J
jclangfo
Guest
The guitar has become a common instrument at mass across the U.S, and its appropriateness has been hotly debated. I suggest that much of the controversy is a result of bad guitar playing and that the guitar is capable of sounding sacred. I think that we need to insist that guitar players are qualified before we let them play for mass and educate people on how the guitar can be used to sound sacred. This includes:
-outlining the melody on the guitar using some finger picking rather than strumming the whole way through
-when strumming, be subtle and support the singer, not overpower them
-Use sustain and clean channels on the electric guitar to model how the organ produces a continuous sound
Silent Night was written for the guitar. Sacred guitar is doable, we just need to educate people!
Here’s a post I wrote about this that goes into greater detail, and also discusses how the church documents on the liturgy support appropriate contemporary music.
contemporaryorthodoxy.weebly.com/blog/guitar-in-liturgical-music
-outlining the melody on the guitar using some finger picking rather than strumming the whole way through
-when strumming, be subtle and support the singer, not overpower them
-Use sustain and clean channels on the electric guitar to model how the organ produces a continuous sound
Silent Night was written for the guitar. Sacred guitar is doable, we just need to educate people!
Here’s a post I wrote about this that goes into greater detail, and also discusses how the church documents on the liturgy support appropriate contemporary music.
contemporaryorthodoxy.weebly.com/blog/guitar-in-liturgical-music
