Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

In Which I Take My Stand on Suitable Church Music

The writings of Plato and Aristotle on music show that the Greek world in their time was faced with a choice between two kinds of worship, two different images of god and man… one the one hand, there is the music that Plato ascribes, in line with mythology, to Apollo, the god of light and reason. 
This is the music that draws senses into spirit and so brings man to wholeness. It does not abolish the senses, but inserts them into the unity of this creature that is man. It elevates the spirit precisely by wedding it to the sense, and it elevates the senses by uniting them with the spirit. Thus this kind of music is an expression of man’s special place in the general structure of being. 
But then there is the music… which we might describe as ‘Dionysian’. It drags man into the intoxication of the sense, crushes rationality, and subjects the spirit to the senses….
The Apollonian/Dionysian alternative runs through the whole history of religion and confronts us again today. Not every kind of music can have a place in Christian worship. It has its standards, and that standard is the Logos.
Joseph Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy

Reflection – This final reflection (for now) on the subject of liturgical music and worship shows that Ratzinger is, indeed, aiming his sights at the use of rock music in liturgy here. I would hesitate to describe the oeuvre of Marty Haugen as a Dionysian crushing of rationality and an intoxication of the senses. I would also hesitate to place that composer and his confreres and soeurs in the camp of Apollo, either – there is little elevation of sense or spirit that occurs in a rousing rendition of ‘Gather Us In.’ 

No, Ratzinger’s main point here is that rock music, with its Dionysian quality, cannot be reconciled with Christian worship, because of its anti-rational quality, its pursuit of a sort of experience of transcendence through the intoxication of sense and the suspension of reason.

We are a religion of the Logos, and our music in liturgy must acknowledge that God comes to us as logos, as Word, and that hence our rational faculty is engaged, even if we know that reason itself must be transcended by the deeper action of the Spirit.

Now, you may disagree with Ratzinger’s evaluation of rock music, although as I said a few days ago, I think it is remarkable that he considers rock significant enough to write a theological analysis of it and engage it at that level, both as a theologian and a musician. Elsewhere in his books he writes of his experience as a university professor in the late 1960s and witnessing his students going to these rock festivals which indeed had the quality of religious rites of a strongly Dionysian character.

I think his basic principle of evaluating music for its suitability in worship is right on the mark. Music must have this Apollonian quality, this union of reason and sense, of beauty and truth. 

I too am a Church musician of a very low stature, having directed the MH schola cantorum for a couple of years early in my life in the community, sung in it for many years before and after that, and even written a few pieces of sacred music here and there, to boot. So I am fully aware of the struggles and obstacles church musicians face, in terms of limited resources, human and material, and the need to tread carefully while working with the pastor and the parishioners. You can only do so much, and the director of music in a Catholic parish is a job with great challenges, to say the least. I am fully aware of that.

That being said, it’s time for me to take my stand on these matters. I would say that the musical forms available to us in North American parishes that meet the Appolonian standard, if I can put it that way, are three in number. There is Gregorian chant, available in good English translations now, which is necessary in these uneducated times. There is the traditional metrical hymnody—the ‘Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow’ sort of thing. And there is, for the more accomplished parish choirs, the great tradition of choral pieces—Palestrina and Byrd and all that. There are other forms of music that are suitable—in MH we use the Gelineau psalmody to good effect, for example—but these are not necessarily available easily on the parish level.

While I love praise and worship music in itself, I find it too aggressive and showy on the one hand, or too self-indulgent and subjectivizing on the other (as I talked about yesterday), for easy and appropriate use in liturgy. But I realize that in many places there is a great love and attachment to this music, and so it cannot be simply eliminated.

I think what is really needed is a great liturgical catechesis, a real learning of what liturgy is, what it is supposed to do for us, what mystery we are entering into when we enter into the Mass. Along with that, we need a musical education, much like what Ratzinger does a little of in this book, to know what the history is, what the different forms of music are that are useful in liturgy. 


