger ought to be reissued by
Bach Guild. The Missa de beata Virgine on Turnabout TVS REMEMBER TO RENEW
34437 is quite a bit above Paul Boepple's average, but it
dates back to 1960; its only competition was a French YOUR SUBSCRIPTION
recording by Roger Blanchard made about the same
time. There are two versions of the Missa Ave maris Stella
in the catalogue. Both were made in this country and
released a month a part in 1969; the Nonesuch is fine and Regular $7.50
low-priced, the New York Pro Musica version on MCA
(ex-Decca) is very fine but full-priced.
Voting $12.50
The renewed attention to Josquin which Lowinsky's
magnificent book should stimulate may result in better
recorded representation of his Masses on records. We Sacred Music
can start by encouraging the producers who have already
given us quite a bit.
Earl D. Hogan
j . F. WEBER
3800 Crystal Lake Blvd.
Minneapolis, Minnesota 55422
41
and Max Reger. Edith Ho performed works of Johann
NEWS Walther, Georg Boehm, Felix Mendelssohn, Paul Hin-
demith and J. S. Bach in her recital on November 8.
Reiko Oda presented compositions of Johann Pachelbel,
Father Ralph S. March, S.O. Cist., of Dallas, Texas, J. S. Bach, Johannes Brahms and Paul Hindemith on
has received an appointment from Josef Cardinal Hoeff- November 9, and on November 10, Stephen Kow-
ner, Archbishop of Cologne, to the position of choirmas- alyshyn with members of the Greensboro Symphony
ter at the Cologne cathedral. He will assume charge of Orchestra performed Handel's Organ Concerto V, To-
the Domchor of thirty-five men and forty-five boys on maso Albinoni's Adagio for organ and strings and other
February 15, 1978. In addition he will serve as headmas- works by Nicklaus Bruhns, Franz Joseph Haydn, J. S.
ter of the archdiocesan choir school to which the boys go Bach, Alexander Guilmant, Marcel Dupre and Antony
for their studies. Father March was editor of Sacred Stepanovich Arensky. Father Francis M. Smith is pastor.
Music from 1967 until 1975. He is director of the Dallas
Catholic Choir and formerly professor of music at the
University of Dallas.
The Church of Sant Leo, Saint Paul, Minnesota, will
sponsor its second annual choral festival, February 3-4,
1978. Eph Ehly, chairman of choral studies at the Univer-
Because of the great success of the symposium and sity of Missouri, Kansas City, will be festival director and
workshops held last summer at Neuberg in Styria, Aus- work with the participants on the music of Lotti, Men-
tria, plans have been formulated to offer an expanded delssohn, Daniel Pinkham and others. Elizabeth Stodola
program from July 16 to 23, 1978. Situated in the Alps of is the parish music director.
Styria, the former abbey church makes a great setting for
the performance of church music, and the hospitality of +
an Austrian village offers ample vacation opportunity. Recent musical programs for the liturgy at the Church
Seminars in instrumental and choral areas will be con- of the Holy Childhood, Saint Paul Minnesota, included
ducted in both German and English sessions. Schubert's Alexander Gretchaninoff's Missa Festiva on October 30,
Mass in G and the Neuberg Festival Mass by Gerhard Track 1977, and Anton Diabelli's Missa Pastoralis for the Christ-
will be performed. For further information see the adver- mas Mass. Other music was by Karl Meister, Bruce Lar-
tisement in this issue of Sacred Music. sen, Cesar Franck, Pietro Yon and Felix Mendelssohn.
Soloists among the boys of the Schola Cantorum are
John Jagoe, Daniel Gabrielli, Jeffrey Jagoe and Michael
Moe. Tenor soloists are James Lang and Bernard Steffen;
Monsignor Fiorenzo Romita, past president of the In- baritones, Lee Green and Stephen Schmall. Richard
ternational Federation of Pueri Cantores, died in Rome Kramlinger is bass. Bruce Larsen is choirmaster and Mer-
on September 22, 1977. He was well known for his ritt Nequette, organist. Father John Buchanan is pastor.
