I've only been choir director for a year now and I recently had a high school boy approach me saying he wants to play his sax in our choir.
Let him play something adapted from the classical repertory with the organ as a voluntary before mass, at the offertory, or at the communions...
One wouldn't want this to become habitual, nor allow the inevitable shift of mental focus to the saxophone and its native milieu rather than the text that was being sung.
It has been my experience that much clamor for the piano over the organ is the result of this: some people just want to hear the piano sound, and aren't interested in what is being sung.
It seems like you need to decide whether beginning instrumentalists need to have a place in your church choir.
instruments and styles of composition which have grown up to serve the profane (i.e., "outside the temple"), should be left outside the temple.
The only saxophone, IMHO, that could, could participate with less discord would be the soprano.
What is the key issue? Saxes don't play well with others.
The difficulty in controlling them is one of the reasons the instrument hasn't been wholly accepted into classical music.
It hasn't, however, been accepted into the symphony orchestra for some strange reason,
it doesn't blend well
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