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What about Bad [Catholic] Music?
CatholicCulture.org ^ | October 9, 2009 | Dr. Jeff Mirus

Posted on 10/09/2009 6:37:58 PM PDT by Salvation

What about Bad Music?

by Dr. Jeff Mirus, October 9, 2009

It is a feature of human nature that all normal persons respond emotionally to music. For this reason, music is often described in emotional or quasi-emotional terms. It may be languorous or bombastic, martial or lyrical, peaceful or agitated, soothing or exciting, and so on. But in addition to the connection between music and human moods, music is also perceived as beautiful (or ugly) and the human intellect naturally wishes to understand those properties of music which, if properly manipulated, produce beauty. Finally, the essentially moral character of the human person leads us to ask whether music can affect either morals in particular or spirituality in general and, if so, how.

It is possible to draw from these considerations three questions of great interest to most serious Catholics in today’s culture: First, can different kinds of music in themselves be either morally good or evil? Second, is it possible for music to influence a person’s moral behavior? Third, are some forms of music more suitable than others to worship and especially to the Divine liturgy? Prescinding for the most part from the problem of what makes music beautiful or ugly, it is these three questions that I intend to address below.

Morally Good and Bad Music

One surveys the comments of ancient, medieval and modern philosophers in vain to find a consistent rational exposition of the nature of music or its potential moral effects. Different philosophers from Confucius to Nietzsche, including Plato, Aristotle, Boethius, St. Thomas Aquinas, Kant and many more, have made assertions about music, its essential character, and its impact on morals without the development of any single consistent rational line of argument that could be used to distinguish legitimate conclusions from mere opinions. This dearth has been alleviated to a modest degree by the aesthetic studies of neo-Thomist philosophers in the 20th century, including the work of Jacques Maritain, and by documents written to reach out to artists by Pope John Paul II. But we are a very long way from understanding—if we ever will understand—exactly what distinguishes music from noise, what makes music beautiful, and exactly why and how music reaches to the core of the human person.

Those who have been exposed to “arguments” on the subject of whether some music, or perhaps some rhythms, are intrinsically disordered and therefore morally evil, should have noticed that these “arguments” are always either mere assertions or they are supported only by appeal to some authority. When the authority in question is consulted, one always finds another mere assertion, without any sort of logical argument that may be tested by another. In reality, it is oxymoronic to describe either rhythm or music as “disordered”, for in fact it is precisely the ordering of sound in particular ways which creates both rhythm and music as a whole.

Threfore, even a cursory study of past serious thought about the nature of music forces one to conclude that it cannot be successfully argued that any form of music is evil in itself, but only that it sometimes appears to be evil in certain of its effects, which are always obscured in human responses conditioned by many things outside the music itself.

Music and Moral Behavior

A moment’s reflection will enable us to see that any particular type of music that we do not like, or to which we are personally opposed, can be used to produce an effective, pleasing artistic effect in some context of which we would approve. We may abhor the sound of “death metal”, for example, yet the same sound may be a stroke of artistic genius in a section of a modern opera which portrays a suicide. This leads to an extremely important point, which may be further illustrated by the use of music in film scores. For it is undeniable, as I noted in the introduction, that music stimulates emotional responses and can therefore influence our moods, and this reality is routinely exploited not only in “occasional music” such as that used on patriotic occasions, at sporting events or at dances, but in any form of art which employs music in the telling of a story. Moreover, music has been used in many periods of history to assist in the treatment of various human disorders, up to and including clinical trials in our own time. This may not get us very far in terms of aesthetic theory, but it does provide a universal human experience on which to base certain legitimate conclusions.

The first conclusion, from both our own experience, the widespread experience of others, and even various clinical trials, is that music tends to intensify human responses to other stimulants. Insofar as we are beginning to feel suspense at a certain point in a movie, the right kind of music heightens that feeling. Insofar as we are upset but have something within us which desires peace, tranquil music usually has a soothing effect. Insofar as we are attempting to stir ourselves up to an act of military valor, the right musical accompaniment can stimulate our courage and hasten us to action.

