Catholic composer of sacred music: James MacMillan

From Catholic World Report comes a long article about the Catholic composer of sacred music James MacMillan:

James MacMillan and his sacred music for our time
Kevin McCormick

In September 2010, when Pope Benedict made his historic and transformative visit to the United Kingdom, his first stop was Glasgow, Scotland. There, as he inaugurated the first-ever official state visit [And important distinction… it was a state visit.] by the pope to the UK, he celebrated the opening Mass to the sounds of newly commissioned liturgical music. The music was thoughtful, joyful, singable, yet richly musical. It was the premiere of a work by a man well known in the contemporary classical music community but less known to those outside it: Scottish composer James MacMillan.

James MacMillan has accomplished the seemingly impossible for a contemporary artist of any medium. The Scottish composer and conductor has created a deep repertoire of compositions spanning from small chamber pieces to orchestral works and full-blown operas. His music successfully blends modern compositional expressions with a traditional musical understanding. His work is respected by the avant-garde and well-received by the customary classical concertgoer. His compositional style is praised by performers, conductors, and other composers. He maintains an active and internationally renowned musical life as a highly commissioned composer and heavily-booked guest conductor. And somehow he is able to reserve time to work regularly with his own parish choir in Glasgow.

All of this at the relatively young (for a composer) age of 52. The son of a welder and teacher, MacMillan’s childhood included study of piano and trumpet. He began composing at an early age, and by secondary school already had a penchant for the sounds of Renaissance church music. Eventually making his way to undergraduate work at Edinburgh University, he passed on the opportunity of the more focused conservatory life for the broader experience offered in the university setting.

This early choice is indicative of MacMillan’s interest in a wider appreciation of the language of music, a trait which informs much of his writing. Like his British predecessor Benjamin Britten, he composes compelling vocal melodies with rich choral arrangements with ease. And like Debussy, he possesses an evocative musical vocabulary which allows him great latitude in his compositional structures. Perhaps not coincidentally he shares with both of those composers an enthusiasm for the sounds of the East Asian hammered-bell instrument called the gamelan, which sometimes overtly, other times more subtly, finds its way into his music. That is not to say that his music shares the trance-like meditative quality of much of the music of East. He infuses an intensity into his scores, one which reflects the fundamental struggle between good and evil inherent in the human drama.

Against the fad, with the grain

Though his early writings include Marxist leanings from liberation theology, MacMillan admits in his more recent interviews that he is a “lapsed lefty.” MacMillan has been courageous in confronting the “liberal assumption” that is often militantly and sneeringly guarded by captains of the “Arts élite.” Growing up in a community that he regarded as often hostile to his Catholic religion and its community, MacMillan knows the struggle of living in contradiction to the majority around him.

[…]

Not surprisingly this theological approach informs much of his vocal writing as well. His earliest musical memories are of the ritual of the Mass and the balance of his considerable list of works leans heavily toward sacred choral, and often specifically liturgical, music. He has composed prayers and cantatas, motets and Masses with a brilliant use of harmonic tension and resolution. Much of this vocal music exudes a haunting quality found in the work of other contemporary sacred composers, like the well-known work of Arvo Pärt and John Tavener.

A “Newman” Mass

But with Pope Benedict’s visit to the United Kingdom James MacMillan rose to a broader prominence, reaching a new audience. His “Mass of Blessed John Henry Newman” was commissioned to be used twice during the weekend, once in Scotland and a second time for the beatification in England. Additionally his “Tu es Petrus” was the played for the Pontiff’s processional during the Mass at Westminster Abbey and his “Gospel Fanfare” was played as well.

A relatively last-minute commission, the Newman Mass nearly didn’t happen. […]

Read the rest there.

 

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Media misquoting the Holy Father’s new book

There is a little bit of a controversy about a a couple points from the Holy Father’s new book which really isn’t much of a controversy at all.

If you don’t have the book please use one of my links to buy it.  As a matter of fact, when shopping online think “I’ll use Fr. Z’s links for amazon first and then navigate in amazon to where I want to go!”  But I digress.

US hardcover HERE.  Kindle HERE. Unabridged audio HERE. Large print HERE.
UK hardcover HERE. Kindle HERE.  Large print HERE.

First, some tried to make a big deal out of the Holy Father saying that Our Lord wasn’t born in the year 1 A.D.  Ooooold news, folks.

Then, there was some flutter about the Pope mentioning, quite properly, representations of the crib scene with the traditional ox and ass. We all know that the ox and ass were not in the Gospel accounts.  They are mentioned in Isaiah 1:3, however.  There is also a non-canonical, apocryphal text called the Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew which brings them up.

That said, I think the Pope speaks infallibly about this one: We like the ox and the ass by the manger, which just seems incomplete with them by now.

