St Louis Jesuits - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Wed, 02 Oct 2019 04:40:14 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg St Louis Jesuits - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 St Louis Jesuits final performance brings up the house https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/10/03/st-louis-jesuits-final-performance/ Thu, 03 Oct 2019 07:10:15 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=121664 St Louis Jesuits

Of the 2,422 people with tickets for the sold-out final concert by the St Louis Jesuits, it is likely that Donna Benton is the only one who brought along the program from her wedding Mass. Standing in the midst of the cream-and-gold walls and red velvet curtains of Powell Hall in St Louis, she pointed Read more

St Louis Jesuits final performance brings up the house... Read more]]>
Of the 2,422 people with tickets for the sold-out final concert by the St Louis Jesuits, it is likely that Donna Benton is the only one who brought along the program from her wedding Mass.

Standing in the midst of the cream-and-gold walls and red velvet curtains of Powell Hall in St Louis, she pointed to the pink text spelling out the name of the hymn she walked down the aisle to on Dec. 20, 1980: "Emanuel," by Tim Manion, who, along with Dan Schutte, Robert O'Connor, S.J. (known as Roc), Bob Dufford, S.J., and John Foley, S.J., revolutionised liturgical music in the early 1970s.

Benton says her husband, Doug, who recently died, loved to play the songs of the St Louis Jesuits.

She tears up remembering the way the music always pointed the couple to something larger than themselves.

"‘Emanuel, God With Us,' was the theme not just of our wedding, but our marriage and our lives," Benton said, adding she was thrilled that "Emanuel" is on the setlist for the show.

At 3 p.m. on Sept. 29, the five men took the stage as the St Louis Jesuits for the last time and, after being met with a standing ovation, gave a three-hour performance billed as the official conclusion to a collaboration that began nearly 50 years earlier, while they were Jesuit scholastics in St Louis.

The group's accessible and original music, now collected on 35 albums, became a catalyst for many a guitar Mass and remains a Sunday staple in many parishes.

"Someone once said to me that the St Louis Jesuits wrote the spiritual soundtrack to our lives," said John Limb, former publisher of Oregon Catholic Press, the publisher of the St Louis Jesuits. "For those of us of a certain age, that was true."

The concert, called Coming Home: A Final Celebration, was a return of sorts, not just for the musicians, but for their fans.

One group of women religious, former women religious and former Jesuits—all students at St Louis University in the late 1960s—reunited in the lobby of the theater to laugh and reminisce.

They had attended Mass together at St. Francis Xavier College Church in the Chapel of Our Lady on the church's lower level, where the St Louis Jesuits began their career and where these friends had been a part of the phenomenon from the start.

"[The St. Louis Jesuits] started writing much more rich and serious music," Greg Christoffer said, adding that he still has the original "ditto masters" used to first distribute the group's music.

"It was controversial to use guitar and piano," said John Niemann, who came from Denver with a friend, Carol Lewis, for the show.

"It took time, but they became a real changing force in the church."

"I had to come just for the memories," Lewis added.

"[The St. Louis Jesuits] made a difference.

"They made the church so much more relevant to those of us who were young at the time."

"They were articulating our greatest hopes of Vatican II," said Sister Barbara Franklin, a member of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ who traveled from Redbud, Ill.

"I think they also made us more aware of what Catholic social teaching was with their music. They reminded us to remember other people."

While so-called Vatican II Catholics made up the majority of the crowd, there were some enthusiastic faces from younger generations, as well.

Jennifer Cashin came from Northwood, Ohio, with her daughter Abigail, 17, and Adam, 15, to attend the concert.

Cashin and her daughter are both in the choir at their parish, and their entire family shares a love of the St. Louis Jesuits.

"We find great comfort in their music," Abigail said, adding that it reminds her that "the Lord's love is everlasting and he will always be there for us." Continue reading

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Last Chance: Hear St Louis Jesuits on Great Catholic Music online https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/09/23/hear-st-louis-jesuits-on-great-catholic-music-online/ Mon, 23 Sep 2019 08:08:41 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=121394

A chance to listen to the St Louis Jesuits free of charge is on offer from Free audio web streaming service Great Catholic Music (GCM). GCM says it has made the recordings available this week to honor the St. Louis Jesuits' "music legacy". The group is getting together for the last time for its final Read more

Last Chance: Hear St Louis Jesuits on Great Catholic Music online... Read more]]>
A chance to listen to the St Louis Jesuits free of charge is on offer from Free audio web streaming service Great Catholic Music (GCM).

GCM says it has made the recordings available this week to honor the St. Louis Jesuits' "music legacy". The group is getting together for the last time for its final performance on 29 September.

The St Louis Jesuits' music is on air for an hour a day at 11 a.m. (EST) from 23 to 28 September. It is available online on GCM's mobile app at: GreatCatholicMusic.com and on Alexa devices.

A GCM representative says the streaming service planned the special programming to pay tribute to "a big milestone for Catholic music."

The musicians first met and began composing music together as young Jesuit scholastics in the early 1970s while at St. Louis University.

Since then they have recorded 35 albums and several anthology collections.

They also inspired a generation of Catholic liturgical music.

Among their songs are "One Bread, One Body" and "Earthen Vessels," which have become staples of Catholic liturgies.

The concert has been flagged as "a nostalgic celebration of the [group's] most beloved hymns and songs for worship and personal prayer, both as St. Louis Jesuits and as solo artists,".

GCM is a project of the Living Bread Radio Network, a group of Catholic radio stations in northeast Ohio.

Source

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The St. Louis Jesuits to play one more time https://cathnews.co.nz/2019/08/01/st-louis-jesuits-contemporary-liturgical-music/ Thu, 01 Aug 2019 07:55:58 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=119922 The St. Louis Jesuits — the fathers of contemporary liturgical music — to play one more time aT A CONCERT. The concert in St. Louis on 29 September will mark the last time liturgical composer-performers Dan Schutte, Tim Manion and Jesuit Fathers Bob Dufford, John Foley and Roc O'Connor take the stage together as the Read more

The St. Louis Jesuits to play one more time... Read more]]>
The St. Louis Jesuits — the fathers of contemporary liturgical music — to play one more time aT A CONCERT.

The concert in St. Louis on 29 September will mark the last time liturgical composer-performers Dan Schutte, Tim Manion and Jesuit Fathers Bob Dufford, John Foley and Roc O'Connor take the stage together as the St. Louis Jesuits.

The young Jesuit scholastics met and began composing music at St Louis University in the early 1970s.

The St. Louis Jesuits, as they became known, produced and published more than 150 liturgical songs and hymns. They produced many more individually. Songs such as "City of God," "Earthen Vessels," "Be Not Afraid," "This Alone," "One Bread, One Body" and "Lift Up Your Hearts" are heard in churches across the globe. Read more

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