At the same time, however, the human person always retains the innate capacity—the power of will—to nullify these emotional effects of music. He may psychologically detach himself from the movie, if it is not to his taste or if he has pressing business, and so make himself effectively impervious to the normal effect of the music. Not wishing to be “tranquilized”, he might grow angry at a crude attempt to pacify him through musical sounds. Opposed to war, he may scoff at or condemn martial music without being stirred by it in the least. He may laugh at that which is palpably designed to make him cry, and cry when he hears happy music, perhaps because it reminds him of a lost love.

The second conclusion is that, just as well-chosen music tends to make us feel more deeply certain experiences to which we are otherwise disposed, so too is the emotional impact of music both altered and significantly intensified by association with things that are extrinsic to the actual musical forms. These may be associations which we already have in our own minds, or associations which we form when listening to music that includes lyrics, which possess something that pure music does not, namely the intelligibility unique to human speech.

Lyrics

The most obvious examples of these associations are found in the rise of many new musical forms in various cultures among musicians who are either rebelling against the mores of the culture or who are using particular forms of music to accompany immoral behavior. We could point to several examples quite easily: The rise of certain Greek forms in orgiastic rites, the emergence of jazz among musicians who typically played in bordellos, the development of hard rock and heavy metal in a counter-cultural movement too interested in tearing down conventions. Such music, which in itself might be said to produce effects of restless animation, romantic relaxation, or throbbing anger, as been used as an accompaniment either to immoral activities or to lyrics containing harmful messages, or both.

Those who care about the activities or the messages, finding them immoral or false, will naturally associate these musical forms with evil and so will often experience them as intrinsically evil. It goes without saysing that, in this moral context, moral listeners will perceive as neutral those emotional tendencies of the music which made it appropriate to the lyrics or activities in question; rather, they are likely to react with disgust or anger. These associations and these lyrics are often very significant, and they are by no means to be lightly dismissed, especially in the formation of those who are young and impressionable. But the moral evil at work is not intrinsic to the music itself, as one final consideration will easily demonstrate.

With the passage of time, typically a generation or a little more, each new musical form tends to rise to general acceptability, in a particular context or usage, as the form is appropriated to other purposes and loses a large part of its original associations. It is too soon to see the end of this process in, say, hard rock or heavy metal, but it ought to be exceedingly clear in the case of jazz, which eventually worked its way into polite society, concert halls and university music programs, and which is considered a sort of gold standard today by a great many of those who cannot tolerate more recent musical forms. Yet in its origins, it was often regarded with horror.

There is another aspect of this progress of musical forms which also plays a critical role: familiarity. When we are used to particular forms and comfortable with them, we may find new forms distracting, jarring or otherwise annoying and unpleasant, and this certainly accounts for a large part of the immediate dislike of new music on the part of older people even as it is embraced with joy by those who are younger and more malleable. This alone is sufficient, even without various associations or problems with lyrics, to account for the common generation gaps in musical taste. But it also accounts for a very important phenomenon in the field of sacred music.

Sacred Music

If we conclude that music has no intrinsic moral quality, then we must ask a different sort of question when we consider which musical forms (or instruments, for that matter) are appropriate for divine worship. As you would expect, the evolution of the Church’s teaching on sacred music has been guided by the Church’s understanding of the Divine liturgy, in which the central and essential element (from the human point of view) is words. The Mass is a prayer of words, and insofar as music has been introduced into the public worship of the Church, its purpose has always been to give greater beauty and penetrating force to the words: the psalms, the readings, the prayers which accompany the actions of the Mass, and so on. This has deep roots in worship under the Old Covenant as well.

There are two other significant considerations for Sacred Music as well. First, one must take account of the associations connected with various musical forms. It is at best pointless and at worst counter-productive to bring into Church for the purpose of worship those forms of music in any given culture which are associated primarily with frivolous or even immoral activities. This is simply a matter of common sense. Second, the Church considers the emotional tendencies of the various musical forms used in the liturgy. According to the rhythms of the liturgical year, the mood of the worshippers is appropriately glorious, joyful, martial, reflective, contrite, peaceful, sad, or even bereaved. The music should intensify rather than counteract these highly appropriate moods, which flow not only from the season and the occasion but from the liturgical texts themselves.

