Sacred Treasure: Understanding Catholic Liturgical Music

Front Cover
Liturgical Press, 2012 - Music - 379 pages

In the discussions and debates surrounding liturgical music of the past fifty years, music theorists, critics, and historians have contributed little, and their counsel has rarely been sought. Whenever the matter of liturgical music arises, most often in parishes, but sometimes in episcopal conferences or in the academy or in Vatican documents, the nature of the music, as music, almost never affects the discussion.

With Sacred Treasure, Joseph Swain, a distinguished musicologist and accomplished performer, attempts to change that. He offers a theory for building authentic traditions of liturgical music for Roman Catholic parishes. This book is an exercise in pragmatic music criticism. By providing a rational basis for evaluating the essential issues, Swain seeks to show how a spiritually wholesome stability might supplant the confusion.

Sacred Treasure shows how the hard facts of music must be taken into account in any holistic conception and any lasting form of liturgical music.

 

Contents

Liturgical Music Theory
3
The Second Vatican Council and Liturgical Music
23
Aftermath of the Council Rushing to Fill the Void
39
Aftermath of the Council Democratization of
61
The Diversity of Catholic Liturgical Music
75
The State of the Art
83
Plainchant
95
Classical Polyphony
119
Understanding Musical Symbols
175
Understanding Musical Symbols
199
Understanding Musical Symbols
223
Understanding Musical Symbols
237
An Eternal Conflict Creativity and Tradition
261
An Eternal Conflict Inculturating Liturgical Music
275
An Eternal Conflict Participatio Actuosa and Congregational Singing
297
Foundations
313

Operatic and Symphonic Liturgical Music
135
Traditions of Popular Liturgical Music
145
Primary Considerations
163

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information