The relationship between the clergy and church musicians, which has not always been sweetness and light, was the subject of a recent address to the 83rd festival of 'The Federation of Cathedral Old Choristers Associations' in St Albans by The Dean of St Albans, The Very Rev'd Dr Jeffrey John and which he illustrated by one of his favourite quotations by Philip Stubbes a very fierce Puritan clergyman:
'I say of music that it is very ill for young heads, alluring them to pusillanimity and loathsomeness of life. All music may be compared to honey and such sweet things, which do delight at first, but afterward make the stomach queasy and weak. So music may at first delight the ear but afterward it corrupteth and depraveth the mind, making it inclined to all manner of licentiousness. For who indeed be more bawdy than the company of music making men and singers? Who more loose minded, who such drunken sockets and parasites as they?
Therefore, sir, if you would have your son soft, smooth mouthed, affected to bawdry, scurrility, untimely talk and every kind of abomination, then set him, sir, to learn music and you shall not fail of your purpose.'
The Dean then went on to say that religion needed music; but music - at least religious music - also needed real religion and " I think we can boast a little here that the co-operation of clergy and musicians in cathedrals is one of the reasons why cathedrals are the one success story that the church could show over the last twenty years. Despite all the travails of the rest of the Church of England, cathedral worship has been growing and growing quite fast. So with that in mind can I say Down with Philip Stubbes and the Puritans and Hooray for all you drunken sockets and loose minded parasites that make up our cathedral choirs!"
VCC
'I say of music that it is very ill for young heads, alluring them to pusillanimity and loathsomeness of life. All music may be compared to honey and such sweet things, which do delight at first, but afterward make the stomach queasy and weak. So music may at first delight the ear but afterward it corrupteth and depraveth the mind, making it inclined to all manner of licentiousness. For who indeed be more bawdy than the company of music making men and singers? Who more loose minded, who such drunken sockets and parasites as they?
Therefore, sir, if you would have your son soft, smooth mouthed, affected to bawdry, scurrility, untimely talk and every kind of abomination, then set him, sir, to learn music and you shall not fail of your purpose.'
The Dean then went on to say that religion needed music; but music - at least religious music - also needed real religion and " I think we can boast a little here that the co-operation of clergy and musicians in cathedrals is one of the reasons why cathedrals are the one success story that the church could show over the last twenty years. Despite all the travails of the rest of the Church of England, cathedral worship has been growing and growing quite fast. So with that in mind can I say Down with Philip Stubbes and the Puritans and Hooray for all you drunken sockets and loose minded parasites that make up our cathedral choirs!"
VCC
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