G
georgesclams
Guest
Mother in law has requested grandson to play amazing grace at her funeral service …are bagpipes allowed at catholic funeral service in church…have heard different opinions
Bagpipes are a wonderful instrument. (Instrument of torture, that is.First off–
It’s NOT your mother-in-law’s funeral.
It’s the CHURCH’S funeral that is being bestowed on your mother-in-law.
Now that we have that settled, speaking as a musician, bagpipes are not intended to be played indoors.
A lone piper in church shouldn’t be a problem.The* tune* for “Amazing Grace” shouldn’t be problematic. And a lone piper would not be too overwhelming indoors.
When my sister was in High School, she played the Bagpipes. So when she got married, there were some pipers who played outside the Church after she and her husband were married. It was really cool. :extrahappy:In my family, weddings and funerals typically include bagpipes as one leaves the church – being “piped out of the church” was Da’s expression. Bagpipers also lead the procession to the gravesite. Don’t think I would want to have bagpipes inside a building . . . The sound is much more appealing when it has room to “soar.” Otherwise, tends to sound like someone is irritating a cat . . .
You sound like my mom (who is Irish-Scottish), she wants a good ol’ fashioned Irish wake, I’m sure which would include bagpipes.The Uilleann pipes would be OK in a small church but I see no problem with the great pipes in my Cathedral parish. As a son of Alba and Hibernia, I want pipes at my funeral. A lament would be fine on the way to the gravesite but when my body is placed in the ground, I want a jig. As a native New Orleanian, I could do this with a brass band, as we do the same thing. “Just a Closer Walk with Thee” to the cemetery and dancing back to joyous music. And then to the food to celebrate my life.I have always been raised to believe that we Irish mourn when a babe is born into this vale of tears but we rejoice when the soul goes Home.