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Views from the Choir Loft

PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” (Organ Accompaniment)

Jeff Ostrowski · February 4, 2020

HEAR from so many church musicians—often via telephone—about what is happening throughout the Catholic Church apropos music, and (sadly) I hear many horror stories. The vocation of a Church musician is frequently filled with obstacles and difficulties. From my friend, Richard J. Clark, I learned that composing can “raise one’s spirits” when things are tough. On Sunday afternoon, I had 20 minutes to compose an accompaniment for the Purification Vespers Hymn (“Ave Maris Stella”), and I really had fun. I hope you like it.

I wrote out each verse, just like the choral supplement of the Brébeuf Hymnal does:

*  PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” for Organ
—Harmonization by Jeff Ostrowski for Vespers on 2 February 2020.

(Some day, I’d like to create a different harmonization for each verse.)

Did you notice the second part? It has has blank staves, so you can compose your own version:

Some organists will probably “fill in” the bass line, creating pristine descending stepwise motion:

Here are three versions from the NOH, each one slightly different:

*  PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” (NOH)
—From the Nova Organi Harmonia.

Here is a version from Achille P. Bragers:

*  PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” (Bragers)
—Notice he did not follow the “Brébeuf method” of notating each verse.

This version—by Dom Jean-Hébert Desroquettes, a disciple of Dom Mocquereau—is printed in the New Saint Basil Hymnal. It omits verses, which I find very, very strange:

*  PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” (Desroquettes)
—Notice he did not follow the “Brébeuf method” of notating each verse.

Finally, here’s a version printed circa 1910 by a man named Ignace Müller, whom I know nothing about:

*  PDF Download • “Ave Maris Stella” (Müller)
—Notice he did not follow the “Brébeuf method” of notating each verse.

My posting these examples—which are of historical interest—does not indicate an endorsement; e.g. the one by Müller is horrible.

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

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Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Gregorian Chant Accompaniments Last Updated: February 4, 2021

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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

    Urgent! • We Desperately Need Funds!
    A few days ago, the president of Corpus Christi Watershed posted this urgent appeal for funds. Please help us make sure we’re never forced to place our content behind a paywall. We feel it’s crucial that 100% of our content remains free to everyone. We’re a tiny 501(c)3 public charity, entirely dependent upon the generosity of small donors. We have no endowment and no major donors. We run no advertisements and have no savings. We beg you to consider donating $4.00 per month. Thank you!
    —Jeff Ostrowski
    “Booklet of Eucharistic Hymns” (16 pages)
    I was asked to create a booklet for my parish to use during our CORPUS CHRISTI PROCESSION on 22 June 2025. Would you be willing to look over the DRAFT BOOKLET (16 pages) I came up with? I tried to include a variety of hymns: some have a refrain; some are in major, others in minor; some are metered, others are plainsong; some are in Spanish, some are in Latin, but most are in English. Normally, we’d use the Brébeuf Hymnal—but we can’t risk having our congregation carry those heavy books all over the city to various churches.
    —Jeff Ostrowski
    “Yahweh” in church songs?
    My pastor asked me to write a weekly column for our parish bulletin. The one scheduled to run on 22 June 2025 is called “Three Words in a Psalm” and speaks of translating the TETRAGRAMMATON. You can read the article at this column repository. All of them are quite brief because I was asked to keep within a certain word limit.
    —Jeff Ostrowski

Quick Thoughts

    “Hybrid” Chant Notation?
    Over the years, many have tried to ‘simplify’ plainsong notation. The O’Fallon Propers attempted to simplify the notation—but ended up making matters worse. Dr. Karl Weinmann tried to do the same in the time of Pope Saint Pius X by replacing each porrectus. You can examine a specimen from his edition and see whether you agree he complicated matters. In particular, look at what he did with éxsules fílii Hévae.
    —Corpus Christi Watershed
    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

Random Quote

The effectiveness of liturgy does not lie in experimenting with rites and altering them over and over, nor in a continuous reductionism, but solely in entering more deeply into the word of God and the mystery being celebrated. It is the presence of these two that authenticates the Church’s rites, not what some priest decides, indulging his own preferences.

— Liturgicae Instaurationes (1970)

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  • PDF Download • “Polyphonic Extension” (Kevin Allen) for Gloria III
  • “Booklet of Eucharistic Hymns” (16 pages)

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