Not only are pipe organs the _size_ of buildings, they _are_ the buildings. The church is the supporting structure and resonating chamber of the organ, making it a vital piece of the instrument itself. I just find that crazy. The church AND the instrument counts as one organ.
Kind of a metaphor for Yahuah's spirit -- the hebrew word for His spirit is ruach=breath. Since we are the temple of His spirit, then He is our breath when we are reconciled to Him through His son. Just like an organ in the temporal church building. HallaluYAH!
I know someone who owns a retired church organ that he rebuilt and uses for practice. The size of that thing is bonkers, it filled a semi truck when it was disassembled, and it's still a tiny fraction of the size of that beast.
Wow! Has he ever tried gigging with it? Haha And that’s a great topic for a video if I could find a way to pull it off, learning about the restoration process for something like that would be really fascinating
@@robscallon Well he is a touring musician, but that is definitely not the kind of gig where you have to worry about bringing your own instrument! If you want to check him out he's Jean-Baptiste Dupont, from southern France. I think it took him a couple of years to put the organ back together. I didn't get to see it happen unfortunately, but I did get to hear it play as it was being built and didn't have a console yet, so that huge machinery was comically controlled by a MIDI keyboard.
There are a few musicians I know about who did a similar thing with a Carillon - as in church tower bells mounted into a steel frame and played with fists on pegs. It can be moved, but the frame itself is usually a semi truck trailer.
im so fucking confused i watched a anthony fantano video before this and your comment glitched and showed "dont let this distract you from the fact he gave MBDTF a 6" it still says that what the fuck have you done to my phone melon man
Calling anything good an artist/art is detrimental to actual artists... That's why we are all poor and called loser by society nowdays... Anyone and anything can be an artist/art.
@@YskarAlbumLuna You sound like you just watched Ratatouille for the first time and took it way too seriously. Go outside, stop being pedantic, and quit trying to be a pseudo philosopher; It makes you look like a brooding douche. You wouldn't be able to even DEFINE "art" if it slapped you in the face with it's dick, so stop pretending that you're some intellectual.
@YskarAlbumLuna artists arent losers by societys standards, there are hundreds of artists alive today who are recognized for their work. Your art is probably shit, and combined with your thinking, it's no wonder YOU get called a loser as an artist. But dont lump in everyone else as shit while calling other people shit. How miserable can you be?
Pretty sure it started with a blade of grass held betwixt the thumbs. Then a flute. Then a series of maniacs started wondering why not try to attach several flutes together making the pan flute, then it became 30, 60, 150 and several decades later, hundreds even and possibly a lot of spirits involved someone said : i want to build a church that is half instrument, half pews.
for those wondering, the MIDI does actually record the organist's play, so he can later on review how sounds are heard from different sections of the church to optimize the experience for everyone
@@totallyfrozen in the other vid he said it'll like capture exactly what the organist does--so it can play it back exactly as the organist had. It physically plays the organ.
@@totallyfrozen See the video titled "Controlling a MASSIVE pipe organ with my computer" to find out how this organ uses MIDI. It has a hidden MIDI recorder and player and they later installed the missing wiring to get it to take MIDI as input and play the MIDI tracks through the organs.
agreed. I'm sure the bitter organists are the ones who are stuck playing digital pipe organs. It takes true passion to be so happy to share everything about the instrument they can
The OG synthesizer. Aside from the tremendous size, the fact that organs can essentially morph any sound they create in nearly infinite variation is basically the definition of a synthesizer. So pimp
@@fishingwithleaches They are a lot like a synthesizer. Are they pumping out a raw electrical signal that is manipulated by envelopes and filters? No… Certainly not… but your thinking here is extremely limited.
broazrael1234 I mean.. I guess it would be just like a piano except you have to take into consideration that it might be delayed in some areas because of the size.
@@Hyzian Take it from someone that used to install and repair organs for a living. Yes, you do tune a pipe organ! You tediously tune each and every pipe individually. In this case, that would be several thousand pipes, scattered throughout the building.
I absolutely adore feeling the vibration of the sound hitting my body. When I was a little kid, my mom would take me to church, a neo-gothic structure with a big pipe organ that was played by an organist that loved to play it LOUD.
@TheCrimsonIdol987 I actually loved it. I love the feeling of the vibration of the music going right through my chest. It's like being at a rock concert! And this is a memory from very early childhood. It was the only thing I really liked about going to church.