studies in canon law as it pertained to church music and
took an active part in organizations both in Italy and on
an international scope. Monsignor Romita was in Chicago The Saint Dominic Choir of Shaker Heights, Ohio,
and Milwaukee for the Fifth International Church Music presented the Christmas portion of its seventeenth con-
Congress in 1965. R.I.P. cert season, December 11, 1977, under the direction of
Cal Stepan. The program included Benjamin Britten's
Ceremony of Carols and a selection of Christmas carols in
various arrangements by Richard Zgodava, Richard
The Church of Our Lady of Grace, Greensboro, North Proulx, Cal Stepan and Walter Frackenpohl. The event
Carolina, dedicated a new three-manual pipe organ, de- was dedicated to the pastor of Saint Dominic's Church,
signed by Detlef Kleuker of Bielefeld, West Germany, at Father John F. Neary, on the occasion of his thirtieth
ceremonies extending from November 6 through 10, anniversary of ordination.
1977. The organ is the gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M.
Bryan on the occasion of the twenty-fifth jubilee of the
parish. It occupies the rear gallery especially designed to
house it together with the Ruckpositiv section. The dedica- Quincy College, Quincy, Illinois, presented its Col-
tion recital was played by Harold Andrews of Greensboro legium Musicum groups in a recital of sixteenth-century
College, Richard Anderson of Bennett College and Cath- choral and instrumental music transcribed and edited for
ryn Eskey of the University of North Carolina at performance by Lavern Wagner, chairman of the college
Greensboro. Works performed were by J. S. Bach, department of music. Composers represented on the
Johannes Brahms, Marcel Dupre, W. A. Mozart and Max program were Girolamo Fantini, Pierre de Manchicourt,
Reger. Paul Davis of the Peabody Conservatory played a Johannes Heugel, Jean Bonmarche. Gerard de Turnhout
recital on November 7, which included works by Dietrich and Philippe Rogier. The instrumental and vocal groups
Buxtehude, John Bennett, J. S. Bach, Darius Milhaud were the chamber choir, the baroque trumpets, a
42
recorder quartet and a brass ensemble. The concert was
September 29, 1977. FROM THE EDITORS
The choir of Saint Aloysius Church, Jersey City, New Mass in Latin
Jersey, presented its twenty-fifth annual Christmas con-
cert, December 24, 1977. Joseph Baber directed the
chorus and orchestra in works by Bach, Haydn, Schubert How often have you heard someone ask, "How can
and Handel. Midnight Mass followed the concert. Father they sing a Mass in Latin?" Or a sincere inquiry earnestly
Joseph B. Bagley is pastor. asking, "How do you get permission to have a Latin
Mass?" We tried to explain it clearly in an article in Sacred
Music (Vol. 103, No. 1. Spring 1976, p. 26-31). But it
Music for Christmas Mass at the Church of Saint takes many repetitions of the truth to establish it. Per-
Agnes, Saint Paul, Minnesota, was mostly by Mozart in haps that is why we must still preach on the Ten Com-
addition to the Gregorian chant settings of the proper. mandments of God. Repetitio est mater studiorum.
His Coronation Mass, Ave verum, Exsultate, Jubilate and his Recently a good strong voice of a member of the
Sancta Maria, Mater Dei were sung by the Twin Cities hierarchy reiterated the truth on the use of Latin in the
Catholic Chorale and members of the Minnesota Orches- liturgy. Bishop Thomas W. Lyons, speaking in the name
tra. Soloists were Sarita Roche, Karen Johnson, Vern of the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., has sent the
Sutton and Maurice Jones. David Bevan was organist following letter to all the parishes urging the use of Latin
and William F. Pohl, cantor. On January 1, 1978, the in the Mass and the preservation of Latin chants during
group sang Joseph Haydn's Paukenmesse, and on January the liturgy:
8, his Theresienmesse. "Newspapers, radio and television have recently given
wide publicity to the differences between Archbishop
Marcel Lefebvre and the Church. Not infrequently these
sources of information erroneously describe the dif-
The Bach Society of Dayton, Ohio, has announced a ferences as being simply an insistence on the use of Latin
series of four concerts from October through May to be instead of the vernacular and of saying Mass with the
presented at Holy Angels Church, the Church of the celebrant's back to the people.
