- Catholics my age are growing tired of hearing the same music at home, in their car, at the dentist's office, and at church. They are longing for an experience that transcends everyday life and find that the unmeasured, unhurried, half-understood Latin lines of traditional monophonic chant accomplishes that transcendence. (The question as to why Gregorian chant has a mystical feel to it is best left for another post)
- It also seems as though listening to and performing Gregorian chant reduces stress. Hmmm, imagine that - prayer and meditation can reduce stress. But no one has done studies to see if Gergorian chant's use in Halo reduces the player's or the Master Chief's stress levels.
Self-doubt in the tech industry
1 year ago
2 comments:
Oh hymns are already on the comeback. The new
"In Christ Alone" and "Before the Throne of God Above" are new hymns that are hugely popular. Many people are tired of trite phrases of so much of our "P&W." Now, I love good p&w, but I also love hymns and always have - at least the ones that are doctrinally correct and don't sound like carousel music. =)
That's actually the irony of that last link - there have been an equal number of articles on the internet about how hymns are coming back as people tire of cheap P&W. That doesn't mean there aren't good songs in the P&W tradition (just like it doesn't mean there aren't bad hymns - there are plenty) but that people are beginning to expand their horizons again.
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