The roles of psalmist and cantor are different, the role of psalmist is the one you have accepted. Song leadership is best done by the organ*, but it is not a charism posessed by everyone who can play the organ well. There is helpful advice in this series Do it Rite by Fr Anthony Ruff OSB (they are listed here in reverse order).Finally, the cantor may serve as psalmist, leading and proclaiming the verses of the Responsorial Psalm.
IMHO an important point of liturgy is that the congregational responses acclamations and songs should be familiar. In other words: the Ordinary is the people's part, and the Common responses. You can, and may need to, ask the congregation to take on the role of choir, in part or whole, but in so far as you do they need direction just as the choir would.When, however, a congregation is singing very familiar responses, acclamations, or songs that do not include verses for the cantor alone, the cantor need not be visible.
Why is an altar boy giving you directives?
Because Father instructed so?
Similar to how I sometimes send one of my kids to tell the other kids something.
That has been my experience too.People actually sang more when they knew it was all up to them.
That being said, there is one large, newer church in town so acoustically dead that microphones are required.
Is a renovation project in order in this building, such that this parish become acoustically live and thus microphone free?
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