Cross United Methodist and Immaculate Conception "In fact, Latin is still the official language of the Roman
Church. Cantatas 19, 21, 51, 104 and 131 are pro- rite. Permission is not needed for a priest to say Mass in
grammed together with motets by Anton Bruckner and Latin or to have public Masses in Latin. The rite which
Hugo Distler. The Requiem of W. A. Mozart concludes must be used in such celebrations is the revised rite. The
the season. Richard Benedum is conductor. so-called Tridentine rite may not be used except in cer-
tain specific circumstances.
"Archbishop Lefebvre's rejection of the revised rite is a
The Church of Saint Patrick, Edina, Minnesota, cele- readily visible aspect of a more fundamental difference
brated Christmas with Anton Bruckner's Messe in C, with the Church which includes his rejection of much of
Christmas motets by H. Berlioz, Handel, Praetorius, H. the Second Vatican Council. In other words, simply to
Schroeder and M. Haydn, and orchestra music by Albi- allow use of the Tridentine rite would not resolve the
noni and Mozart. The choir sang Mozart's Laudate basic problem. Your prayers are requested that there
Dominum and soprano, Janice MacGibbon, his Exsultate,
might be an early and peaceful resolution of the Arch-
jubilate. Ita Vellek is choir director, and Kathy Webb was
bishop's differences with the Church.
guest organist. Father Ambrose J. Mahon is pastor.
"On the topic of Latin in the liturgy, Cardinal Baum
has asked that I inform you that he urges parishes to
consider having a Mass in Latin on occasion, or even on a
The Pueblo Symphony Chorale presented a concert as regular basis. He commends the Archdiocesan Sacred
part of the annual Mozart Festival in Pueblo, Colorado, Music Commission for its initiatives and encouragement
January 26,1978. To commemorate the 150th anniversary of Latin in the Liturgy. He particularly urges that we
of the death of Franz Schubert, the chief work performed carry out the exhortation of the Constitution on the Sacred
was his Mass in G. Soloists were Sarita Roche, soprano, Liturgy that 'steps should be taken so that the faithful
Marvon Worden, tenor, and Vernon Skari, bass. The may pray or sing together in Latin those parts of the
chorale will travel to Europe in the summer of 1978, ap- ordinary of the Mass which pertain to them.' In the
pearing in Vienna and at Neuberg in Austria as part of the spirit of this exhortation Pope Paul VI urged pastors to
international symposium scheduled there in July. At that do what they could to preserve certain Latin chants
event they will sing the Schubert Mass in G and Gerhard which are simple and familiar to our people. The Holy
Track's Neuberg Festival Mass. Track is founder and direc- Father arranged for publication of a leaflet of such chants
tor of the chorale. Mary Lynn Parodi is accompanist. under the title Jubilate Deo. The leaflet includes the 16th
R.J.S. Kyrie, the 8th Gloria, the 3rd Credo, the Pater Noster and
43
the 16th Gloria and Agnus Dei (the last are the Requiem hand and points to a star while the other two kings sleep
Mass melodies). on. The concentric folds of the all-encompassing bed-
"These basic chants are familiar to many adults and clothes are exceptionally beautiful. In the book, Gisleber-
can easily be taught to young people and children. The tus, Sculptor of Autun, by Denis Grivot and George Zar-
leaflet is available in an inexpensive form from Our Sun- necki (London: The Trianon Press, 1961) it is explained
day Visitor, Inc., Huntington, Ind. 46750. that this capital is the only one to retain traces of its
"The point is not that we give up the use of the ver- original colors of red, blue, green and gold.
nacular but rather that along with it we preserve a rich In the capital representing two virtues and two vices,
heritage that can serve as a bond of unity among avarice is portrayed in a frightening fashion as a Judas
Catholics of many nations and languages." figure with a money bag. The other vice, anger, is Cain
R.J.S. piercing himself with a sword. These two vices are
dominated by the virtues of generosity and patience. The
stories of a man riding a bird and the fight with a basilik
Autun are allegorical in nature. Both the large bird and the
basilik, a creature which is half cock and half serpent,
The Cathedral of St. Lazarus, located in the small city
represent evil which is being fought by the forces of
of Autun, some fifty miles southwest of Dijon, is judged
good.
