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PetraG
Guest
If it weren’t appropriate to have a guitar in church, there would have been no guitar in church, organ or no organ.
OK, you have found something that I know absolutely next to nothing about, I didn’t know it was that involved. Thanks for clarifying.How in the world could it cost that much to move an organ? Purchase, perhaps. But move?
You and me–I remember when the news of this acquisition came out. The good news is that all it will need is an inexpensive annual cleaning until some of the leather parts need replacement in about 60 years. (They already employ a music director who is an accomplished organist.)OK, you have found something that I know absolutely next to nothing about, I didn’t know it was that involved. Thanks for clarifying.
Luckily we are in an age when documentation, communication and education for the sake of the craft are easier than in the past.Organ repairmen are also getting rarer.
Within the ranks of volunteer musicians, people who have learned guitar at the level of strumming a limited number of chords are more common than, say, pianists who do accompaniment when their mastery of the instrument is at such a rudimentary level. It is a good thing they’ll step in, though, because there aren’t a lot of churches that are better when asked to sing a capella than they are when asked to sing with a guitarist who hasn’t advanced in the art yet. (Which is to say, with a guitarist the people will at least sing something.)Guitar does not equal rock.
I am always happy to be corrected so please show me in the CCC where it states what musical instruments are to be used or not used.No but the Church does have teachings as to preferences, at least as concerned an organ.
The special place of the pipe organ in the musical tradition of the Roman Rite is written in the Church’s Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy, Sacrosanctum Concilium.I am always happy to be corrected so please show me in the CCC where it states what musical instruments are to be used or not used.
Remember a Church teaching is something that Catholics are bound by.