So Sacred Music must be conducive to the understanding of words (which suggests that interludes of “pure” music without lyrics should be rare or non-existent); the forms used should not have primarily secular associations of any kind; and the forms, settings, rhythms, and arrangements should be conducive to the emotions appropriate to the season, the feast and the texts. Now it so happens that Gregorian chant possesses an astonishing ability to intensify text (it is, after all, chant, not song); it is almost completely devoid of association with secular pursuits; and it tends to induce a strong emotional sense of the spiritual and the eternal even as it changes easily from sadness to joy. All these things have combined with the force and associations of the Catholic tradition to give Gregorian Chant a certain pride of place in the Church's liturgy. While too often ignored in practice, this position still obtains both in theory and in the Church's official recommendations today.

Perhaps more to the point in our discussion, there are several features of music (or instrumental accompaniment) which can interfere with worship precisely because they interfere with our focus on the words and their meaning. These features include novelty, complexity, and sheer distractive power. For this reason, in addition to the condemnation over the centuries by both saints and Church authorities of forms of music and particular instruments which were at any given time associated primarily with secular or immoral pursuits, there have been similar restrictions placed upon forms and instruments because the complexity of either the score or the sounds have made it more difficult to focus on the words, or because the very novelty of a particular form or instrument rendered it inevitably distracting.

Thus did a form now as revered as polyphony come under condemnation and severe restriction in the Church’s liturgy, when it was new, and thus has a strong distinction quite properly arisen between sacred music (music used for worship) and more broadly religious music. Indeed, some of the greatest religious compositions—one thinks of Bach or Beethoven—are not generally appropriate for worship. The music is so splendid, so powerful, so generally moving and perhaps even ecstatic that the listener may, through this medium, experience a significant deepening of religious devotion. But he will not thereby have entered more deeply into the Sacrifice of the Mass, unless the music has fulfilled the more modest office of helping to release within him a more deeply-felt understanding and appreciation of the meaning of the rite as conveyed through its words.

Appreciation

I am painfully aware that an essay such as this cries out of more examples, and for appropriate quotations from philosophers and saints, popes and councils. There is insufficient time and space to provide them here. Instead, it is best to offer a brief word of practical advice, a word about how we must prepare ourselves to assimilate the powerful experience of music through what is commonly called music appreciation.

By music appreciation I am not referring exclusively to the ability to discern the various elements which make up a musical composition, to trace their history, or to better understand the techniques and talents of either the composers or the musicians. These aspects should be cultivated whenever possible by frequent listening and by formal study, but they are not essential. Yet just as surely as everything we are given is to be used for the glory of God and our own union with Him, so too should every person strive for the same result in music. For most of us, and especially for youngsters who are very much in the process of moral, spiritual and indeed fully human formation, the essentials of music appreciation must not be ignored.

De gustibus non disputandum: There is no arguing about taste. But the essentials of music appreciation consist in five key elements which each person should learn to understand, and on which I intend to close:

  1. The emotional impact different kinds of music can have, along with the general characteristics that tend to produce various moods;
  2. The importance of lyrics as intelligible in a manner that pure music is not, and the ways in which their power is increased by music;
  3. The nature of the associations which attend upon various musical forms, especially contemporary forms, by virtue of their origins, the uses to which they are frequently put, or the attitudes and performance behaviors of the musicians;
  4. The nature of the liturgy and the reasons that some musical forms and instruments are more appropriate for liturgical use than others;
  5. The possibility and the importance of deliberately adjusting one’s own musical tastes through careful listening, through accurate discernment of the effects each kind of music has in one's own life, and through spiritual reflection.


TOPICS: Catholic; Ministry/Outreach; Prayer; Religion & Culture; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; christianmusic; liturgy; sacredmusic
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To: UnbelievingScumOnTheOtherSide

And I can’t stand Amazing Grace or City of God.


41 posted on 10/09/2009 10:11:15 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Miss Marple

There are many that I don’t sing and just offer it up. I also do a lot of praying after Holy Communion and rarely sing.

If I am lectoring I don’t sing at all. I’ve learned that it is too much strain on my voice to sing and lector too. (I ended up in a terrible coughing spell once and the Deacon had to finish the announcements.) Embarassing!


