Your question is like this one: "Why can't I confess my sins to a picture of my parish priest?"
93. Recorded music lacks the authenticity provided by a living liturgical assembly gathered for the Sacred Liturgy. While recorded music might be used advantageously outside the Liturgy as an aid in the teaching of new music, it should not, as a general norm, be used within the Liturgy.
94. Some exceptions to this principle should be noted. Recorded music may be used to accompany the community’s song during a procession outside and, when used carefully, in Masses with children. Occasionally, it might be used as an aid to prayer, for example, during long periods of silence in a communal celebration of reconciliation. However, recorded music should never become a substitute for the community’s singing.
when used carefully, in Masses with children.
when used carefully, in Masses with children
'What an insult to children!'
Occasionally, it might be used as an aid to prayer, for example, during long periods of silence in a communal celebration of reconciliation.
This was ALSO poor judgement, and had everything to do with saving money and nothing to do with giving God our best. Down with the simulacrum!There was a belief early on that this meant a prohibition on electronic musical instruments such as the Hammond Organ, but this was later clarified that electronic instruments designed to imitate the pipe organ were permissible.
A simulacrum (plural: simulacra from Latin: simulacrum, which means "likeness, similarity"), is a representation or imitation of a person or thing.[1] The word was first recorded in the English language in the late 16th century, used to describe a representation, such as a statue or a painting, especially of a god. By the late 19th century, it had gathered a secondary association of inferiority: an image without the substance or qualities of the original.[2] Philosopher Fredric Jameson offers photorealism as an example of artistic simulacrum, where a painting is sometimes created by copying a photograph that is itself a copy of the real.[3]... wiki
...the answer should be obvious to anyone with an ounce of intuition, cultural maturity, and understanding of the sacred act.... Listening or singing to recorded music in church at mass is the clueless act of a culturally dead and spiritually impoverished people - people, that is, to whom the answer is not obvious... perhaps even incomprehensible.
What's wrong with having an organ play hymns automatically using MIDI?
To whom he said: I say to you, that if these shall hold their peace, the
stones will cry out. Luke 19:40
God desires that His real creatures praise Him, worship Him, glorify Him. A machine cannot do any of that.
If it were to be used only, say, in the form of a monitor speaker to help the schola to chant; or even an earbud for a cantor, I could see that as tolerable in very limited circumstances. Even in this circumstance it should be such that only the vocals are audible to the congregation, recorded music should never be "played" as part of the liturgy, but in some exigent circumstance its use to aid the singers in some minimal fashion might be forgivable.
'...then be prepared to pay real gambists and lutenists the next time you do the Monteverid vespers.'
I do agree that lipsynching to a recording is, generally, a very bad idea, and should be avoided.
'sounds like a piano (organ, etc) because it is a piano' and 'sounds like a piano but isn't one'
Now, if you wish to invent an instrument whose sounds are electronically or digitally produced, whose sounds are new and unique to that instrument, and wish to call this instrument, say, an Hgronth, I will grant you its legitimacy and will admire the artistry of Hgronthists. Otherwise, what we are talking about is sophisticated synthesisers, simulacra.
A boy soprano and a mature female soprano are neither the same instrument nor the same sound.
(W)e are here speaking of deception, even, often, outright lies (which is sin), not of admirable artistic accomplishment. Which leads, further, to the fundamental fact of the laws of physics, namely, that a sound electronically (or, ahem, should I say 'digitally'?) produced cannot possibly sound just 'like' one produced by vibrating strings or columns of disturbed air in a pipe. This is not physically possible. The immutable laws of physics forbid it. One is left inescapably with, if you will, a computerised (digital?) copy of the Mona Lisa which would fool the elect. With or without the necessary fools, it is a fake, and its maker a charlatan.
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