to be one of the two most beautiful romanesque churches
With this issue we bring to a close our series of photo-
in Burgundy. The other is the neighboring Basilica of the
graphs of French medieval churches, St. Trophime at
Madeleine at Vezelay. Built in the early twelfth century
Aries, the Basilica of the Madeleine at Vezelay, the
to house the relics of St. Lazarus, the cathedral is unique
Abbey of Cluny, the Cathedral of Notre Dame in
in that its sculptural program was carried out almost en-
Chartres and the Cathedral of St. Lazarus in Autun. Once
tirely by one man, Gislebertus, who signed the tym-
again we congratulate Warren J. Wimmer, Jr., 1977
panum just below the feet of Christ with the Latin
graduate of Macalester College in St. Paul, Minnesota,
phrase, Gislebertus hoc fecit. The fact that his signature is
and now Andrew Wimmer, O.S.B., novice of St. Louis
located so prominently leads one to conclude that the
Priory, St. Louis, Missouri, on his excellent photo-
bishop and chapter of Autun had given their consent for
graphs. We thank him for his generosity in sharing them
its placement, and that Gislebertus was one of the most
with us and we wish him God's blessing.
prominent sculptors of the period. Art historians believe
V.A.S.
he was trained at the nearby Abbey of Cluny and that he
worked for a time at Vezelay before coming to Autun.
Fortunately for the lovers of romanesque art the exquisite
Last Judgment tympanum at Autun was preserved from
the ravages of the French revolution by being covered This issue
with plaster in the eighteenth century. It was only redis-
covered in 1837. The magnificent head of Christ which Dr. Mahrt of Stanford University continues his study
had been broken off to facilitate the plaster work was of the reforms begun in liturgical music by the Second
re-discovered and replaced in 1948, thus returning the Vatican Council with his article on the pipe organ which
tympanum to something near its original grandeur. was so beautifully extolled by the council fathers.
In addition to the facade, Gislebertus was responsible We begin with this issue a series of articles describing
for all of the capitals of the interior of the cathedral that the developments in liturgical music abroad. Dr.
are clearly visible from the ground except for two. The Schubert has translated from French a report given by
illustrations for this issue of Sacred Music are for the most Professor Joseph Lennards on conditions in Holland. Fu-
part photographs of those capitals. Several represent var- ture issues of Sacred Music will bring articles on England,
ious aspects of the story of the Nativity. The Flight into Austria, Germany and Italy.
Egypt, which is on the front cover of our magazine, is Reports on activities of church musicians in various
judged a favorite capital of visitors to Autun. It repre- parts of the country are interesting and important. Some
sents Mary and the Christ Child seated on a high step- months ago we published an account of Father John M.
ping donkey being led by Joseph who is armed with a Oates' work in Cranford, New Jersey. In another issue
sword. Mary holds a globe in her hand. Christ's right we wrote about the schola at the Church of the Holy
hand rests on it as if to symbolize the fact that He accepts Childhood in Saint Paul. In this issue we have an article,
His mission. The motif at the base of the capital reminds originally written in German for the Austrian church
one of wheels and could be related to the fact that a music magazine, Singende Kirche, by Richard M. Hogan,
donkey on wheels carrying a Christ figure was a part of describing the Twin Cities Catholic Chorale and its pro-
medieval processions on Palm Sunday. Two details of gram of Viennese classical music. The author has made
another capital show the magi presenting their gifts to the translation which is printed in this issue. We are
Christ who is seated on His mother's lap. In the Dream anxious to have reports on other endeavors, and we in-
of the Magi the artist uses a double perspective, present- vite you to send either brief news items or longer de-
ing the scene from above and from the side at the same scriptions.
time. One king is awakened by an angel who touches his R.J.S.
44
OPEN FORUM originality in the interpretation of the chant not in the
interpretation of Solesmes chant.
