Tuesday, September 27, 2011

How Ward Choirs Are Apostate

Also - since I'm in the mood to put off my First Amendment reading and post on the blog, I might as well discuss something that has been bothering me lately.

On my mission, both of my Mission Presidents (and probably all others) used to counsel us to "look to the General Authorities as examples." Examples of dress, grooming, behavior, quiet dignity, etc. While I am admittedly not a perfect follower of this counsel, I believe it is appropriate and wise.

I also think that along those sames lines, ward choirs should look to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir as an example - especially as an example of what music they should select and perform in various venues.

For example, every six months at General Conference, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir performs in the Saturday AM session and in both sessions on Sunday. In these sessions they rarely perform a hymn that is not found in the hymnbook (or Children's Songbook), and often they sing an arrangement straight from that hymnbook.

The Mormon Tabernacle Choir also performs a weekly broadcast titled "Music and the Spoken Word." In this venue they perform hymns and songs of both a spiritual and secular nature. These arrangements come from classical music, Broadway musicals, gospel spirituals, Protestant hymns, traditional LDS songs, and a wide variety of other sources. While these performances are often spirited and enjoyable - they are markedly different than the songs presented at General Conference.

If a ward choir were to follow that example, they would perform (mostly) LDS hymns in Sacrament Meeting, and would save other types of music for musical firesides or other less formal occasions.

The First Presidency Preface to the hymnbook reads: "Latter-day Saints have a long tradition of choir singing. Every ward and branch in the Church should have a choir that performs regularly. We encourage choirs to use the hymnbook as their basic resource." This is not to say that a choir should never perform a work that is not found in the hymnbook, but those should be the exception and not the rule.

So basically I'm sick of hearing ward choir medleys of "I Heard Him Come"/"His Hands"/"The Prayer of the Children"/"Jesus Was No Ordinary Man"/"You're Not Alone"/"The Olive Tree"/Anything on an EFY CD/"His Image in Your Countenance"/"He Hears Me."

Let's stick to the basics, people.

1 comment:

  1. Amen, brother. In our home stake, ward choirs were only aloud to sing hymns because Elder Packer made it very clear to the stake presidency that the hymn book was supposed to be the base. Plus, I've never seen a ward choir good enough to pull off all those other complicated choral pieces. Mostly they sound terrible.

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