Related to the topic of the historical spread of both traditional and contemporary styles to other countries, here’s a link to a pdf of some Worship Leader articles that some colleagues and I did in Nov/Dec 2010.
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/27400104/Worship%20Leader%20-All%20%28compressed%29.pdf
This particular WL issue was on “global worship” and brings ethnomusicology approaches to bear on the “worship wars” issue, giving suggestions to those interested in moving toward a multi-cultural approach to congregational worship. I have since expanded the lead article for an academic audience and it will be published in a forthcoming book, Worship and Mission for the Global Church: An Ethnodoxology Handbook: http://missionbooks.org/williamcareylibrary/pages.php?pageid=12
All the best,
Robin Harris
PhD Candidate, University of Georgia Athens
Associate Coordinator, World Arts Program, www.GIAL.edu
Thanks so much for posting these articles! Really great resources -
but, you're always right on the ball with such things :)
--Deborah Justice
Quoting Anna Nekola <annan...@yahoo.com>:
--
Deborah Justice
PhD Candidate, Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology
Indiana University
(Lutkin, Peter Christian. 1910. Music in the Church. Milwaukee: The Young Churchman Company.), p. 48)
Some people were more positive:
"For myself, I am disposed to believe that the original impulse toward the so-called 'Gospel Hymns' was emphatically good, that much of their practical use has been worthy, and that some of them are likely to continue useful in many conditions. I even think that the whole movement has tended to break down whatever of stiffness and frigidity there is in our hymnody, and to liberate it from what in other fields would be called its 'academic bias'."
(Pratt, Waldo Selden. 1923. Musical Ministries in the Church: Studies in the History, Theory and Administration of Sacred Music. 6th ed. [1st ed.: 1901.] New York: G. Schirmer.), pp. 59-60
I myself lean toward Pratt's view when thinking about CCM in mainline worship. My read on the situation is that there has been a paradigm shift since the 1970s, beginning in the charismatic churches, then proceeding to the evangelical ones, and then finally to the mainline by the 1990s. (Also at the same time, a parallel movement among Catholics put in motion by the Second Vatican Council.) This music seems revolutionary, because the period from 1930 to 1970 or so was one of relative stasis in church music.
But in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the gospel hymn was the paradigm shift. These songs were not sung by choirs to organ accompaniment at first. Like a lot of CCM, many of them began outside the churches at events such as revivals, such as when Homer Rodeheaver blared out the latest gospel songs with his trombone at Billy Sunday revivals. It took a couple of generations, but the church music tradition eventually digested the best of these songs, rejected the worst, and now they are simply one more item in the hymnal.
The same thing will happen with CCM, if it's not already happening. For example, I have the hymnal "Worship and Rejoice", published in 2001 by Hope, and it has songs from both Protestant and Catholic contemporary writers, including "Shout to the Lord," "Lord, I Lift Your Name On High," "On Eagle's Wings", and "Be Not Afraid", to name a few. The Methodist hymnal "The Faith We Sing" has a lot of songs of this type. It will be interesting to see if the rumored revision to the Episcopal Hymnal 1982 (the most anti-gospel of the denominational hymnals I know of) also does.