42 posted on 10/09/2009 10:14:05 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Huck

**It’s absurd to think that Washington or Jefferson would respect or enjoy heavy metal music. But it’s equally absurd to think conservatism could ignore modern culture**

So right!


43 posted on 10/09/2009 10:15:57 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Coleus
what songs are bad?

In one sense, all of them.

Rather than singing songs or hymns, we ought to be singing the Mass.

Chant and polyphony should be rediscovered and relearned.

44 posted on 10/09/2009 10:16:56 PM PDT by B Knotts (Calvin Coolidge Republican)
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To: buccaneer81

No guitar mafia for you? LOL!

(BTW, I agree!)


45 posted on 10/09/2009 10:17:47 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Tax-chick

With Spanish music the guitar is totally acceptable. I just don’t like them for solemn hymns.


46 posted on 10/09/2009 10:19:03 PM PDT by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Frantzie

The parish we are currently attending seems to be in love with all the Protestant hymns in the OCP book. When the pianist (no organ setting on her keyboard, I guess) plays an interlude it’s straight out of the Enya “Orinoco Flow” song book. :o(


47 posted on 10/09/2009 10:21:25 PM PDT by redhead (LIBERALS: We know who you are. Do you know us? we are THE PEOPLE, and we are WATCHING you.)
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To: B Knotts
"Rather than singing songs or hymns, we ought to be singing the Mass. Chant and polyphony should be rediscovered and relearned."

Exactly right. In the Byzantine Rite, there is NO accompaniment, but we sing the entire Liturgy, while STANDING, all a capella. We sit for the first reading, stand for the Gospel, and sit for the homily. We chant every response, and all the prayers that the priest doesn't chant.

48 posted on 10/09/2009 10:26:11 PM PDT by redhead (LIBERALS: We know who you are. Do you know us? we are THE PEOPLE, and we are WATCHING you.)
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To: redhead

We’re not quite that far yet but we do sing most of the prayers in Latin and the only hymns we sing come out of the ‘Adoremus Hymnal’. You’re pretty safe with that one! Our choir is up in the loft where they should be. They put out a CD one year only to raise money to help repair the loft/organ. They did a great job!

http://kansascitycatholic.blogspot.com/2007/04/our-lady-of-good-counsel-kcmo-64111.html


49 posted on 10/10/2009 5:51:51 AM PDT by samiam1972 ("It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish."-Mother Teresa)
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To: Frantzie
Good = Mozart

Um, not after about 1777. He went freemason and his opera flourished, but the sacred went really profane. His early sacred literature is far more devout. The Ave Verum done right is one of the most moving pieces ever written.

If you do not get it after listening to his Requiem and understand the Latin words then you will never get it.

To really get it, listen to Faure's Requiem and Bruckner motets. As a classical vocalist, the Mozart Requiem is a blast to perform, but parts of it (the Lacrymosa, in particular) are downright mocking. Same thing with later Haydn.

50 posted on 10/10/2009 7:14:43 AM PDT by Desdemona (True Christianity requires open hearts and open minds - not blind hatred.)
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To: Frantzie
Agreed that Bach’s work is more sacred but poor Mozart in his final short day proved he could do stellar sacred music with really his own Requeim.

You do realize that a pretty good percentage of the Mozart Requiem was was written by one of his students, Sussmeyer. Mozart died in the middle of writing it. The Agnus Dei isn't really his.

I've got to run, but will be back later this afternoon. One of my favorite topics.:)

51 posted on 10/10/2009 7:19:50 AM PDT by Desdemona (True Christianity requires open hearts and open minds - not blind hatred.)
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To: Huck

Nice to hear your veiwpoint on this - I don’t mind a lot of modern Christian songs but what I do not appreciate is when they are the main focus in a worship service because it ends up being more like a rock concert. Like the Authour points out sacred music is meant to highten the experience of church and bear out what we hear in the sermon etc. Music is not meant to be the whole worship service.

Worship can as easily be had in silence as in music and indeed for the prepared heart silence is often a relief from the noise of music when one can really commune with God rather than sing about him! Also too much music can tend to give a feeling of euphoria which may be confused by some with the deep stirings and the peace or joy associated with being in the presence of God.

Often great music - whether sacred or secular - can stir my soul to praise God because of the sheer beauty of the music itself.

