Posted on 11/20/2007 1:34:30 PM PST by NYer
For decades, the standard of singing in St Peter's basilica has struggled to match that of a Gilbert and Sullivan society.
Church music in Italy is generally atrocious, and the Vatican is no exception.
Since he arrived in Rome nearly 30 years ago, the music-loving Joseph Ratzinger has had to endure the sub-operatic warbling of bad 20th-century music. Now he has had enough.
The Pope, who last year appointed a new choir director of St Peter's, wants Gregorian chant, polyphony and baroque masterpieces to dominate the repertoire in the basilica and the Sistine chapel. And, by making his preferences clear, he is sending out a message to the whole Catholic Church.
We are moving into an era of liturgical revolution. Benedict detests the feeble "folk Masses" that have remained the staple fare of Catholic worship long after they went out of musical fashion.
He wants the Church to rediscover the treasure of its heritage - and that includes Gregorian chant as well as the pre-1970 Latin Mass that can now be celebrated without the permission of bishops.
The old guard of trendy choir directors and composers (many of whom have signed lucrative contracts with dioceses) will fight his reforms every inch of the way, egged on by philistine bishops.
But younger church musicians, like young priests, are conservative in their tastes.
The next generation of choir directors have been charged by the Pope with the task of reintroducing beautiful music into church. If they succeed, then at long last the pews may begin to fill up again.
Damian Thompson is editor-in-chief of the Catholic Herald
A close friend of mine who is a canon lawyer once told me-—some 20 years ago-—that “liturgists are what God sends to his Church so that the laity will have something to suffer for the Faith.”
That being said, I agree with all that you have expressed in this post.
LOL
We’re having a series of talks about the new translation at Church. My aside to a friend was that the gift of being a convert is that one is so blown away by the consolations of the Sacred Body and Precious Blood that they could worship in Pig-Latin and it would still be marvellous.
a former pastor of mine once said that the difference between a terrorist and liturgist is that you can negotiate with a terrorist.
;-)
Listen to the first minute and a quarter of this.
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