Father Weber castigates me over the question of the
lack of source data in this collection. I was, however,
asked to review this particular edition which did not
Record Review contain source data. I was not asked to criticize the orig-
inal Harmonia Mundi recordings which Father Weber
points out do contain the relevant historical informa-
I did want'to comment on the review of chants in the tion. If this is the case, the album that I received should
latest issue. I'm afraid that Bevan just asks questions; a have included this essential supplement.
reviewer ought to answer them. The fact is, this album
DAVID BEVAN
(he should at least have pointed out the bargain price — I
saw it advertised for $7.99) is licensed from four Har-
monia Mundi (France) records among the five numbered
HMU 234 to 238 (I don't have the set yet so I don't know
INDEX TO VOLUME 104
which one is missing). ARTICLES
Bevan's rather startling list of opinions really ought to
be backed up beyond their mere statement. He thinks "Church Music Association of America"
Alfred Deller's counter-tenor is grotesque; he's entitled by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Spring 1977
to his opinion but the rest of the world seems to consider "Bishop John B. David, an Unknown American Composer"
the man to be one of the world's outstanding artists. He by J. Vincent Higginson Spring 1977
thinks the interpretation is standard-Solesmes; it is quite
"Boys Choirs: an Appraisal"
distinctly different, which is not to say either better or
by David Bevan Spring 1977
worse. The list of contents in French reflects not so much
the origin of the chants as the origin of the notes — the "Church of the Holy Childhood"
liner notes of the original Harmonia Mundi records. The by Virginia A. Schubert Spring 1977
original records gave much of the source data that Bevan "Fiddling while Rome Burns"
longed for; he should have been aware of their existence by Reverend John Buchanan Summer 1977
and offered the information as part of his review, instead
of just asking unanswered questions. "Reflections of a Choir Singer"
My pet complaint, however, would be his suggestion by Thaddeus Chao Summer 1977
that a whole LP of "relentless" chants needs polyphony "Wagner, Sacramentals and the New Iconoclasm"
to break up the monotony (?). We are fortunate in having by Richard M. Hogan Summer 1977
scores and scores of chant LPs, and we are lucky that no
"In Unitate: Ceremonies and Music"
one has gotten to the record companies to dissuade them
by Harold Hughesdon and
from their issue. (I applaud such relevant juxtapositions
as the recordings of Machaut, Morales, Monteverdi and Helen Mary Hughesdon Summer 1977
De Monte polyphonic Masses with Gregorian propers "1967 Instruction - Ten Years Later"
interspersed in place. I don't suggest that they be so by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Fall 1977
placed just to break up the monotony!) "Chartres"
REV. JEROME F. WEBER by Virginia A. Schubert Fall 1977
"The Musical Shape of the Liturgy. Part IV: The Function of
I read with great interest Father Weber's letter in crit- the Organ"
icism of my review of the Deller Consort's plainchant by William Peter Mahrt Winter 1977
album. I should like to answer some of the points he "Sacred Music in Holland"
raises, beginning with the following: "He thinks Alfred by Joseph Lennards Winter 1977
Deller's counter-tenor is grotesque."
"The Twin Cities Catholic Chorale"
Here is an instance of mis-apprehension of the kind
by Richard M. Hogan Winter 1977
that bedevils diplomats. I never mentioned the name of
Alfred Deller, nor did I refer to his voice in these general
MAGAZINES REVIEWED
terms. I specifically described the performance of some
chant versicles by a counter-tenor as grotesque. Bollettino Ceciliano (Msgr. R. J. Schuler, reviewer)
Secondly: "He thinks the interpretation is standard Vol. 71, No. 10-11 October-November 1976
Solesmes; it is quite distinctly different, which is not to Spring 1977
say either better or worse." I fail to grasp Father Weber's Vol. 71, No. 12, December 1976 Spring 1977
point here. The version of the chant in this album is Vol. 72, No. 2, February 1977 Summer 1977
distinctly Solesmes, though of course, the style may dif- Vol. 72, No. 3, March 1977 Summer 1977
fer from that actually practiced by the Solesmes monks. Vol. 72, No. 4, April 1977 Summer 1977
What one would wish for in a chant record is a degree of Vol. 72, No. 8^9, August-September 1977 Winter 1977
45
Der Fels (Richard M. Hogan, reviewer) LIST OF MEMBERS Fall 1977
Vol 8, No. 3, 4, March, April 1977 Summer 1977
Vol. 8, No. 6, August 1977 Fall 1977 MEMBERS IN PROFILE Summer 1977
L'Organiste (Virginia A. Schubert, reviewer) NEWS Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter 1977
No. 4, December 1976 Summer 1977
OPEN FORUM Spring, Summer, Winter 1977
Music and Liturgy (David Bevan, reviewer)
Vol. 2, No. 2, spring 1976 Spring 1977 FROM THE EDITORS
Vol. 3, No. 1, Spring 1977 Summer 1977 "St. Trophime at Aries"
by Virginia A. Schubert Spring 1977
Singende Kirche (Richard M. Hogan, reviewer)
"Cui Bono?" by Harold Hughesdon Spring 1977
Vol. 24, No. 2, 1976-77 Spring 1977
"How Much has it Cost?"