From that, I think all of us will be able to discern what is suitable and what is not, what is in accord with the theology and experience of worship and what is not. And that is my position on this subject, which I come to only after thirty years in the trenches of liturgy and music and its difficulties today.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Saying Goodbye to 'My'

In liturgical music, based as it is on biblical faith, there is, therefore, a clear dominance of the Word; this music is a higher form of proclamation. Ultimately, it rises up out of the love that responds to God’s love made flesh in Christ, the love that for us went unto death. After the Resurrection, the cross is by no means a thing of the past, and so this love is always marked by pain at the hiddenness of God, by the cry that rises up from the depths of anguish, Kyrie eleison, by hope and by supplication. But it also has the privilege, by anticipation, of experiencing the reality of the Resurrection, and so it brings with it joy of being loved, that gladness of heart that Haydn said came upon him when he set liturgical tests to music.
Joseph Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy
Reflection – So we continue with excerpts from this fantastic book from Pope Benedict. I’m only giving short excerpts of his treatment of the subject of music and liturgy—just enough to give a flavour of it, not the full argument. As I have said more than once on this blog, this really is the best book you could buy on the subject of liturgy, if this is something that you want to really understand better.

In this passage, though, we do see the fundamental principle of liturgical music that has to be applied carefully to every discernment around a given composition: sacred music must be at the service of the Word, must be in its essence a proclamation of the Word, a ministry of the Word.

This is why, for example, I believe rock music itself, with its drums and loud volume and amplified guitars, is not a suitable genre for liturgy. It seems to me that the purpose of rock music is to draw attention to itself through its aggressive pounding beat and power chords, and not to the Word being proclaimed in the liturgical action.

It is not only rock music that is like this. Some kinds of classical music are problematic, such as operatic arias. I recall once trying to distribute communion at a Mass while the cantor, a professionally trained singer, belted out at full volume some quasi-Wagnerian piece a few feet away from me. It did not create the most reflective and meditative atmosphere to receive the Body of Christ in. 

Liturgically speaking, there is little to separate that kind of performance from Spinal Tap. No, the music at Mass has to be at the service of the sacred text, and also of the sacred action. This is why the Church had a serious reservation against the use of polyphony at Mass—the text is obscured by this type of music, the artistic bona fides of which are beyond question. 

The other consideration in this excerpt is the content of the Word that the music is to support. It is meant to be reflective of the great dialogue of love of God and man, the love coming down from heaven, the supplication coming up from the earth, God entering our human reality from within, the Son’s prayer to the Father becoming the prayer of all mankind to God, and in that, that prayer becoming suffused with the joy of the Resurrection and the anticipated joy of the heavenly liturgy.

All of this is meant, according to our best abilities, to be reflected in the music we croak out at Mass. This implies that the music we use have a certain gravitas to it, even if it is simple and plain. Scriptural texts are best—at Madonna House, we really do use psalm settings quite a bit in our liturgies, for example. 

It is better—and I know I may be treading on some toes here—to avoid texts that are all about ‘me and my love for Jesus’. Those are fine for other settings, like praise and worship sessions, prayer meetings, and so forth. But when we enter liturgy, we are leaving behind the simple level of ‘me and my love for Jesus’ and entering into Christ’s own love for the Father, the Trinitarian action of love and offering and gift, and the whole Paschal Mystery—Cross, tomb, Resurrection, the ascended Christ, the descending Spirit.

It is all so much beyond our personal level, yet coming to us at that personal level to draw us up and out—out of ourselves and our subjectivity and up into the heart of the Trinity. This drawing, this movement, which is the real ministry of the Word at its deepest level of understanding, is not well served by songs that continually throw us back to the subjective level, to my feelings and my experience and my desires and my love and my pain and my, my, my…

As I say, all of this can be very good music and very good in other contexts, but in the liturgy it is to time to say goodbye to my and open up to Him and in that opening to Him, to Us, to the corporate worship of the Body which is essentially the worship given by the man Jesus to his Father in which the whole life and love of the Trinity is made available to us.


Music must at least palely reflect that essence of liturgy, and so we have a real challenge given us here, to see how we can shape our liturgical musical culture better in light of the reality of the liturgy we have been given.

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Escaping the Cult of the Banal

Three developments in recent music epitomize the problems that the Church has to face when she is considering liturgical music. First of all, there is the cultural universalization that the Church has to undertake if she wants to get beyond the boundaries of the European mind. This is the question of what inculturation should look like in the realm of sacred music if, on the one hand, the identity of Christianity is to be preserved and, on the other, its universality is to be expressed in local forms.  
Then there are two developments in music itself… modern so-called ‘classical’ music has manoeuvred itself, with some exceptions into an elitist ghetto, which only specialists may enter…  
The music of the masses has broken loose from this and treads a very different path. On the one hand, there is pop music… [which is] aimed at the phenomenon of the masses, is industrially produced, and ultimately has to be described as a cult of the banal.  
‘Rock’, on the other hand, is the expression of elemental passions, and at rock festivals it assumes a cultic character, a form of worship, in fact, in opposition to Christian worship.
People are, so to speak, released from themselves by the experience of being part of a crowd and by the emotional shock of rhythm, noise, and special lighting effects. However, in the ecstasy of having all their defences torn down, the participants sink, as it were, beneath the elemental force of the universe.  
The music of the Holy Spirit’s ‘sober intoxication’ seems to have little chance when self has become a prison, the mind is a shackle, and breaking out from both appears as a true promise of redemption that can be tasted at least for a few moments. 
Joseph Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy
Reflection – Since I’m giving prominence to the psalms on the blog right now with my new weekly series the ‘Monday Psalter’, I thought I would share a few excerpts from Ratzinger’s exceptional book Spirit of the Liturgy on the subject of liturgical music. His writings on this subject are unusual in the annals of the Church; it is rare that a theologian of his caliber is also an accomplished musician, and has both the interest and knowledge to write about the subject as he has.