@armedwithjello My wife when she used to be a home help aid for older folks had a client who was a total boss. He was the main organist for the Presbyterian church in our city's downtown area, and they had an older building that had a pipe organ put in it. She LOVED listening to him play that organ like a total boss, because that's what he did his whole life. He sadly passed away, but he was amazing.
I love how they were playing it low and soft, like elevator music. I can just see it on church day, as people file in and sit, then the signal from the back as the service is ready to start, kick the baffles open, open it up hit one of those big massive chord combinations and progressions..... "Ladies and gentlemen. God has entered the building." 🤣🤣🤣
When looking for a someone to play the organ in your cathedral, it would be pretty sensible to make sure that they're decent and nice - you don't want to put some scumbag asshole in charge of *_that much_* power and noise . . .
@@saurabhsonic something tells me this guy wouldn't abandon his office and then come back weeks later feeling all entitled to tell everyone to get to work while lying to his boss making him think he was at work those weeks and weeks he was gone.. Also expecting the rest of the office to lie for him.. I could go on, Andy was kind of a total douche in a way... And in another way he was like the nicest dude ever.
Im his big toe and he feeds me once a week.. its kinda bad down here in my room... all the time in the shoe.. but at least i get to swim and play on the bed at night.. sometimes when hes asleep so deeply he won't wake up easily i sneak up his leg and crawl into his buttocks hole and i get the most amazing sleep of my life.
I do too. I'd love to see a similar video of two people touring the inside of an organ and then playing the hymn tune FOREST GREEN, my most favorite tune in the world.
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.......
My dad passed away a few years ago, but he spent his life working with pipe organs. He worked building organs at a company in CT, and later ran his service business, maintaining pipe organs all over New England. He knew pipe organs inside and out, he rebuilt them, moved them, tuned them, restored them, and even pioneered using midi integration in traditional organ consoles so VST instruments can be used through speakers in conjunction with the real pipes, recording key strokes, as well as storing stop settings. Thanks for your video, it brings so many fond memories climbing around pipe organs with my dad.
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.🌻
@@purebliss2669 We don't need your medieval bullshit. Putting a threat of eternal torment of they don't behave isn't love, it's totalitarianism. Think about it. Nobody should need magic thinking in the age of science. Your God used to be pulled out as a joker card to explain most of the incomprehensible things that happened, today, science has explained and thoroughly proved by experimental means and mathematics that all events are results of physics and entropy, period. Religion has done enough damage already and it's way overdue that people open their eyes and see that therens no proof or even slight evidence of an afterlife, there is no God whichever one you were forced into as a child and this is your only shot at making something good. Stop wasting your time at church and do stuff. And if you feel like helping others, remember that this feeling comes from YOU because you're a social creature and you want your surroundings not to be a shitty, sad and poor and you don't need a threat of eternal torture in hellfire to be good.
I really love how there is no interruptions the expert talks and everyone listens, that’s always something that annoys me is when a host wants to try and talk over the person trying to explain their instrument or whatever it is
This is true for this particular organ and most medium to large organs. The lowest note (C0) is produced by a 32 foot pipe, and the pipe for the highest note (C9) is only 1/16 feet. Some organs may play a few semitones higher. Smaller organs generally have C1 as the lowest note (lowest C note on a standard piano), sounded by a 16 foot pipe, as there is usually no space for pipes extending to 32 foot.
John was my organ teacher for three years. I had the wonderful opportunity to be the “Organ Scholar” at Fourth Pres. this past year, which allowed me to play this amazing instrument every week. Glad to see John and the organ getting the recognition they deserve!!
My step uncle tuned and preserved organs. I was involved in dismantling one in an old church in Tacoma WA. This thing was immense. I had no idea before that day just how incredible these instruments are. Even the woodwork was masterful. All Done by hand. I left with an appreciation, for my uncle as well and his dedication to preserving these masterpieces. Thought I'd share. Thanks for this video. Peace my friends
@@spartz117 most likely it was dismantled to be moved and reinstalled. It's alright if the building it's in is being abandoned or the instrument is no longer in use. I would rather the instrument be moved them left to rot.
Yeah, I gave up on trying to tune my G-string. The tauter the string got, the more worried I became that I wasn't going to be able to keep my guts inside any more...
Organs are such a fascinating instrument to me. They're so complex and involved. It can emit incredibly powerful & calming sounds, even sound like other instruments, all controlled and played by a single person.
