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OBITUARIES Abbot Alan Rees O.S.B. - R.I.P. |
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Fr Alan, photographed by the Hereford Times in 1982 with his copy of the Papal Mass for the visit of Pope John Paul II. | |
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The Times Published Tuesday 12th October Fr Alan Rees OSB
A WELSH organist, monk and musician, Father
Alan Rees was a gifted composer who enriched tremendously the music of
the Roman Catholic Church when its liturgy passed from Latin into the
vernacular after Vatican II. Sacred music, said Rees, should be "easy to sing, generally tuneful, easy to learn" and above all prayerful, inducing the singer to focus on the spiritual message of the text rather than worrying about the notes. Inspired by the Gregorian chant, which he sang
daily as a monk at Belmont Abbey, Herefordshire, Rees composed many modern
settings for the Mass, including the office of Vespers, for use in the
average parish. A magnificent organist, he also had a gift as a wordsmith,
setting words to music after meditating deeply on their spiritual meaning.
Rees's Mass settings are now used in Anglican and Catholic churches worldwide.
Particularly popular are his Belmont Psalm tones and responses, chant
and organ music. His greatest public accolade was being invited to compose
a special Mass for Pope John Paul II's visit to St David''s Cathedral,
Cardiff, in 1982; before entering Belmont Benedictine monastery Rees had
been the cathedral''s choirmaster. Alan Rees was born in Morriston, near Swansea, in 1941, the only son of John and Hilda Rees. His love of religion and music began at an early age with a visit to a Pentecostal Mission tent near his home in Cwmrhydyceirw, Swansea. Subsequent Sundays were divided between accompanying his father to the Tabernacle Welsh Baptist Chapel and his mother to Church in Wales worship. By the age of 6 Rees had set up an altar in his bedroom, and as a child he learned to play the organ in chapel before his legs were long enough to reach the pedals. This Nonconformist background was the source of his love of melody, while his natural feel for language was rooted in Welsh hymns and the Book of Common Prayer. In later life as a Catholic monk Rees would
claim that his Nonconformist background had given him a particular affinity
with the 1st, 2nd, 4th and 7th modes, or medieval system of scales of
Gregorian chant, though he felt unequal to capturing the grandeur of the
8th. Each mode represents a complete system of scales, and pre-dates the
use of the major and minor scales which came to dominate Western music. Rees became Anglo-Catholic as a teenager studying
at Dynefor Grammar School in Swansea, and during the first year of a degree
in music and education diploma at University College Cardiff he was received
into the Roman Catholic Church. He began to explore a religious vocation,
beginning, after his studies, a novitiate with the monks of Ampleforth
Abbey, North Yorkshire. After a nervous breakdown he left to teach music
and became an associate of the Royal College of Music and the Royal College
of Organists. From 1963 to 1968 he was the organist and choirmaster at
St David''s Cathedral, Cardiff, and began to compose liturgical music.
In September 1968 he began his second Benedictine
novitiate at Belmont. He was solemnly professed a monk four years later
and in 1974, after two years'' study in Rome, was ordained. Returning
to Belmont, he became novice master to the community, as well as its choirmaster
and organist, a position he maintained throughout his life. He also worked
at the monastery's school as a housemaster until 1986, when the community
elected him the ninth Abbot of Belmont. Rees struggled throughout his life with weight
and blood pressure problems. Only weeks before his election as Abbot he
told friends that he wished the Abbot would put him on a diet. Though
universally popular for his gentle, charismatic leadership, he disliked
being Abbot, because of a combination of his acute sense of responsibility
and a fear of confrontation. After seven years in office he resigned in
the throes of depression, an illness which dogged him in the latter half
of his life. A former chairman of the Society of St Gregory,
Rees was a co-founder of the Panel of Monastic Musicians. When the editorial
panel of the PMM's Hymns for Prayer and Praise found that they lacked
a tune to fit a particular hymn text, Rees would be sent out to do the
job, and would return, recalled one co-editor, "in ten minutes, with
a finely crafted composition". Rees's many contributions to Catholic liturgy
included a Congress Mass for a conference of priests and laity. At the
time of his death he was involved in setting the new English translation
of the Roman Missal to music. This was part of Rees's work with the International
Committee for English in the Liturgy, a body mired in controversy as English-speaking
clergy clashed with Rome over how the Mass now used in the Anglophone
world should be corrected and revised to produce a more accurate translation
from Latin. A popular retreat-giver and confessor, Rees
wrote many heartfelt prayers expressing his experience of Benedictine
life. He also published a small book, Prayers from the Cloisters, based
on the monastic custom of lectio divina, a meditative approach to Scripture.
