A Grand Work!

I still remember the day I walked into Our Lady Queen of Peace Catholic School on the first day of my sixth grade year.  Our family had recently relocated from southern Oklahoma to Illinois.  I had never attended a Catholic school before then, and while my family took the Faith very seriously, attending Mass during the week was a new experience for me.  Within the first month of school, our pastor, Fr. James Flach, called all of the 4th, 5th,  6th, 7th and 8th graders together and made it known that the parish was in need of new organists and that he would personally pay for organ lessons for any student who wished to play in the hopes that one would become an organist.  Well… I am that one.  I played the organ during Mass for the first time (during a school Mass) on the Feast of the Guardian Angels and have been at it ever since.  Today I am the one teaching children and hoping that at least of few will follow in the footsteps of a sacred musician (That sounds a little grand.  Perhaps it would be better to say a musician in the field of sacred music!).

Sometimes I feel we forget about the formation of our children in the grand tradition of sacred music.  At the same time, I wonder if some of our many wonderful musicians aren’t a little afraid to stand in front of a room full of children for the first time and raise the baton.  I can’t claim to be Olivier Latry at the organ or Sir Richard Terry leading a smart group of choristers through Byrd’sMass for Five Voices, but there are few people who love working and training choristers more than I do.   I hope that I can pass on the little I have learned to all of those toiling away in their work with young children.  It is grand work indeed!

2 thoughts on “A Grand Work!

  1. The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas (and the Church at large) is so blessed to have you working in the vineyard, Dr. Tappan, and equally blessed by the Most Pure Heart of Mary Schola Cantorum. Thank you for carrying the torch!

    1. I’m back to the cello after 34 years in the desert’.Sight rdnaieg was anathema to me until a weekend with other amateur cellists.Being put on the spot’ to play through pieces made me realise that I can keep up (a certain amount of bar-counting and ducking out’ of the fast bits happened) and it no longer holds the FEAR that it did!Looking forwards to your future posts on this blog ..Thanks!

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