The traditionalist seeking to eliminate the guitar has a lot of ground to cover in establishing that the general population of Catholics in our country considers the guitar "suitable for secular music only" in light of its widespread usage in Catholic parishes...I suggest rather that this paragraph is referring to harmonicas, kazoos, and accordions (joke instruments in our culture, by and large) and the sort of techno/computer synthesized instrumentation that accompanies pop music and is in fact considered by everyone to be suitable for entertainment purposes only.
It would be a poor idea legally to impose chant on people not culturally prepared to worship with it.
I do, however, think the culture needs to be changed to the point where the music played at mass, regardless of genre, has a clear sacred sound to it that is distinguishable from pop music. We face a long road ahead of us in this regard, and I think progress needs to come from slowly introducing good music and having Catholics experience it in a positive manner.
It seems beyond dispute that we are the heirs of a Church that has been quite willfully culturally shattered beyond repair. This is the work of most of the bishops and priests who came home from the council, thumbed their noses at its lofty verba, and went to work. Their heirs continue the work. And Rome? Rome did nothing and does nothing. Absolutely nothing.
where was the corollary to this assertion after the council when sacro- and folk this that and the other were shovelled into our churches and imposed upon the worship of people not culturally prepared to worship with it?
Also, copying links from a search result can have some glitches, because Google sometimes abbreviates the link for display purposes. Those abbreviated display URLs may not work
...would take much, much, much convincing...
Like other kinds of simulacra, the trend now is to refer to the real thing as an 'acoustical' such and such, as opposed to an 'electric' or 'digital' such and such, as if by doing so one had asserted that they are both equal but merely different versions of the same thing. They aren't. The laws of physics, due to the difference of sound source and production, forbid it. One is fake, the other isn't. It is good that, in the case of electric guitar simulacra, no one is claiming that they sound the same. It's pretty obvious that one is the beautiful sound of a real guitar, and the other is an unholy something else altogether.
Whatever their merits as religious music, none of these is liturgical, as understood by the Catholic Church.
liturgical OR simply religious
I am open to persuasion (I think)
Yet, this is primarily how amplification of an electric guitar works. There is a small microphone on an electric guitar which picks up the faint sound and then send it to an amplifier or a sound board. In the case of electric guitarists who plug strait into the sound board, the original sound of the guitar is played through the speakers in the same manner that the original sound of the choir is played through the speakers.
Do you insist that all church organs be completely mechanical and have no electronics in them at all?
sacred popular music
Yes, he does.
Surely you jest with us ;-) There are churches one simply has to make the best of, but the substitute isn't the same as 'acoustical' singing. But let me change tack before I end up calling St Peter's Basilica a simulacrum of a church.Surely one would not make the argument the microphone amplification of a choir is replacing the real sound with a fake one.
By no means an electric guitar expert, but I always thought electric guitar pick-ups worked via magnetism—they are not microphones. A quick search turned up:
http://soundcalledmusic.com/electric-guitars/
Charles! 'He does not!' You do me a disservice. While I would not squawk like some at a totally mechanical instrument, I am far from opposed to electronic blowers, direct electric action, combination actions and other 'conveniences', so long as the sound source and its means of activation remain inviolate, which is the 'bottom line' absent which there is no organ at all.
Surely one would not make the argument the microphone amplification of a choir is replacing the real sound with a fake one.
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