If you're ever in Salt Lake City, they do tours of the old pipe organ in the Tabernacle on Temple Square and sometimes they even have free concerts. It's usually church music, but if you catch a taping of Music and the Spoken Word they usually do at least one classical piece. I got to see the organist doing this one piece where it looked like he was dancing on the foot pedals because his feet were moving so much and so quickly. It used to be the third largest organ in the world, but I don't know if it still is.
@@rileymarth6824 Yep, churches have often been the impetus for the creation of the arts - not only because the subject matter tends to pull such strong feelings and thoughts out of people, but also because churches (especially the Catholic church) often were the patrons who commissioned the work from the artists.
I LOVE how this man not only has a smile on his face when he explains and plays his instrument of choice, but that he lights up when he sees Rob just noodling around and seeing the joy of the instrument take over someone yet again. Just from a 3rd person perspective, instead of a 1st. I feel like he must have done and felt the same way Rob did, hitting that much closer to home.
I'd like to see the inside of an organ in (undisclosed location) where I live. When churches reopen I will ask my organic friend to please give me a tour of the inside of the organ. And then I'd ask him to play hymn #398 while I am inside the organ so I can see the pipes move. I Sing the Almighty Power of God, tune "Forest Green", the best melody ever composed. Yes, I would love to be inside a pipe organ while someone plays the "Forest Green" tune. I love pipe organs and I love "Forest Green".💚🧡💖🎼
@@claireforestgreenorgangeek7882 Not to be *that* guy,...but you would blow your eardrums out and cause some actual lasting damage if you played an organ like this, whilst inside it. Please, live your dream, explore the precarious inners of said organ. Hell, move the shutters open and closed while in there. Just PLEASE make sure only ONE person has permission to touch to keys, and that *that* person is with you while you're inside it.
Thats a real musician for you! They want to share the joy of music =) expecially if this spark of joy comes from an instrument that not a lot of people consider playing. Our Music director in our church took hours to explain our pipe organ to the kids in our congregation just in the hope that 1 of them might stick aroud to want to learn this beautiful instrument. I think if you're that pationat for music and the instrument you're playing you just want to share that passion and you're just happy if you can see someone else infected with that spark. I started to learn the pipe organ myself so I did not really learn new stuff in this video but I enjoyed watching it so much just because of all the fun everyone was having! Makes me want to go to my church and start playing again
My mom was an amazing organist for over 50 years. She played a very similar instrument as this one. I get very emotional when I hear organ music. After she passed, I was in England in various cathedrals. Each time the organ was being played. The 2 other times I was there, I never heard them play. It was like her spirit was there playing just for me.
I've been playing the organ for 13 years now. 'Mine' is obvs not as big and powerful, but what I love about this instrument is how you really play a whole room. When I hit the lower notes I can hear the window panes moving and feel the wood around me vibrating with the sound. I love experimenting, playing pop songs, meditating with the music. And it feels like I hold so much power in being able to produce such forceful sounds and playing the 'Queen of instruments'.
Well actually this is not a fully analog instrument anymore. Most of modern organs have a digital pult and there is a datalink to the pipe house, where you have digital actuators, that control the wind.
@@dermozart80 While some church organs aren't fully analogue (due to price of maintenance resulting in the shift), this one would be still considered fully analogue, as they are still using every single pipe for every single sound, versus substituting for an electronically produced sound. Organs that also use an "enhanced" control board versus the typical control board of older organ models also could still be considered analogue, as the board is only actuating, while the pipes and physical system itself is still doing what it would have been doing before (but with more efficiency)
I watched the entire video with a giant smile on my face that my cheeks hurt. it is... just magnificent, ablosutely magnificent. One of the best things humans ever made.
Yes it is, right along with the glass armonica and the glass violin....as a child I got to play on the pipe organ at our church us kids all loved the sounds it made.
I remember being 10 years old, in church, looking over at the organist and being amazed at what he was doing. So I just straight out asked him "could you teach me that?" Skip ahead to now and I've been taking organ lessons for 8 years. Amazing feeling when you get to pull out all the stops.
Silent Gloves he said design, meaning when it was created. Although it was a process. At the beginning it weren’t that big, bet they kept growing as the churches were build bigger in the gothic age
@@herbienbrian2 Though about 25% of the original pipes were refurbished, the rest of the organ is brand new, built by Quimby Pipe Organs in 2015. The previous organ was completely removed do to its poor condition. Even the console was replaced with an entirely new console. Information can be found here: www.fourthchurch.org/music/organ/index.html
I finally realized why it’s called an Organ. It’s literally the organs of the building in which it lies. In this case being a church and it’s absolutely beautiful.
