The rules are spelled out in the 1958 instruction:ditto the First –day votive Masses or feasts or communion outside of the Mass
In Matters Liturgical, Wuest interprets the restriction as applying equally when the Office is not de tempore. The Ceremoniale enumerates the feasts of Ss. Mathias, Thomas Aquinas, Gregory the Great, Joseph, and the Annunciation "et similibus" as days celebrated with solemnity during Advent and Lent. The organ may be played and the altar decorated with flowers on the occasion of a First Communion of children even during Lent (S.R.C. 3448). If nuptial Masses are permitted during Advent and Lent, that also constitutes an occasion of (extraordinary?) solemnity. But third-class votive Masses for monthly devotions? Probably not!on holy days of obligation, and holidays (except Sundays), on the feasts of the principal local patron saint, the titular day, and the dedication anniversary of the local church, the titular or founder’s day of a religious congregation, and on the occasion of some extraordinary solemnity
In accordance with tradition, the organ should remain silent during penitential seasons (Lent and Holy Week), during Advent and Liturgy for the dead. When, however, there is real pastoral need, the organ can be used to support the singing.
What do you mean by "insisting on 1962"? You either follow the rubrics and legislation that pertain to your rite or you don't.Local Ordinaries may determine more precisely the application of these prohibitions, and permissions according to the approved local or regional customs.
We’ll be having a bongo drum, two guitars lightly strumming, and a clarinet on each Sunday of Lent, following the octavos we recently bought from a major publisher that advised us our celebrations would be incomplete without them.
Oh dear. Talk about getting lost in the minutia.We even used to get so legalistic as to not allow a pitch pipe.
We’ll be having a bongo drum, two guitars lightly strumming, and a clarinet on each Sunday of Lent, following the octavos we recently bought from a major publisher that advised us our celebrations would be incomplete without them.
I hope we dont get any funerals during Lent.
I will hazard the following thoughts:Since the use of organ during penitential seasons causes such dispute, I often wonder why?
Half of U.S. adults can’t read a book written at the 8th-grade level.
— Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
V2 did I struct composers to expand the treasury of sacred music. It is natural for each generation to want to leave its mark.It seems to me that there is a real human impulse here that should be formally embraced.
The requiem is one area where I bend the rules, because it can be deeply uncomfortable for people who are really grieving hard, to have to sit and listen to someone sobbing. So I will lightly cover that up. I will also take the opportunity to play those chant melodies which, for whatever reason, cannot be sung. That way there is an echo of the proper music, even if it is not fully manifest.I have always felt bad that I cannot play the organ during Lent or the Requiem.
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