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Choosing Music for the Mass. 30 April 2011 Fr. Jan Michael Joncas. Criteria for Choosing Musical Settings for a Worshipping Community. Sing to the Lord: Music in Divine Worship (2008). Ritual Dimension. Analysis of Ritual Dimension.
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Choosing Music for the Mass 30 April 2011 Fr. Jan Michael Joncas
Criteria for Choosing Musical Settings for a Worshipping Community
Analysis of Ritual Dimension • Textual Genres (dialogues and acclamations, antiphons and psalms, refrains and repeated responses, hymns) • Musical Elements (pitch, volume, duration, timbre, scale, texture, form) • Ritual Settings (music alone, music + action, music + text, music + text accompanying an action)
Pitch • Congregation: C c // Abeb • Choral: melody probably placed in alto line // possible settings in which SB sing in octaves with T above the melody and A below the melody • Instrumental: emulate organ, i.e., bass BELOW range of congregational singing to ground harmony and establish meter; mid-range IN THE MIDST of congregational singing to establish harmony; descants ABOVE the congregational singing to offer contrasts • Volume • Congregation: Volume depends on genre (loud = acclamation; soft = litany) • Choral: when singing alone, follow score; when singing with congregation, adjust to assembly • Instrumental: when playing alone or accompanying choral ensemble, follow score; when playing to accompany congregation, adjust to leading instrument
Duration (meter / rhythm) • Congregation: most comfortable with regular meters and rhythms • Choral: when singing alone, may be adventurous; when supporting the congregation, use regular rhythms and meters • Instrumental: when playing alone or accompanying a vocal ensemble, may be adventurous; when supporting the congregation, use regular rhythms and meters • Timbre • Congregation: love the sound of untrained congregational unison • Choral: when singing along, timbre appropriate to the style of music being sung (chant, Bach chorale, shape-note hymn, spiritual); when singing with the congregation, assume refined congregational timbre • Instrumental: when playing alone or accompanying vocal ensemble, timbre appropriate to the style of music being played/sung; when accompanying the congregation, sustain singing
Scale/Melody/Harmony • Pentatonic • Diatonic (modal) • Chromatic (lightly) • Not dodecaphonic or micro-tonal • Texture • Monophonic • Heterophonic • Homophonic • Polyphonic • Form (congruent with ritual requirements) • Open forms (antiphon + psalm verses; mantra) • Closed forms (through-composed; hymns)
Music Alone • Bugler playing “Taps” at graveside • 3-part invention after psalm on Trinity Sunday • Music + Action • President Entering Room for a Press Conference • Wedding Procession • Music + Text • Edith Piaf in concert • Cantor offering Responsorial Psalm • Music + Text Accompanying an Action • “You put your right hand in….” • “Lamb of God” during Fraction Rite
Mediates Transcendence • Assists memorization of sacred texts • Facilitates group identity and action • Expresses and evokes emotion • Structures time and symbolizes eternity • Models ordered creativity
Must bear the weight of mystery (i.e., express people’s faith without trivializing or making it inaccessible) • Must bear the weight of repetition (i.e., be able to be sung/played many times without becoming vacuous) • Must bear the weight of identity (i.e., give worshipers a sense of being “at home” in worship)
Two Examples by Michael Joncas • “Retrojected” Setting: “Revised Sing Praise and Thanksgiving” (WLP) • New Setting: “Missa ad Gentes / Maryknoll Centennial Mass” (GIA)