@@bcc5701 Romans 10:9-10 "That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved." And please follow God's commands too, before it's too late 🙏
No. "The word organ is derived from the Ancient Greek ὄργανον (órganon),[17] a generic term for an instrument or a tool,[18] via the Latin organum, an instrument similar to a portative organ used in ancient Roman circus games. " en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_organ#History_and_development
AHHHH THIS IS MY SPOTTTT I was a teen in recovery and was cold outside one day downtown and decided to walk in to this same church cause I heard crazy music coming from inside ! It was just the organist warming up so it sounded kind of like chaotic noise but it was amazing I'd never heard nothing else like it , blew my mind. Literally changed my life. Found God n everything 🤣🙌
If you’re anywhere near this place (4th Presbyterian, Chicago).... go on a Sunday morning. Grab a hymnal & sing along. That would be quite an experience! I like this organist :)
@@theshyguy1580 Or you could donate a bunch of money to Atlantic City in Seattle to help restore the Atlantic City Boardwalk Theater Organ, the largest instrument in the world, currently under restoration. Will be finished in 2023, it's gonna be grand.
@@adityakansotiya8528 that’s WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaAAAAAAAAA give me a sec AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY to far
I really like how at 26:44 u do something that could be mildly aggressive towards the 1850 organ and then it immediately looks like he's putting you in jail
@@DevynCairns The 1921 E.M. Skinner 328 Magnum Opus organ at the Cleveland Public Auditorium in Cleveland,Ohio has almost 10,000 pipes! It cost over $120,000 dollars (which was an ass ton of money back in those days) and was paid for by John D. Rockefeller. It was the largest and finest orchestral concert Organ Ernest Skinner ever built! It’s still there to this day,but sadly it was neglected for many years. Efforts are underway to restore it. Two of the five manuals on it are fully playable. The other three are in a sad sounding state,and are not played. It is a monster of an organ. Severance Hall also in Cleveland,Ohio has an E.M. Skinner. Skinner revolutionized the American orchestral pipe organ sound,which is in many people’s opinion, is far more superior than European built organs. Ernest Skinner was a genius! The console in this video is very similar to a Skinner.
Most nowadays do, especially considering the fact that basically all organs have mixture stops with higher levels of ranks increasing the count significantly
I only just recently learned that even the organs in our local churches have hundreds, even thousands of pipes. It’s kind or sad that most people don’t even know how majestic these are. Truly the king/queen/tsar/kaiser of instruments
Wannamaker Organ in Philadelphia beats out all of them, world wide. It's seven storys tall, and has held the record since it was upgraded in 2017. It has 6 manuals, and a total of 28,750 pipes. This organ featured on this video is little. I recommend going to Wannamakers (Macy's) in Center City Philadelphia.
The ironic thing is that modern organs use MIDI to control the valves that let air into the pipes. And the source of that air is a compressor which re-fills automatically. Back in the day, all the valves were mechanically linked to the keys, which as you might expect required constant maintenance. The air was supplied in real-time by someone (usually the organist's apprentice or a boy under the church's guardianship) frantically squeezing a bellows. So with modern these additions, the organ has become much more like a synthesizer, but with an analog rather than digital sound source.
ngl you're right 'Member when RUclips had the slogan "Broadcast Yourself" back in the day and it was ordinary people broadcasting anything and everything. Makes you almost miss the days of Fred Figglehorn. Almost.
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.🌻
Actually on the original sheet it doesn t say it is for organ. It sounds good on violin also. Search for Bach Toccata on violin. Even worst than that it wasn't found through Bach's original papers but as a copy by someone and publisht 80 years after he died
I love how not only Rob laughs so hard learning how to play and having fun, but all the teachers are laughing of joy from teaching something that they have so much passion for. So wholesome.
The pipe organ is, without contest, the most glorious instrument ever conceived by the mind of mankind. Thanks for delving into this amazing work of art Rob!
Ted Archer Did you HEAR that super low low bottom register note? No? That's because it was so subsonically low it can only be FELT....so, it TOTALLY djents!
How overwhelming and divine such an organ still sounds, imagine hearing this a few hundreds of years or even one hundred years ago. Before electrically let alone digitally enhanced amplified sound. Mind-blowing powerful. - edit: that blown-pun was not intended, nevermind, I'll let myself out -
My friend has a small organ in his basement. It’s interesting in that it has 6 real stops and 24 synth stops, it’s very strange. The 6 real stops are vox Humana, trombone, trumpet, violin, cello, and viola, the rest i felt they could get away with synthesizing in the late 1980s. It’s very strange cause it has amplifier output meters and a pressure gauge and a vacuum gauge. It’s weird.
