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Jesus said to them: “I have come into this world so that a sentence may fall upon it, that those who are blind should see, and those who see should become blind. If you were blind, you would not be guilty. It is because you protest, ‘We can see clearly,’ that you cannot be rid of your guilt.”

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Views from the Choir Loft

Musical Resources • Feast of Christ the King (Extraordinary Form)

Jeff Ostrowski · October 23, 2015


RESPONSES FOR HIGH MASS

PDF Score (Singer) • printed on a single sheet


PROCESSIONAL   •   #858 Crown Him With Many Crowns

From the Campion Hymnal.   Organist.


ASPERGES

PDF Score (Singer)   •   Practice Audio (Singer)   •   Organist

To practice the new section of the Asperges, you must locate #4550.


INTROIT   •   Sung by the men only.

PDF Score (Singer)   •   Practice Audio (Singer)


KYRIE ELEISON

Score is in the Campion Hymnal. The organist needs this Accompaniment. To learn this piece, go here and find “Kyrie XI.”

Our Palestrina Kyrie will be sung during Advent. The CHRISTE section (#5054) and the KYRIE section (#5053). Please be practicing this because we might start it before Advent—it all depends.

To practice the Kyrie by Richard Rice, which will sing again someday, you must locate #4781.


GLORIA IN EXCELSIS

The Gloria this week is #4748.

The one by Zachariis (†1594) which we’ve been doing for months is #5051.


GRADUAL & ALLELUIA

To practice the new Palestrina ALLELUIA, you must locate #4470. The other one we know is #5050.

You don’t need to practice the chant verses which change each week.


CREDO IV   •   Alternatim

PDF Score (Singer)   •   Practice Audio (Singer)   •   Organist


OFFERTORY ANTIPHON

PDF Score (Singer)


OFFERTORY

Christe Supreme • Score   •   Accompaniment

To practice the polyphony part, you must locate #4594


SANCTUS & HOSANNA

We have been singing #4912 and will sing it again this Sunday.

Sometimes—but not this coming Sunday—we sing a different polyphonic “Hosanna,” which is #5048. You don’t need to practice the Chant Part.


AGNUS DEI

To practice the Agnus Dei by Philippe Verdelot (d. 1531), you must locate #4801.

Don’t forget our other setting, #4347.


COMMUNION ORGAN

Organist … while choir receives Holy Communion.


COMMUNION ANTIPHON

PDF Score (Singer)   •   Practice Audio (Singer)


COMMUNION POLYPHONY

We will sing #4428 this Sunday. It is called “Jesu Dulcis Memoria.”


BENEDICTION :

After Post-Communion, the Sanctíssimum is left on the Altar.

After the Last Gospel, Celebrant changes into Cope at the chair. Then he walks to the center of the Altar. He intones “O Salutaris Hostia” (Number 968 in the Campion Missals) which we continue. Organist accompanies using this score.

Celebrant incenses the Sanctíssimum.

Consecration is prayed.

When Celebrant is finished leading the Consecration we count to twenty, we begin singing “Tantum Ergo” (Number 969 in the Campion Missals). Organist accompanies using this file.

After the Blessing with the Monstrance, Divine Praises will be prayed, and Tabernacle door is closed, we sing RECESSIONAL.


RECESSIONAL HYMN   •   #856 To Jesus Christ, Our Sovereign King

From the Campion Hymnal.   Organist.

Opinions by blog authors do not necessarily represent the views of Corpus Christi Watershed.

Filed Under: Articles Last Updated: January 1, 2020

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About Jeff Ostrowski

Jeff Ostrowski holds his B.M. in Music Theory from the University of Kansas (2004). He resides with his wife and children in Michigan. —(Read full biography).

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Corpus Christi Watershed

President’s Corner

    “Music List” • 4th Sunday of Easter (Year C)
    Some have expressed interest in perusing the ORDER OF MUSIC I prepared for the 4th Sunday of Easter (11 May 2025). If such a thing interests you, feel free to download it as a PDF file. I don’t know a more gorgeous ENTRANCE CHANT than the one given there: Misericórdia Dómini Plena Est Terra.
    —Jeff Ostrowski
    “Entrance Chant” • 4th Sunday of Easter
    You can download the ENTRANCE ANTIPHON in English for the 4th Sunday of Easter (11 May 2025). Corresponding to the vocalist score is this free organ accompaniment. The English adaptation matches the authentic version (Misericórdia Dómini), which is in a somber yet gorgeous mode. If you’re someone who enjoys rehearsal videos, this morning I tried to sing it while simultaneously accompanying my voice on the pipe organ.
    —Jeff Ostrowski
    Music List • “Repertoire for Weddings”
    Not everyone thinks about sacred music 24/7 like we do. When couples are getting married, they often request “suggestions” or “guidance” or a “template” for their musical selections. I created this music list with repertoire suggestions for Catholic weddings. Please feel free to download it if you believe it might give you some ideas or inspiration.
    —Jeff Ostrowski

Quick Thoughts

    Antiphons Don’t Match?
    A reader wants to know why the Entrance and Communion antiphons in certain publications deviate from what’s prescribed by the GRADUALE ROMANUM published after Vatican II. Click here to read our answer. The short answer is: the Adalbert Propers were never intended to be sung. They were intended for private Masses only (or Masses without music). The “Graduale Parvum,” published by the John Henry Newman Institute of Liturgical Music in 2023, mostly uses the Adalbert Propers—but sometimes uses the GRADUALE text: e.g. Solemnity of Saints Peter and Paul (29 June).
    —Corpus Christi Watershed
    When to Sit, Stand and Kneel like it’s 1962
    There are lots of different guides to postures for Mass, but I couldn’t find one which matched our local Latin Mass, so I made this one: sit-stand-kneel-crop
    —Veronica Brandt
    The Funeral Rites of the Graduale Romanum
    Lately I have been paging through the 1974 Graduale Romanum (see p. 678 ff.) and have been fascinated by the funeral rites found therein, especially the simply-beautiful Psalmody that is appointed for all the different occasions before and after the funeral Mass: at the vigil/wake, at the house of the deceased, processing to the church, at the church, processing to the cemetery, and at the cemetery. Would that this “stational Psalmody” of the Novus Ordo funeral rites saw wider usage! If you or anyone you know have ever used it, please do let me know.
    —Daniel Tucker

Random Quote

What earlier generations held as sacred, remains sacred and great for us too, and it cannot be all of a sudden entirely forbidden or even considered harmful.

— ‘His Holiness, Pope Benedict XVI (7 July 2007)’

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