VI. Organ and instruments15. Although the music proper to the Church is purely vocal music, music with the accompaniment of the organ is also permitted. In some special cases, within due limits and with proper safeguards, other instruments may be allowed, but never without the special permission of the Ordinary, according to prescriptions of the Caeremoniale Episcoporum.
16. As the singing should always have the principal place, the organ or other instruments should merely sustain and never oppress it.
17. It is not permitted to have the chant preceded by long preludes or to interrupt it with intermezzo pieces.
18. The sound of the organ as an accompaniment to the chant in preludes, interludes, and the like must be not only governed by the special nature of the instrument, but must participate in all the qualities proper to sacred music as above enumerated.
19. The employment of the piano is forbidden in church, as is also that of noisy or frivolous instruments such as drums, cymbals, bells and the like.
20. It is strictly forbidden to have bands play in church, and only in special cases with the consent of the Ordinary will it be permissible to admit wind instruments, limited in number, judiciously used, and proportioned to the size of the placeprovided the composition and accompaniment be written in grave and suitable style, and conform in all respects to that proper to the organ.
21. In processions outside the church the Ordinary may give permission for a band, provided no profane pieces be executed. It would be desirable in such cases that the band confine itself to accompanying some spiritual canticle sung in Latin or in the vernacular by the singers and the pious associations which take part in the procession.
Except when they weren't, which is indeed the case with some of them, which were always intended as concert works.certainly orchestral Masses were intended for liturgical use by their composers
Except when they weren't, which is indeed the case with some of them, which were always intended as concert works.
Gotta love the old "the extra 15 seconds it takes to sing the Paternoster is unacceptable, but I'm going to ramble-preach for 30 minutes with no coherent point" approach.
Indeed it was! Mozart's Missa Brevis in D, K. 194, which is actually shorter than some of the a cappella polyphonic Masses we do. We had originally planned it for Easter of 2020, but then there was this new virus. The two epistle sonatas got off to a rough start, but I was pleased with the Mass itself, even more so the psalm we did at the offertory. The rehearsal recording is better, in my opinion, because of both mic placement and an empty church, but the Mass itself is also on YouTube. The music was very well received, and I think the Mass made quite an impression on the hired instrumentalists.An orchestral Mass was just sung this last week at Mater Misericordiae in Phoenix -- a First Mass of Thanksgiving for a new priest of the Fraternity.
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