In any event, there is a Latin phrase “fluctus in simpulo… a wave in a ladle“.

Still… news agencies really should try to get their reportage right.  No?  Am I being too picky?

On that note, this is from the blog The Charcoal Fire:

Busted: Media Circulating False Quote from Pope’s Book Not In English Edition, Random House Confirms

In response to my inquiry (basically, the same as what I posted here), Random House confirmed my suspicion that the quote in several media stories is not legitimate, saying that the quote circulating is a bad translation from the Italian text and is not to be found in the English text of the Pope’s new book on the Infancy Narratives. The Pope’s book was written in German.  [What are the German and the Italian texts?  Here is the German, supplied by a reader: “Die christliche Ikonographie hat schon früh dieses Motiv aufgegriffen. Keine Krippendarstellung wird auf Ochs und Esel verzichten.” (p.79).  This is something like, “No nativity scene can relinquish (do without) the Ox and Ass.”]

The real quote:

“No presentation of the crib is complete without the ox and the ass”

 (p. 69).The quotes the media have been circulating:

4th century Roman sarcophagus

 (Time,Telegraph, UPI,Christian Post).“No nativity scene will give up its ox and donkey”

 (Daily Mail,Guardian,Catholic Herald,National Post,Catholic News Agency/EWTN)What does this all mean? At any point the writers of the stories about the Pope’s book in the English-speaking press could have picked up the book and looked up the quote to publish it accurately. They did not. They did not bother. The media is reporting on itself, not on the Pope. They want their controversies. Well, now they’ve a credibility controversy (they should anyway). Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy. They should all be running corrections!

Fr Z Kudos!

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‘c’atholics for Free Choice? Quislings in our midst.

From CNA about the quislings in our midst:

Catholics for a Free Choice spends millions in Latin American abortion support

Lima, Peru, Nov 26, 2012 / 04:06 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- The abortion advocacy group Catholics For a Free Choice has invested more than $13 million over the last decade in pushing the legalization of abortion in Latin America.

IRS documents show that between 2002 and 2010 – the last year of tax filings available for review – the organization spent $13,716,679 to promote the procedure in Central and South America.

Founded in 1973, the group has an annual budget of $3 million, which it obtains through organizations that openly finance abortion, such as the Ford Foundation, which donated $300,000 in 2011.

Additional funding has been attributed to the MacArthur Foundation, which donated $275,000 between 2009 and 2012, and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, which gave over $600,000 thousand in November of 2011 during a period of 24 months.

The Playboy Foundation is also among the group’s financial backers.

In October of this year, the spokesperson for the U.S. Bishops’ Conference, Sr. Mary Ann Walsh, told The Washington Times that Catholics For a Free Choice “is not a Catholic organization.”

It never has been, and it was created to oppose the Catholic position on abortion,” Walsh emphasized.

The main offices for the group are in Washington, D.C., but the organization has outposts in Peru, Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Mexico, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Paraguay and Spain.

Its average annual budget for abortion advocacy campaigns in Latin America is estimated at $1.2 million.

Posted in 1983 CIC can. 915, Dogs and Fleas, Emanations from Penumbras, Our Catholic Identity | Tagged , , , ,
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This day in 1095

On this day in 1095 Pope Urban II made a speech.

The setting was the Council of Clermont in France.

Urban, indeed all of Europe, was alarmed at the aggression of the Turks in the East, who had taken the Holy Land and were invading the Eastern Roman Empire.  Urban therefore addressed the Council asking them to help their Christian brethren in the East.  As Robert the Monk recorded, Urban put it, apparently, this way: “Deus vult!… God wills it!”

Thus began the First Crusade.

In another version of Urban’s history-shaping speech recorded by one Fulcher of Chartres, Urban also addressed corruption in the Church.  According to Fulcher, thus Urban:

Let those who have been accustomed unjustly to wage private warfare against the faithful now go against the infidels and end with victory this war which should have been begun long ago. Let those who for a long time, have been robbers, now become knights. Let those who have been fighting against their brothers and relatives now fight in a proper way against the barbarians. Let those who have been serving as mercenaries for small pay now obtain the eternal reward. Let those who have been wearing themselves out in both body and soul now work for a double honor.

Not a bad sentiment, when removed from its context and separated from some the the racial rhetoric common to the day.

Perhaps it would be good for Catholic men to see themselves as knights.

In one parish I know a zealous priest, Fr. Richard Heilman, started a men’s group called The Knights of Divine Mercy.  He has even written a “field manual” for Catholic men.  We belong to the Church militant after all. Book HERE Kindle HERE.  I gave a talk to this men’s group not too long ago.  They are doing good things.  They also have a group for boys called the Squires of Divine Mercy.

