Last Wednesday, after the 6:00 Mass, my pastor said to me, "Brian, did you know your name's in the Wanderer?" My first instinct was "OK, what did I do this time?" (read: Who did I piss off this time?) Turns out it was a good thing. One, I wasn't the only one - mine was amongst a list of names. Two, it was an article by the CMAA's Jeffrey Tucker about new composers. And being up there, little old me, with the names I was listed with, makes me feel honored (and humbled).
Below is the article, in case it expires. Enjoy!
Peace,
BMP
(Source - The Wanderer, XI-17-11. Links added by yours truly.)
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The Revival Of Catholic Musical Creativity
By JEFFREY TUCKER
Years ago, I lamented that the end of the age of Catholic musical  creativity seemed to be upon us. In the 1980s, we became aware of these  vast treasures of polyphony  thanks to the secular popularity of the  great music of the Renaissance. On CDs, we listened to the amazing work  of a thousand  years and we wondered: What happened?  Where are  Josquin, Palestrina, Victoria,  Mozart, and Bruckner? What happened   to smash this tradition? The documents  of the Second Vatican Council  talk about beauty, chant, and polyphony, but all we hear in our parishes  is something else entirely.
Then chant became popular the same  way. We listened in our cars, in our living rooms, on our iPods. Chant  was everywhere  but in our parishes. Why did all musical  greatest  seem to be in our past but nowhere in the present and highly unlikely   in the future?
Thinking about this more, I began to  understand.  The liturgy was unstable, and composers aren’t drawn to  that. Choirs were being disparaged and put down. Excellence  in music  was under attack in favor of an amateurism chic. The beautiful was  unfashionable because it supposedly contradicted  the real world in  which we live our lives. Liturgy was supposed to be more like reality  television than prayerful theater. No wonder the composers had lost interest. The musicians had all been chased away.
Well, that  was all before this year. In 2011, we’ve seen an incredible outpouring  of fantastic composition by excellent musicians,  all of it structured  for liturgical use using the musical and textual language of the liturgy  itself. The books and collections are pouring out faster than even  close observers  can follow, and this new material is completely unlike  the usual fare we’ve been treated to over the last decades, which has  been essential pop music with madeup,  feel-good lyrics. The new  approach to composition takes the liturgy and its tradition  seriously.
It is an astonishing turnaround, something  that could only be expected by a person  of a mighty faith and optimism.
What has inspired all of this? There are many factors. The propers of  the Mass have been rediscovered as source texts after decades of  neglect. The proliferation of the Extraordinary Form of Mass has given  hope that order can prevail over chaos. Papal liturgy  has been  seriously upgraded. Gregorian Chant is back as a living form of music.
More than anything else, the appearance of the Third Edition of the  Roman Missal has provided incredible encouragement that the Church has  once again begun to take its liturgy task seriously. The language is  solemn, rhetorically high, and dignified. It is not pop language, so it  strongly suggests in its own linguistic structure that draws from  something. Pop music is not the appropriate  approach. It calls for  chanted music that comes from the liturgy itself.
 This is the thing that has inspired so much creative energy.
Most serious musicians I know are very excited about the opportunity.  They sometimes  wake in the morning with a melody in their heads and  quickly write it out, just like in the movies. They fill in the other  parts and, next thing you know, they have a Mass setting ready to go.  There are many sites that are now posting these for free. Other  composers have established their own commercial sites where you can buy  the Mass for $ 75.00 and make as many copies as you want. Then, of  course, there are the conventional sources for music.
Catholic  musicians are increasingly taking  these resources for granted so it  can be hard to fully appreciate the difference between  now and, say,  five years ago. There was hardly any Catholic music online. Composers   were not really doing the Catholic thing. There was little inspiration  and plenty to inspire depression. The chant movement  was in its  infancy. The idea of the new missal had long been rumored but most  people figured it was aeons away and there was not much hope for it at  any point in the future.
And now suddenly, it is upon us. We  are amazed to see a flurry of new names who are leading the way in new  composition: Kevin Allen, Jeffrey Ostrowski, Adam Bartlett,  Richard  Rice, Arlene Oost- Zinner, Aristotle Esguerra, David Hughes, Fr. Samuel   Weber, Brian Michael Page, Bruce Ford, Ian Williams, Kathy Pluth,  David Friel, Chris Mueller, Richard Clark, Noel Jones, Jacob Bancks, and  so many others. Many of these people never imagined that they would  find themselves in the ranks of Catholic  composers. They were  reluctant to accept  the role, but they still answered the call.  We  are all privileged to be alive in these times of the revival of the  highest of the sacred  arts. This is the dream of so many people for so  long. Back in the sixties, a generation of musicians saw an  astonishing  collapse take place before their very eyes. No matter what  they did, they could not stem the tide. Not only did their worst  predictions come true, those predictions were surpassed and then some.  Even more shocking was the collapse lasted much longer than anyone could  have expected. Forty- five years is a long time to wait. And forty  years is a long time to live with a missal  text that was nowhere near  being what it should be.
The sufferings of those generations  should be kept in mind as we go forward. They worked, prayed, wrote, and  did their best to keep beauty alive in times when it was not  appreciated or encouraged. They knew that it would return someday, but  most did not live to see this day. They are our benefactors and we  should be grateful and pray for them. They kept the tradition alive, and  now it is thriving again, being refurbished  so that it can be handed  on to the next generation.
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