To follow along, please use the following time stamps: Kyrie Eleison (Penitential Act with Invocations) - 0:08 Sprinkling Rite (Springs of Water) - 1:31 Gloria (Glory to God) - 3:28 Gospel Acclamation (Alleluia with Sung Verse) - 6:48 Gospel Acclamation (Alleluia with Verse Tone) - 8:03 Gospel Acclamation (Lenten Gospel Acclamation w./ Sung Verse) - 9:00 Gospel Acclamation (Lenten Gospel Acclamation w./ Verse Tone) - 10:14 General Intercessions (Prayer of the Faithful) - 11:14 Preface Dialogue - 13:38 Preface - 14:03 Sanctus (Holy) - 15:31 Eucharistic Prayer II (Pre-Consecrationem) - 16:31 Memorial Acclamation A - 18:42 Memorial Acclamation B - 19:08 Memorial Acclamation C - 19:37 Eucharistic Prayer II (Post-Consecrationem) - 20:03 Doxology - 21:38 Great Amen - 21:57 Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) - 22:27 Please Note: There are no professional recordings of Penitential Act Form A, Penitential Act Form B, Gloria (Through Composed), and Pointed-Verse Gospel Acclamations. However, the sheet music can still be purchased on GIA's website under "Mass of Joy and Peace, Tenth Anniversary Edition." Find this setting in the following hymnals offered by GIA: Gather 4, Gather 3, and Ritualsong 2.
Thanks for providing that extremely distressing information in the description. I will not be supporting music from a publisher that thinks it’s OK to appropriate the Catholic Mass so they can make more money selling to Protestant churches. It’s offensive and I’m standing against it. It’s a shame because this is otherwise one of my favorite mass settings!
I mean…all due respect as someone who composes music, I don’t think that’s a fair assessment of the presented facts. Marty Haugen writes music for the Catholic mass and is a Lutheran. Many of the great masses of history were composed by Protestants. Composers compose…it’s their job and, dare I say, vocation. Alonso composed music based on his Catholic Mass for Protestants…perhaps they’ll become curious about the broader Mass and be drawn to the Mass itself. Reformation day is absurd, obviously. It celebrates, at the least, the church departing from Jesus’s prayer that we all might be one. To celebrate the division of Christians is anti-Christian. At the same time, a Catholic reaching out and seeking to pull the branches together by creating a common music frame of reference seems an attempt to heal divisions rather than create them.
To follow along, please use the following time stamps:
Kyrie Eleison (Penitential Act with Invocations) - 0:08
Sprinkling Rite (Springs of Water) - 1:31
Gloria (Glory to God) - 3:28
Gospel Acclamation (Alleluia with Sung Verse) - 6:48
Gospel Acclamation (Alleluia with Verse Tone) - 8:03
Gospel Acclamation (Lenten Gospel Acclamation w./ Sung Verse) - 9:00
Gospel Acclamation (Lenten Gospel Acclamation w./ Verse Tone) - 10:14
General Intercessions (Prayer of the Faithful) - 11:14
Preface Dialogue - 13:38
Preface - 14:03
Sanctus (Holy) - 15:31
Eucharistic Prayer II (Pre-Consecrationem) - 16:31
Memorial Acclamation A - 18:42
Memorial Acclamation B - 19:08
Memorial Acclamation C - 19:37
Eucharistic Prayer II (Post-Consecrationem) - 20:03
Doxology - 21:38
Great Amen - 21:57
Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) - 22:27
Please Note: There are no professional recordings of Penitential Act Form A, Penitential Act Form B, Gloria (Through Composed), and Pointed-Verse Gospel Acclamations. However, the sheet music can still be purchased on GIA's website under "Mass of Joy and Peace, Tenth Anniversary Edition."
Find this setting in the following hymnals offered by GIA: Gather 4, Gather 3, and Ritualsong 2.
Thanks for providing that extremely distressing information in the description. I will not be supporting music from a publisher that thinks it’s OK to appropriate the Catholic Mass so they can make more money selling to Protestant churches. It’s offensive and I’m standing against it.
It’s a shame because this is otherwise one of my favorite mass settings!
I mean…all due respect as someone who composes music, I don’t think that’s a fair assessment of the presented facts. Marty Haugen writes music for the Catholic mass and is a Lutheran. Many of the great masses of history were composed by Protestants. Composers compose…it’s their job and, dare I say, vocation. Alonso composed music based on his Catholic Mass for Protestants…perhaps they’ll become curious about the broader Mass and be drawn to the Mass itself.
Reformation day is absurd, obviously. It celebrates, at the least, the church departing from Jesus’s prayer that we all might be one. To celebrate the division of Christians is anti-Christian. At the same time, a Catholic reaching out and seeking to pull the branches together by creating a common music frame of reference seems an attempt to heal divisions rather than create them.