He also is one of the few serious theologians in the modern Church to really grapple with the challenge of rock music, taking it seriously and analyzing the deeper meaning of this new musical form. While his evaluation of it is ultimately negative, he is respectful of it and does not dismiss it out of hand. This is genuinely unique, I believe – I don’t know of anyone else at his level even bothering to try to understand the subject.

At any rate, he is grappling seriously with the question of liturgical music here as only a musician can, being aware that the quest for appropriate music is limited on the one hand by the capacities of the available musicians and the tolerance of the assembly for unending revisions of its hymnody, but on the other hand is a necessary quest since we too often find ourselves caught up in the very ‘cult of the banal’ that pop music denotes, or the essentially anti-Christian transcendence offered by rock music. 

Admittedly, I don’t think I’ve ever heard genuinely hard rock being done in the context of the liturgy, which would be fairly absurd – would the nave be turned into a mosh pit? Would we change the lyrics to ‘Highway to Hell’ to ‘We were on the highway to hell, ‘til we met Jesus’? At what point in the Mass would it be appropriate for the musicians smash their guitars? (Some of us would argue that would best happen before Mass begins…)

When liturgical music has tried to be in the modern popular vein, it has more aimed at an imitation of light folk rock, and generally ends up with a fairly banal, mediocre production even of that. The oeuvre of Haugen, Haas, and the St. Louis Jesuits has produced little if anything of lasting value, and certainly nothing that would draw any music-loving young person into Church, which was supposed to be the entire point of the exercise. Whenever I hear a choir crank up ‘Sing a New Song’ for the hundred thousandth time, I feel like saying in response, ‘Yes, please! Can we please sing a new song? Anything at all will do!’ Whatever else we need to do, we have to escape from the cult of the banal that still reigns in far too many parishes.


Ratzinger will go on to describe his own resolution of these problems and the basic principles that need to guide liturgical music, and we’ll get there later this week. But the problem is real, and I don’t think anyone has done more that he has to address it in this book and his other liturgical writings.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Sing, and Keep Going


Christians who find themselves in the new covenant now sing an altogether new song, which is truly and definitively new in view of the wholly new thing that has taken place in the Resurrection of Christ… The in-between state of Christian reality (no longer a shadow, but still not fully reality, only an ‘image’) applies here. The definitively new song has been intoned, but still all the sufferings of history must be endured, all pain gathered in and brought into the sacrifice of praise, in order to be transformed there into a song of praise.
Joseph Ratzinger, Spirit of the Liturgy, 138

Reflection – We did something new this year for our All Saints Day celebration on November 1, and I hope we keep doing it, as it really worked well. In the days before we all wrote down, on little file cards, our favorite quotes from the saints, with the quote on one side and the saint on the other. In the evening of the day we played a guessing game of ‘which saint said what’. It was fun and helped us to enter the world of the saints more fully.

One of the quotes I wrote down reminds me of this passage from Ratzinger. St. Augustine of Hippo, ‘Sing, and keep going.’ I think this pithily gives us our Christian way of life in the world. To sing and keep going—praise God, lift up our hearts and minds and voices to the Lord in thanksgiving and worship… but keep moving in this world, keep heading towards the new and everlasting Jerusalem, keep living our life in such a way that our feet tend towards the kingdom of love and goodness.

We all can tend to live in our world where the ‘sufferings of history’ are endured and the pains of life have a way of grabbing our full attention. There is something about ‘gathering it all in to the sacrifice of praise’, as Ratzinger so beautifully puts it here, that is absolutely crucial if we are to navigate our life correctly and get to our final and proper destination.