Vol. 24, No. 3, 1976-77 Summer 1977
by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Summer 1977
Vol. 24, No. 4, 1976-77 Fall 1977
"Vezelay and Cluny" by Virginia A.
Vol. 25, No. 1, 1977-78 Winter 1977
Schubert Summer 1977
"Heresy?"
Una Voce (France) (Virginia A. Schubert, reviewer)
by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Summer 1977
No. 74, May-June 1977 Fall 1977
"The 1967 Instruction"
No. 75-76, July-October 1977 Winter 1977
by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Fall 1977
Una Voce Korrespondenz (Richard M. Hogan, reviewer) "A Christmas Suggestion"
Vol. 6, No. 6, 1976 Summer 1977 by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Fall 1977
Vol. 7, No. 1, 1977 Fall 1977 "Another Christmas Gift Suggestion"
Vol. 7, Nos. 2, 3, 1977 Fall 1977 by Virginia A. Schubert Fall 1977
Vol. 7, No. 5, 1977 Winter 1977 "Mass in Latin"
by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Winter 1977
BOOKS REVIEWED "Autun" by Virginia A. Schubert Winter 1977
Andreas Werckmeister, Werckmeister's Erweiterte und Ver- "This Issue"
besserte Orgelprobe in English. by Monsignor Richard J. Schuler Winter 1977
(William F. Pohl, reviewer) Spring 1977
John Fesperman, Two Essays on Organ Design. RECORDINGS REVIEWED
(William F. Pohl, reviewer) Spring 1977 (J. F. Weber, David Bevan,
James Walsh et al., eds., A Song in Season. John Buchanan, reviewers) Spring, Fall, Winter 1977
(Canon George C. Davey, reviewer) Fall 1977
Johannes Overath, ed., Confitemini Domino. SAMPLE MUSIC AND SPECIAL REVIEWS
(Msgr. H. J. Schuler, reviewer) Winter 1977 Prex Eucharistica I Spring 1977
Ferdinand Haberl, II Kyriale Romanum. Out of the Depths by Gerhard Track
(Msgr. R. J. Schuler, reviewer) Winter 1977 Hal Leonard Publishing Corp. Fall 1977
Ferdinand Haberl, Das Graduate Romanum. To You I lift My Soul by Gerhard Track
(Msgr. R. J. Schuler, reviewer) Winter 1977 Hal Leonard Publishing Corp. Fall 1977
Francis P. Schmitt, Church Music Transgressed. Christus factus est by Leonardo Leo
(Msgr. R. J. Schuler, reviewer) Winter 1977 G. I. A. Publications Winter 1977
CHORAL MUSIC REVIEWED Crux fidelis by John IV
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter 1977 G.I.A. Publication Winter 1977
46
The Collectors Companion
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BECAUSE OF THE GREAT SUCCESS OF THE 650 YEARS ANNIVERSARY
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2ND INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM
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Seminars • Workshops • Concerts • Masses
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Seminars in Choral conducting, Voice, Violin, Piano,
Organ, Trumpet, Clarinet and Chamber Music
"Symposium Choir" for all participants
Highlights:
Schubert Mass in G Track: Neuberg Festival Mass
(150 Years Anniversary of Franz Schubert's death) for Mezzo Soprano, Mixed Choir and Organ
World Premier Performance
of a new oratorio in the Cathedral of Neuberg
Enjoy your studies in the beautiful surroundings of the Styrian Alps. Costs: $200.00 includes
Seminar Fee, Hotel Accomodations, 3 meals a day and tickets for all concerts during the festival.
International faculty from USA, Austria, and Poland. All seminars in the English language.
For further information call: (303) 566-0540 or write to
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