as well as that of light or loud instruments
and even worse, ignored.
I really just have a hard time understanding how something from 1903 is no longer relevant because of A. its age or B. because it was unpopular with the persons responsible for drafting the GIRM, so #393 appeared for the sake of changing it.
A later law abrogates a former law or derogates from it if it expressly states so, if it is directly contrary to it, or if it entirely re-orders the subject matter of the former law; but a universal law in no way derogates from a particular or special law unless the law itself expressly provides otherwise.
As you can tell, I have a HUGE problem with the use of piano in church. I am forced to incorporate it at two of our four Masses and it sets a HORRIBLE tone for the liturgy, no matter how "sacred" it can be made to be.
...and Fr. Krisman's very informative post.Like many documents from earlier times, it is not being ignored. It has been superseded by later documents from competent ecclesiastical authorities. GIRM is our current set of regulations by the USCCB, the competent authority on the liturgy. Rome controlled liturgy much more closely at that earlier time. Now that authority has been delegated to the conferences of bishops.
Go forth, wail, gnash teeth, and rend garments while in sackcloth and ashes. LOL.
the outright assertion that the piano IS NOT AND NEVER CAN BE an appropriately Sacred instrument is ridiculous.
Perhaps my feelings stem from the fact that I am in a very acoustically live church that can seat 800-900 people with a small Yamaha grand. (I very much dislike the sound of Yamaha pianos.) In my experience, the congregation immediately shifts their focus toward singing and toward the Mass with the organ, whereas the piano typically elicits a much more casual atmosphere far less centered on the liturgy. Maybe it's my playing. Who knows?
The problem is that while the organ is sacred by default, the piano requires a deliberately sacred way of playing in order to function well in liturgy.
You could also just smash it.
I have never heard "Shout to the Lord"
sometimes you've just got to work with what you've got
Or, in other words, "you gotta love the one you're with"?
Not being a very good pianist to begin with, I couldn't do the fancy stuff, which worked out well.
I dont believe there is any instrument on which Bach cannot be performed
Was specifically referencing the organ. I would enjoy listening to Bach on any organ, even a theatre organ.
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