Mel


52 posted on 10/10/2009 9:11:52 AM PDT by melsec (A Proud Aussie)
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To: melsec
Often great music - whether sacred or secular - can stir my soul to praise God because of the sheer beauty of the music itself.

That's how I feel about it. When I listen to Glenn Gould playing Bach, I can't help but think it's a miracle a)that a genius such as Bach existed and b) centuries later, a genius such as Gould was there to bring Bach's awesome music to life. Gould seems possessed by the music, like a vehicle, a conduit. It is truly sublime, and puts my mind into a higher state.

53 posted on 10/10/2009 10:50:00 AM PDT by Huck ("He that lives on hope will die fasting"- Ben Franklin, Poor Richard's Almanac)
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To: Huck

I know it’s a lot more modern but some of Vangelis’ music is wonderfully stirring also some movie scores are amazing when listened to in isolation from the film they are from. I have never heard Gould playing Bach but I will try and do so on your recommendation.

Oh BTW I am not a musician but I used to be a drummer LOL!

Cheers

Mel


54 posted on 10/10/2009 11:08:56 AM PDT by melsec (A Proud Aussie)
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To: Desdemona

I think it is about 4 movements. The think Benedictus was also Sussmayr. I would say probably 30 to 35% is supposedly Sussmayr.


55 posted on 10/10/2009 11:27:12 AM PDT by Frantzie (Do we want ACORN running America's health care?)
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To: Desdemona

I think this was after his father died?

The quartet voice parts are pretty staggering. You Tube has the Requeim done in Austria with Solti conducting on the 200 year or maybe more anniversary. It had the soprano from Calif, Arleen Auger, who was sick at the time and passed away shortly after that performance. She was wonderful.

I think Mozart knew his time was just about up when he wrote the Requeim then Sussmayr finished it. Was the Lacrymosa a movement that Sussmayr wrote? Oddly they are pretty sure he wrote the Bendictus because it is pretty weak but the quartet singing parts are very good.


56 posted on 10/10/2009 11:37:14 AM PDT by Frantzie (Do we want ACORN running America's health care?)
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To: samiam1972
I'll have to listen to your music. Here is some beautiful music from our church....so sad it's from years ago. We had a mens and boys choir. St. Mary
57 posted on 10/10/2009 11:37:53 AM PDT by arbee4bush ( "promoted by GOD to be a mother" Palin 2012!!!!!)
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To: buccaneer81

I’m 45 and have never cared for the Folk Mass either though I grew up with it.

I feel robbed.


58 posted on 10/10/2009 2:12:33 PM PDT by Infidel Heather (In God I trust, not the Government.)
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To: radiohead

Still is if you are lucky enough to live by a parish that has one. I am :)


59 posted on 10/10/2009 4:40:44 PM PDT by wombtotomb
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To: Frantzie
The last notes of the Lacrymosa Mozart actually wrote were the introduction. He didn't write any of the vocals. It's my understanding that Sussmayr wrote the Agnus Dei. I'll have to look it up before we do it in February. With all luck, we can get the Dies Ire to cook again. The first violins gave us some really dirty looks. :)

Anyway, for some sacred variety, other than Bruckner Motets (Tota Pulchra Es and Locus Iste are two of my favorites), the Faure Requiem (try to find the one with Victoria de los Angeles singing the Pie Jesu), I would recommend English Renaissance (Tye), the later Venetians (Galluppi, etc.) and early 20th century Russian. I realize the Russians aren't Catholic, but there is a Rachmoninoff All Night Vespers that's just beautiful and at least one Stravinsky Ave Maria I absolutely love.

Sacred music is very much in the eye of the beholder. Just because the words are the Mass parts or are bible related doesn't mean that the music itself will speak to everyone. It's definitely a personal experience thing. The music I've mentioned I love partially because I've sung it. That's something that MANY people cannot say. One person on this thread is a Bach fan. To me, Bach is a snooze-fest. It's definitely a palate thing.

Okay, Mendelssohn tonight. Gotta run.

60 posted on 10/10/2009 4:49:49 PM PDT by Desdemona (True Christianity requires open hearts and open minds - not blind hatred.)
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