On a day trip to Salzburg, we bought tickets for a tour of the dome church which included a 30-minute concert on the organ of the dome. It turned out that the dome church does not just have one organ but a total of five – built a different time reflecting the way music was made and played over a span of centuries. A young organist presented the concert, and it was setup to introduce three of the five organs – two of the columnar instruments and the main organ high up on the balcony of the main church. It was an interesting task since the organist had to descend to the church floor in between the pieces and move to the new instrument – the farthest being probably almost 300 feet away and many steps up! She played from sheet music staged on the holder above the keys. The way the musician was seated one could see the movement of her feet over the pedalboards, which requires quiet some range of movement – the choice of music, the atmosphere of the building and its decoration and also the formal dress of the organist all was conducive to project you back in time into the 17th and 18th centuries. And then as the organist got ready to play the second piece, she pulled out her cell phone and compared notes on the setting of the registers of the organ with the physical state of the instrument – making some adjustments. The phone vanished into her pocket and the piece started. Yet a dash of technology had pierced the centuries preceding ours!