His own music he held to be worth little when set beside the great tradition
of Gregorian chant. In the early 1990s Rees was elected Titular
Abbot of Tewkesbury and also became Vicar for Religious in the Archdiocese
of Cardiff.
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Daily Telegraph Abbot Alan Rees Abbot Alan Rees, who has died aged 64, made
a major contribution to the music of the Roman Catholic Church when the
reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s led to Latin being
replaced by vernacular languages in public worship. He insisted that the new music of the Church
should be: "easy to sing, generally tuneful, easy to learn - music
that will cause as little preoccupation with the notes as possible and
the greatest attention to the texts and resulting prayer." Writing
in Gregorian medieval modes rather than modern scales, he claimed that
his Nonconformist background might have helped him to write in the first
seven modes, but he had difficulty in capturing the grandeur of the eighth. Rees was a founder-member in 1971 of the Panel
of Monastic Musicians, which encourages those communities, both male and
female, which sing the choral offices. Its 1996 publication Hymns for
Prayer and Praise, which he co-edited, is now used in monastic communities
throughout the world. When the panel found itself short of a tune for
a particular hymn text, Rees would often be sent out to write one; 10
minutes later he would return with a finely crafted composition. Besides his Congress Mass, written for the National
Pastoral Congress in Liverpool in 1980, and the Cardiff Mass, composed
for Pope John Paul II's visit to Britain in 1982, he was prepared to write
many simpler settings for anyone who asked him. His Belmont Psalm Tones
and Responses and his choral and organ music are performed widely in both
Anglican and Catholic churches. Although a superb organist and improviser, he
much preferred setting words: Music for Evening Prayer was an attempt
to re-establish the ancient office of Vespers in parish churches. Alan William Rees was born at Morriston, near
Swansea, on February 1 1941. His love of religion and music began when
he was taken to the Tabernacle Welsh Baptist Chapel by his father and
to St David's Church in Wales by his mother; and he started to learn the
organ at a young age. Young Alan became an Anglo-Catholic while at
Dynefor Grammar School, Swansea, and a Catholic in his first year at University
College Cardiff, where he gained an honours degree in Music and a diploma
in Education; he later became an Associate of both the Royal College of
Music and the Royal College of Organists. In 1968 Rees joined the novitiate at Belmont,
where he was solemnly professed three years later. From 1970 to 1972 and
from 1974 to 1982 he was housemaster of Cantilupe House. Rees also studied
at the Benedictine house of Sant' Anselmo in Rome for two years before
being ordained priest. He was then assistant novice master for six years
and novice master for four years; from 1970 he was choirmaster and organist. In 1986 Rees was elected the ninth Abbot of
Belmont, which was founded in 1859 and raised to be an abbey in 1920.
During his abbacy he initiated the annual May procession in honour of
Our Lady. But while universally loved for his gentleness, he disliked
being in authority and, suffering from depression, resigned his post after
seven years. Rees was appointed Abbot of Tewkesbury, a titular
appointment which stretches back to the pre-Reformation Church, and he
found ever expanding work as a retreat-giver and confessor, as well as
in being vicar for religious in the archdiocese of Cardiff. Several of his own prayers, which appeared in
To Speak in His Presence (1995), give an insight into the inner turmoil
which led to serious breakdowns before his sudden death on October 2,
convinced that he had lost the gift of the faith, which had been so dear
to him, and that he had been abandoned by God. |
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