I was complaining that my guitar was too loud bc i know i have neighbours so i cant play late... This video made me glad i didnt choose the pipe organ as my instrument of choice
The building IS a part of the instrument. This organ sounds great in the stone church. Imagine how they sound in an old wooden church where the sound isn’t just reverberating off the walls but is vibrating them?
Even in stone churches, you ARE vibrating even the stones when you play an organ there. Talk about feeling a sense of power when you can make that happen.
I had no idea that any of the old churches and cathedrals were so fully plumed. Such beauty in form and function, the whole massive machine . Thank you for this. Our world is an unending bounty of profound amazement and you fellas all did a great job at capturing for me, the gloriousness of the pipe organ!
I was passing by Grace Cathedral in San Francisco one Saturday and heard the organist practicing. I went inside and stood in the middle of the cathedral to listen. It was incredible. Earth-shaking lows and ethereal highs. Given that many churches were design in part to showcase the organ and compliment it, the organist really is in a sense playing the church.
I had a massive smile on my face all the way trough this video, amazing showcase of an amazing instrument. But where is the link in the description to where I can buy one ;)
If you've got $1,000,000+ to burn, there's plenty of organ makers that'd work for you to build an organ close to that size. Definitely among the most expensive, if not the most expensive instrument to buy.
@@Bragituba This Organ's restoration was 3 millions alone... Can't imagine you'd get close to half that size at all for a million brand new... The local church here had their pipe organ restored in 1991 for 100 000$ and it's about a tenth the size of this one...
@@adelphus515 The Letourneau organ at CSU in Legacy Hall was about $1.5 million brand new, and it has a little over half that number of pipes. Considering the age of the organ in this video, I'm not surprised it costs that much to maintain. Especially if part of the organ is over 100 years old at this point. I made sure to put $1,000,000+ because I wasn't entirely sure what market value is for different organ manufacturers coupled with historical value.
After playing keyboards all my life, in 2020 I played on a church organ for the first time in my life. Crazy experience. The whole church trembling under my feet. Chills all the time!
You will find it even more interesting if you'll go for a service or sometimes these churches do organ recitals. There is no way to compare a video of the organ to actually hearing one in the flesh.
The funny thing is that the largest pipe organ in North America used to be in the old Chicago stadium. They didn't move it to the United Center because they claimed it would cost too much money. Cheap Skates
Is one player even enough? It's crazy how such an instrument came to be, even hundreds of years ago. It's truly the original Synthesizer. And it moves a lot of air.
My foster father worked and retired from Shantz Pipe Organ. He was a toner/finisher of the pipes and pipe organ after it is installed. His main duty was to give the finished pipe that was made its initial sound and tone. I was able to learn some of his work and actually have some pipes out there that I had made go toot toot for there very first time. His secondary duty was to go to where the pipe organ was installed and do all of the final tuning and adjustments to the pipe organ giving its final home its sound and life. I learned how they were built from the raw materials to the finished product in its new home. They had their own smelting areas to melt the metals needed for the pipes and would pour the molten metal into the molds to create the sheets of metal in various thicknesses that were later cut and shaped by hand into the pipes themselves. They have an area where the wood pipes are built as well. They also have an area where the consoles were built. Then they had a special area where they built each section of the pipe organ to make sure that things all matched to the blueprints and tested out each section to make sure it worked properly before tearing it all down and packing it away for shipping. I also had many opportunities to see other pipe organs from the small home practice ones to the largest theater pipe organs. I had the opportunity to actual help restore and rebuild pipe organs as well. The saddest accomplishment was when I was helping to remove the pipe organ from the Minneapolis Civic Auditorium prior to its destruction to be rebuilt. They claimed they were going to put the pipe organ back in the new building but still to this day that has not been done. It sits in the warehouse in many boxes and crates that were custom built to house the various components. The largest pipe I could crawl down inside of it. Pipe organs are the most fascinating instruments every created by humans. Sadly far to many are being ton apart and never rebuilt or replaced and these majestic instruments are fading away.