All, ultimately, is to be gathered upon into praise and into song. Even the most dreadful events, the deepest sufferings, the worst evils visited upon people—all of this is meant to be redeemed and transformed into a song of praise. This is very deep, this business of song and praise. Even if you happen to be tone deaf and have little to no musical appreciation, there is something about song and praise that is at the heart of reality, something that is not, in the end, optional at its core.

Heaven, C.S. Lewis writes in the Screwtape Letters, has only silence and music. Hell has neither, and is all noise. Our world is a battleground of silence and music against noise. To sing and keep going, to enter now in the midst of the noise of the world into the sacrifice of praise, the song of the Risen Christ, is to win a great battle that rages in our own hearts and lives, too.

That within us which is Noise, which is Hell (and we all have a little bit of Hell in us, alas), tells us to respond to the struggles and strains and evils of life by asserting our own prerogatives, by taking control of our own destiny, by extending our self as far as we can into this world. Only by the extension of the ego into the world can we push back the evils and ills that beset us. And so, as all our egos get busy clamoring for that push, for tat extension, Noise grows and grows and grows in the world.

That within us which is Heaven (and I believe every human being has at least a glimmer of that gold shining somewhere in them) bids us to be silent, and to praise God with a psalm. To sing, and keep going. Singing, in which that in us which must express itself is coordinated into a beautiful harmonious whole, a unity of love and purpose, and silence in which that which is interior in us is made receptive and attentive both to God and the needs of our brothers and sisters. And then, to keep going, to keep loving, to keep serving, to keep moving through the world that is into the world that is to be, the world Christ is fashioning in his resurrected body and to which the whole cosmos is turning and yearning. And that is the fundamental way of life of the Christian in the world.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Sursum Corda


The Holy Spirit leads us to the Logos, and he leads us to a music that serves the Logos as a sign of the sursum corda, the lifting up of the human heart. Does it integrate man by drawing him to what is above, or does it cause his disintegration into formless intoxication or mere sensuality? That is the criterion for a music in harmony with logos…
Spirit of the Liturgy, 151

Reflection – The discussion of liturgical music on a blog always raises interest, raises traffic to said blog, raises a few hackles, and (more often than not) raises a bruise or two upon the poor beleaguered wretch who is trying to run a parish music program, usually on a volunteer basis and with a small budget, and with limited if any say on the hymnals and other resources provided to him or her.

I have been there and done that, admittedly a good few years ago, so I do get it. There are genuine practical difficulties that enter into any effort to substantially change what is happening on the ground in a parish, musically. It takes money, time, and human resources, all of which may simply not be there in a specific place. Sometimes people really are doing all they are capable of doing, and are doing it with great love and generosity for God and the Church.

All of which is to say that discussions around parish music have to be conducted with great gentleness and charity. It is easy to rant about this hymnal or that song; it is easy (sadly!) to make fun of this composer or that style. I personally have great capacity for both ranting and mockery—I try not to indulge those capacities. Neither ranting nor mockery are particularly helpful to anyone, least of all to the one ranting or mocking.

Nonetheless, conversation needs to happen. And I personally know no one who has tried harder and with greater charity and gentleness to get this conversation going than Joseph Ratzinger. Do you know that he actually has written theological reflections on rock music? (I’ll have some of those here at some point). Has anyone else even had enough respect for rock music to look at its theological implications?

Of course, he himself is a musician, a pianist formed in the classical German tradition of Mozart, Bach, and Beethoven. He has the understanding and sympathy of one who has gone through the struggle and labour of the musical craft. It is hard work to master an instrument; he has done that hard work.

His whole focus on the words logos and sursum corda is the key to his reflections. Music is meant to be a lifting up of the human heart. And what the human heart is being lifted up towards in liturgy is not merely elevated emotion or Dionysian intoxication (as in rock music), but the logos of God. Christ Himself, and in Christ the ordered disciplined pattern of Christian worship. This call to order and discipline in our worship goes back, of course, to St. Paul (cf 1 Cor 14). From the beginning the Church has rejected a chaotic free-for-all approach to liturgy.

Musicians in the Church have always had to walk a fine line between music that ‘grabs us,’ music that according to cultural fashions and personal tastes draws us and lifts us up, and music that serves the logos of worship. This is no easy thing, and I don’t think there ever has been a Golden Age when the Church really has gotten this right. We can talk about Gregorian Chant, and I’m all for it, but historically it has mostly thrived in monasteries, not parishes.

It seems to me that the first priority is sound theology in the lyrics. Historically, the Church has resisted allowing just anyone to compose liturgical hymnodic texts. It is so easy for heretical notions to enter into people’s minds and hearts via a catchy tune. Scripture, writings of canonized saints, and existing liturgical antiphons are the best places to find texts.