Urban’s speech and Fr. Heilman’s efforts also remind me of the good movie called Courageous (USA BlueRay+DVD HERE.  Just DVD HERE. UK DVD HERE.  Yes, I think the concepts will “translate” for readers in the UK.) about some men who band together and decide they will make a special commitment, to each other and to God, to be better men, better husbands, and better fathers.  The pastor who witnesses the vows the men make says this:

“I also have a warning for each of you.  Now that you know what you are to do, and have committed to do it before God and these witnesses, you are doubly accountable.  Let me also assure you, that you may have confidence in this resolution and your resolve now, because as you stand here there’s no challenge, no controversy, and no conflict.  But I can assure you that challenges will arise, conflicts will arise, and controversy will arise. It is at that moment that, in order to live our this resolution, you will need courage… courage… courage.”

This is what we need from our fathers in the family and in the Faith.  When I heard that in the movie I thought that that speech could be one of the best parts of the admonition a bishop is supposed to give to the men he will ordain priests.

Anyway, today in 1095 Pope Urban made a speech.

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I use the female voice’s refrain as a framework for one of my conference talks.  Buy the album with that song HERE, UK HERE.  The other songs are good too.

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Remember 1859? 2013 will be the peak of solar activity.

I doubt many people reading this have personal memories of September 1859.  The question was rhetorical.  And yet that date should now stick in your mind.

in 2013 your earth’s yellow Sun’s activity, such as solar flares and coronal Mass ejections, will reach a peak in its 11 cycle.

Every 11 years, as the Sun’s magnetic field reaches its maximum, the field “snaps” and the solar poles flip.  The Sun has a little nutty and sporadically spits out billions of tons of charged particles.

Will this be the year when a massive CME hits the planet and throws us back to the 18th century?

If we get hit by a blast like the one in 1859, we are in serious trouble.  Aurora Borealis was seen as far south as the Caribbean.  In North American people could read at night.  Telegraph systems were blown out, some even starting on fire.  Some telegraph systems were so supercharged that even when disconnected from their power sources they could still transmit.

The 1859 event didn’t affect civilization very much because there was hardly anything that used electricity then.

But today?

TEOTWAWKI.

Our technology is not, in general, near “hardened” enough to withstand an 1859 event.

And it is only a matter of time before such an event strikes again.

Remember in August 2003 when some high-voltage lines, which because of the heat, stretched and sagged into some trees and, BAMMO, power-grid lost in Ontario and Northeastern states all the way to Michigan.  That interruption was only for a couple days. Imagine the interruption and then the power doesn’t come back on.  Most cities would be nine meals away from total meltdown, lethal chaos.

To brighten your day a bit more.

Here is a video from NASA about solar maximum.

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And

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Some Z-Swag “in the wild”!

My good friend, His Hermeneuticalness, the great Dean of Bexley and p.p. of Blackfen, the unabashedly Unreconstructed Ossified Manualist, Fr. Tim Finigan, posted at his excellent blog shot of some of my Cafepress Z-Swag caught “in the wild”.

Go there for the explanation of the car magnets and the setting!

Buy my stuff HERE!

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“Behold, He is in the inner chambers” – Blasphemy and Obama

I read a story about some dopey “comedian” who called Pres. Obama our “lord and savior”.  He said exactly, …

First of all, give an honor to our God and our lord and savior, Barack Obama. Barack Obama.

This was not in the context of a stage routine.  Foxx said this during the BET network’s promotions for the Soul Train Awards.

Pres. Obama, The First Gay President, the most aggressive pro-abortion politician we have seen, the man who endorsed infanticide as a state senator, the man who through his mandarins attacks the Church and undermines our civil liberties….

Now I see at the site of The Catholic League that an artist named Michael D’Antuono, apparently into racial imagery, painted this, which is entitled “The Truth”:

Blasphemy.

Last Sunday I sang this in the Gospel:

