Officium cordis. O sagrado e o profano na música e na Festa da Pocariça (1950-atualidade)
2015; Volume: 2; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
0871-9705
Autores Tópico(s)Asian Culture and Media Studies
ResumoThe Pocarica Festival is an annual Catholic festival dedicated to St Sebastian and Our Lady of Lourdes. From the beginning of the 20 th century, a number of important changes took place in this Festival, as a consequence of the reforms adopted by the Roman Catholic Church, relating to the liturgy and events in Catholic life arising both from Motu Proprio Tra le Sollecitudini (1903), as well as the Second Vatican Council (1962-5), which were adapted by the Portuguese Church to local conditions. This article analyses the changes that occurred, from the 1950s, in the religious and secular music performed during the Festival of Pocarica: 1) the Portuguese Church's adaptation of Tra le Sollecitudini with the local brass band playing in the liturgy of the Festival, something prohibited by Motu Proprio ; 2) the changes implemented after the Second Vatican Council II regarding liturgical music in the 1960s, and secular music in the 1970s, which were only fully implemented in the Festival after 1974 – with the beginning of the democratic period – diluting the dichotomy between religious and secular music. Indeedy after 1974, pop and rock bands, prohibited by Motu Proprio and considered secular and dangerous music for a Catholic event, began to take part in the Pocarica Festival. The Festival as a whole is considered an officium cordis , a religious festival coming directly from the heart.
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