Hymns and songs with other lyrics have to be scrutinized carefully. Is this sound doctrine? Is the quality of these lyrics worthy of the liturgy, free from slang or soupiness or banality? Are we praising God here, or ourselves? It can be very subtle, that – a good criteria is to see how often variations of the word ‘I’ occur in the song. ‘I want to praise you… I think you’re so great… I want to say to you that you are my God… my one desire is to tell you what a great God you are for me…’ If we’re praising God, why do we keep talking about ourselves?

Well, this blog post has approached its critical mass. Regarding musical style and genre, all I would say (because it’s really complicated, actually) is that we need to find music that serves the liturgy, that does not distract from the action of the liturgy (for example, both rock performances and operatic arias distract), and that is of a quality worthy of the sacred liturgy. And I’ll leave it there, I think, for now at least.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Sober Intoxication


It is the Holy Spirit who teaches us to sing—first David and then, through him, Israel and the church. Yes, singing, the surpassing of ordinary speech, is a ‘pneumatic’ event. Church music comes into being as a ‘charism,’ a gift of the Spirit. It is the true glossolalia, the new tongue that comes from the Holy Spirit. It is above all in Church music that the ‘sober inebriation’ of faith takes place—an inebriation surpassing all the possibilities of mere rationality.

But this intoxication remains sober, because Christ and the Holy Spirit belong together, because this drunken speech stays totally within the discipline of the Logos, in a new rationality that, beyond all words, serves the primordial Word, the ground of all reason.

Spirit of the Liturgy, 140

Reflection – The issue of liturgical music and what it should sound like is one of those cans of worms that bloggers open at their peril. Rock music vs. Gregorian chant, folk music vs. Palestrina and Byrd, Haugen vs. Handel—the fault lines open up quickly and deeply and everyone’s emotions quickly get stirred up. Charity and tolerance get left in the dust all too often.

In the interest of full disclosure, my own journey as an amateur liturgical musician took me from the Glory and Praise school of guitar hymns, where as a youth God did in fact meet me and began to stir up in me the first movements of faith and prayer, through to immersion in the choral tradition of the Church. I have, by God’s grace, Palestrina-ed and Byrd-ed and Mozart-ed and loved it, and my own liturgical sensibility favours that style, mixed in with hefty doses of chant and good quality, theologically sound hymnody.

So I find myself unable to dismiss or scorn the more primitive musical styles of ‘praise and worship’, for the simple reason that I know my own adult faith life truly was nourished by that kind of music in its early stages. I am also aware of the very real limitations of time, money, talent, and training in many parish music ministries. We do what we can, right?

At the same time, I am well aware that the solemnity and sublime nature of the liturgy calls for something better than rock/folk/Broadway inspired musical forms, and that we should at least be trying as a Church to move towards that ‘something better’, as and when we are able.

Ratzinger is one of the most thoughtful and balanced writers about this need for something better in Church music. Himself a classically trained musician, he knows very well what music is, what its challenges are, and where it can take us. In the above passage, he strikes a very good balance: music is intoxication, elevating us above the prosaic and the plain, but it is a sober intoxication, never losing its connection to the Logos, the rational nature of our faith rooted in the rationale of God which is Christ.

The joy and abandonment we experience in truly successful music, that sense of beautiful release, of something carrying us beyond our own horizons and thoughts, must be at the service of the proclamation of the Gospel. Rock music, which is by nature a sub-rational release of raw emotion, Dionysian abandonment to the sensual level, does not belong in liturgy. It is an intoxication that is not sober, not ordered to the Logos.

The phrase ‘sober intoxication’ is, I think, a good one to ponder as we evaluate this or that piece of music. Does it elevate us? Or is the quality of this piece too mediocre to achieve that (cough-PeaceisFlowingLikeaRiver-cough)? Does the music raise our minds and hearts to God, or does it draw too much attention to the choir, the soloist, the ‘band’? Are the lyrics theologically sound and substantial or not (cough-GatherUsIn-cough)? Bad theology truly does not serve the proclamation of the Gospel, right?

It all is a bit complex, and of course all the limitations of time, talent, personnel, and money will come to bear on this. But it behoves all who love music, love the liturgy, and wish for music to serve the liturgy to ponder these things, weed out the worst items in our repertoires, and strive towards the ‘sober intoxication’ that truly beautiful and fitting liturgical music can contribute to the worship of God.