We
Need Each Other
by Bob Batastini
Bob Batastini
is the vice president and senior editor of GIA Publications.
This article was published in the GIA Quarterly, vol. 16,
no. 1, © 2004, GIA Publications.
I write this having just returned from the
NPM Convention in Phoenix. At one point during the convention
a recurring thought surfaced—something that I find troubling.
I thought about the fact that so many church musicians—persons
who play the organ, or the piano, or the guitar, or direct
the choir, or lead congregational singing week after week
in their Roman Catholic parish church—have no association
with NPM. |

Bob Batastini
Vice
President and Senior
Editor of GIA Publications
|
The National Association of Pastoral Musicians
is not merely an organization for Catholic church musicians who
wish to engage in the kinds of exchange that membership provides,
but should be required of everyone who makes music in a Catholic
parish. With 18,000 Roman Catholic parishes in the US, NPM membership
should stand at over 30,000. But, sadly, although the NPM is a vibrant
organization with a dynamic membership, it doesn’t come close
to achieving that profile.
I’ve heard all the excuses.
“I’m just a volunteer.”
“I’m just an amateur.”
“NPM is too ‘high church.’”
“NPM is too contemporary-music oriented.”
“I’ve got a DMA (or PhD) and don’t have any real
need to belong.”
“I have to do whatever Father says, so why bother learning
about the things I ‘should’ do?”
Of course, any intelligent person can look as those
excuses when lined up as they are and realize that they are all
pretty thin. The reality of life in this community we call Church,
is that no one who serves a community in any ministerial role whatever,
should function in isolation. If you are a musician who plays one
mass per week on the piano, you need NPM. If you are a volunteer
choir director with no training, who just gets in there and does
your best (“We hardly ever even sing in parts”), you
need NPM. If you are Dr. Amadeus Muzak, with a major cathedral position
having seven choirs, a four-story pipe organ, and a larger budget
than many a small diocese, you need NPM.
The heart of the matter is this: If you fit any
of those categories, you will find your equals among the NPM membership.
NPM is not high church or contemporary church; it is not an association
of volunteers or professionals; it is not for those who have a lot
to learn or just for those who have it all figured out. NPM is all
of that. And therein lies the reason why no Catholic church musician
can justify excluding themselves from being a part.
If you accept the role of serving your parish community
as a musician, then you take on the obligation to do your best—according
to your own unique gifts, and, yes, limitations. Unless you are
an expert, you will always have something to learn. If you are an
expert, you have an obligation to give! If you struggle because
the pastor (or DRE, or school principal) won’t listen to one
single thought you ever have on the subject of liturgical music,
come and join the best support group on the planet. If you’ve
figured out how to work well within a parish team, come and share
some of your insights.
Don’t ever feel you are not good enough to
step up into NPM membership. NPM continually offers skill sessions
designed especially for those who feel they have a lot to learn.
But you can’t benefit from these programs if you are not involved.
About the question of high church–contemporary
church (and a whole lot in between): Well, speaking for myself,
there is music which I feel is most appropriate for Roman Catholic
liturgy, and there is music I feel is significantly less appropriate,
at best. Do I hear and sing it all at NPM conventions? Do others
feel the same way, but would disagree on what music fits which category?
Yes. It’s a tension that exists because we live in the real
world. So long as the tension exists, there will be dialog. Dialog
leads to continual change. If you don’t like the way things
are evolving in church music today, you have only yourself to blame
if you don’t participate in the dialog. It’s similar
to the person who doesn’t vote in the presidential election
but then complains about the outcome.
Phone the National Association of Pastoral Musicians
at 240-247-3000, or log on to www.npm.org.
The folks who fill the pews in your parish want you to call now!
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