Raymond Robert Repp (September 17, 1942 – April 26, 2020) was an American singer-songwriter credited with introducingfolk music intoCatholic Masses with his albumMass for Young Americans (1965), an album that formed the earliest stirrings ofContemporary Christian music.[citation needed]
Repp was born inSt. Louis,Missouri, to Walter and Rita Kempf Repp, the eldest of their nine children. He was educated in Catholic schools: Seven Holy Founders Elementary School, St. Louis Preparatory Seminary,Cardinal Glennon College, and Kenrick Seminary, with graduate studies atSt. Paul's Seminary, Ottawa, Canada. Later he studied music and languages in Vienna, Austria.[1]
After his 1965 album, Repp recorded 11 collections which have been translated into 28 languages, and wonASCAP's "Award for Special Contributions to the Field of Music" six times.[2] His song collections includeThe Best of Ray Repp Vol. 1 & 2 andYesterday, Today & Tomorrow, with all songs written from 1965–1985. Repp's music has been recorded by those outside the Catholic Church. Christian punk outfitUndercover and Christian rockerPhil Keaggy have both covered Repp's work on their own discs.[3]
Repp also recorded non-religious material. "Don't Go In the Street" and "Apple Pie", both fromThe Time Has Not Come True, featured sometimes humorous, prescient left-leaning social commentary.[citation needed]
In 1997, Repp drew a measure of notoriety from the mainstream journalistic media when he sued composerAndrew Lloyd Webber, asserting that Lloyd Webber had plagiarized portions of his "The Phantom of the Opera" from his own composition "Till You". Lloyd Webber, however, cross-litigated with a counter-accusation that Repp had, in fact, plagiarized portions of "Till You" from "Close Every Door", fromJoseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. Repp ultimately lost the case.[4]
On April 26, 2020, Repp died after battling bothlymphoma andmetastatic melanoma, the latter of which of those two forms ofcancer was the direct cause of his death.[5]
Repp as one of the first artists to employ the idiom ofpopular 1960's folk music withinCatholic liturgical music. While clearly not neglecting vertical theology in his compositions, Repp was a major proponent of horizontal theology (i.e., emphasis on social justice themes and 'love of neighbor') in Christian music. In a tribute to Repp byDavid Haas, another Catholic singer-songwriter, Repp is quoted as having said:
"Latin philosophy and theology textbooks could hardly hold my attention from the books of my new heroes: Deikmann, Davis, Jungman. I was writing music at the same time, usually secretly in my small seminary room. But liturgical music? The thought never crossed my mind. If my music hadn't been officially banned in dozens of U.S. dioceses, it probably would never have caught on. My songs were written out of my frustrations then at seeing little concern for the neglected Hispanics and Blacks in Utah, not only by Mormons but my own affluent Catholics. [...] If our music is to praise God, it can only do so by helping to change us and our communities into more sensitive, loving, and just human beings."[citation needed]
Perhaps the best summary of Repp's theology can be found inSong of Micah[6] in his workEver Bless (1985). This song is based onMicah 6:3–8:
This is all I ask of you, this is the only praise I seek: That your love be gentle and your lives be just, and humbly walk along with me.
Should we go before the Lord, bowing low, and giving praise? Will the Lord be pleased with gifts we have to bring, with songs we want to sing?
Should we make some sacrifice? Should we offer up our lives to the Lord on high? How shall we adore the Lord forevermore?
My people hear me, what have I done – that you distrust so my gift of love? What will the Lord be satisfied by our gifts and songs of praise? Will the Lord be pleased, what honor can we give? Should we change the way we live?
Repp was married to, and lived with, his husband of twenty years, Richard Alther, who made his own living as a writer and painter, in their homes in Southern California and Vermont.[7] Alther wroteThe Decade of Blind Dates about his past relationships as a homosexual divorcee and his marriage to Repp.[8]
In 2018, Repp published his first book,TABLE TALES: Do Ahead Dinner Party Menus That Whet Appetites, Loosen Tongues, and Make Memories.[9]
Data from One WayJesus Music (music from theJesus Movement) website:[10]
Data from the OCP Publications website:[11]
Data from the Amazon website:[12]