At that time, Jesus said to His disciples: When you see the abomination of desolation, which was spoken of by Daniel the prophet, standing in the holy place – let him who reads understand – then let those who are in Judea flee to the mountains; and let him who is on the housetop not go down to take anything from his house; and let him who is in the field not turn back to take his cloak. But woe to those who are with child, or have infants at the breast in those days! But pray that your flight may not be in the winter, or on the Sabbath. For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not been from the beginning of the world until now, nor will be. And unless those days had been shortened, no living creature would be saved. But for the sake of the elect those days will be shortened. Then if anyone say to you, ‘Behold, here is the Christ,’ or ‘There He is,’ do not believe it. For false christs and false prophets will arise, and will show great signs and wonders, so as to lead astray, if possible, even the elect. Behold, I have told it to you beforehand. If therefore they say to you, ‘Behold, He is in the desert,’ do not go forth; ‘Behold, He is in the inner chambers,’ do not believe it. For as the lightning comes forth from the east and shines even to the west, so also will the coming of the Son of Man be. Wherever the body is, there will the eagles be gathered together. But immediately after the tribulation of those days, the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give her light, and the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers of heaven will be shaken. And then will appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven; and then will all tribes of the earth mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming upon the clouds of heaven with great power and majesty. And He will send forth His angels with a trumpet and a great sound, and they will gather His elect from the four winds, from one end of the heavens to the other. Now from the fig tree learn this parable. When its branch is now tender, and the leaves break forth, you know that summer is near. Even so, when you see all these things, know that it is near, even at the door. Amen I say to you, this generation will not pass away till all these things have been accomplished. Heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away.

I have occasionally quipped here that during Obama’s third term, men like me will be hunted down and dealt with.

I am not seeing anything to the contrary.

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“In foramine terrae habitabat hobbitus.”

Reading The Hobbit was one of the most important things I did in my life.  In another book, Tolkien used the image of the pebble that starts the avalanche.  That is what The Hobbit was for me.  Among the rocks The Hobbit dislodged was the longest friendship of my life and, in consequence, the learning of Latin which was, in turn, a factor in my conversion to Catholicism.

Thus, I was amused by a note from a reader letting me know about a new edition of The Hobbit in Latin.  Hobbitus Ille.  (I don’t think the “Ille” was needed, but… )

There is an edition in Latin only and another in Latin and English.

Good for students?  Home schoolers?  Latinists both budding and blooming?

This follows Domus Anguli Puensis, Harrius Potter et Philosophi Lapis, Fabula de Petro Cuniculo, Ursus Nomine Paddington, etc.

US Latin only HERE

UK Latin only HERE.

US Latin and English HERE

UK Latin KINDLE HERE.

I also want to draw your attention to a booklet from the Catholic Truth Society about J.R.R. Tolkien, newly published I think.

US HERE and UK HERE.

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New meaning for “Black Friday”: Planned Parenthood’s discount coupon

Planned Parenthood is in the business of abortion. Big business abortion is the name of their game.

Here is something I saw on the site of The Christian Post:

Planned Parenthood Clinic Offers ‘Black Friday’ Discount for Birth Control, Abortions

The traditional first-day of Christmas shopping known as “Black Friday” has taken on an entirely different meaning for a South Florida Planned Parenthood clinic that offered special pricing on birth control and emergency contraception to women if they visited the clinic between certain hours.
In what appears to be an email offer to a supporter, the message read: “Dear Anne, We are truly thankful for all our patients and supporters, so this Thanksgiving we are offering a day after Thanksgiving special! Visit the Kendall or West Palm Beach health center for this one-day deal.”
The Coupon by Planned Parenthood of South Florida offered $10.00 off for a visit on Friday, November 23, between the hours of 10 am and 2 pm. The coupon was also good for $5.00 off of an “emergency contraception.”

[…]

Read the rest there.

Planned Parenthood, originally started for the purpose of eugenics and genocide, is not really about women.

It’s about money.

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QUAERITUR: Vernacular Proper in the TLM?

From a reader:

I am considering starting an EF daily Mass in my parish. I am considering offering it as per usual with the exeption of using the vernacular for the propers (introit, collect, gradual, communion, post communion) and the readings. I once read that Bishop ___ thought such an EF would be permissible. I am interested in what you and readers interested in the EF think about this; specifically, is it permissible and if so, advisable?

It is NOT permissible to do the Propers in English.

I suppose you could request an indult for this from the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei”, but I doubt it would be given.

Concerning readings in the vernacular, there is disagreement about the permissibility of having the readings only in English, rather than in Latin first and then read at the pulpit in English.

In my opinion, even if we attain clarity about the matter, and it turns out that it is permissible, it is NOT advisable to do readings in English only. I cannot get behind the idea. Read the readings in English prior to the sermon.

Moreover, you can supply people with “worship aids” that have translations of the the whole Mass.  You can also urge people to obtain and bring their own hand-missals.

Leave the liturgical readings in Latin.  That is the most inclusive approach it you have a congregation in which there are more than one language represented.

The proclamation of Holy Scripture during the the Church’s sacred liturgy is not primarily a didactic act. It isn’t just a “teaching moment”.  It is symbolic as well. The Epistle is proclaimed in the liturgical South (the right side of the altar), which represents the land of the converted.  The Gospel is proclaimed to the liturgical North, the land of the yet-to-be converted. The proclamation of the Word of God in the language of the Church points to Christ as Word, and we are members of Christ’s Body, the Church.

 

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