That’s incredible! Since pipe organs aren’t portable, they aren’t as popular as they deserve. Thanks for sharing your experience. I’m a bit jealous. LOL! What a unique experience your had with your dad. 👍🏻
@@totallyfrozen ... I used to get out of school and walk to Shantz Pipe Organ and go into my foster fathers work section and I would sit there and we would chat away as he made the pipes speak their first notes. I forget where it is but he had taken me to see a HUGE tracker pipe organ and I was able to crawls around inside of the chambers and see how it all came together to function. A part of that trip was for him to tune the organ and I was the one that held the keys as he tuned the pipes. The most fascinating aspect to me back then and still today is seeing the trackers from the console to the chambers all hidden under the floors of the stage. In Milwaukee there was a pizza joint called Pizza and Pipes. The main feature was it had a huge restored theater pipe organ in there and they had different people come in to play throughout the week. All of the pipes were in chambers that had windows so you could see all of the pipe. All of the extra instruments were placed all around the place and you could see them in action as they were being played. The largest of the wood pipes were on the outside of the chambers laying on their sides. You could sit on them and feel them vibrate They even had a mini disco ball and other lighting to set a great atmosphere for the songs. That place was packed every night. Most of the organs in the churches were fairly boring at times but even those still hold a majestic feeling when played. Many churches hide it all and it takes away from the instrument in my eyes. If it wasn't for pipe organs and my foster father I more than likely would not have gained an appreciation for classical music as well. Concert Band in school had its place but it is not the same type of experience.
@Rispatha I hope these organs are never completely gone. There is no comparable instrument, and certainly not in digital form. My favourite place for birthday parties as a kid was the Organ Grinder restaurant on the Esplanade in Toronto. (It no longer exists, but was in the space now occupied by the Bier Markt. ) The centrepiece of the place was a Wurlitzer organ, which not only played the traditional pipes, but was connected to over 100 other instruments around the building such as drums, xylophones, bells, horns, and tambourines. The organist would take requests on slips of paper, and everyone sang along. It was a noisy, chaotic, gloriously joyful place. They mostly served pizza, which I recall was also pretty good. But I didn't much care what they served. It was the music that was the main attraction! I really miss that place.
as a 16 yr old organist it's really cool to see the pipe organ get more exposure beyond just the wedding march being played in rom coms. Thank you for this Rob.
More agreement from an 18 year old organist. I live in Germany, so there is a little more exposure, but not much. But we also have organs from the 18th century over here...
As a lifelong organist all I want is 2 hours on this instrument! I was not familiar with this organ builder though I have played many Aeolian Skinner organs. I lost a good part of my sight at age 58 so I’ve given up playing now. It is too frustrating and depressing to play given what I once could do. Fun to see what a non-organist will try.
I work in a factory in Portugal where we build this pipes and we send them all over the world. I see pipes in all sizes and shapes. It was really great to see how everything comes together.
My great grandpa used to tune this organ for many years from at least 1945-1975 every other Saturday. He also did the organs in Rockefeller Chapel, Orchestra Hall, and First Methodist and St. Lukes church in Evanston. Plus my great great grandpa did this as well but my grandpa doesn't know the specific years but he assumes 1930ish-1940.
really, every other saturday? I can imagine that they are kind of sensitive to changes in temperature and humidity (which, thinking of it, shouldn't happen that much in a church), but do they go out of tune that much/that fast? Or is it more of a "rolling maintenance" thing, ie. one day one section of the organ is tuned and two weeks later the next section?
@@jk9554 They don't go out of tune that fast, at least not to a point where the instrument becomes unplayable. The organ I play gets tuned twice a year, and even then, every single pipe is not tuned, just the ones that are noticeably out of tune. Sounds like the organist at this church was obsessive about intonation.
@@jk9554 They are most sensitive to humidity changes - especially the "reed" pipes - 61 of them per stop knob (at least). Rolling maintenance would render only the most recently tuned pipes "usable" while the rest would vary based on the length of time since their last tuning.
That was more than AWSOME! We have the Etsey pipe organ at First Baptist/Urban Grace in Tacoma, WA. I sat in on a tune up job 2004 was hosting a guest organist from Massachusetts..I thought that was a learning experience, Didn't hold a candle to this video! Thanks....
110 db at 1 meter is different than 110 db at 20 meters...people just think dB the wrong way, also the weighting is important...110dbA are really different than 110 dBC. 110 dB at 20 mt are WAY more than 110dB at 1mt
Not only are pipe organs the _size_ of buildings, they _are_ the buildings. The church is the supporting structure and resonating chamber of the organ, making it a vital piece of the instrument itself. I just find that crazy. The church AND the instrument counts as one organ.
Kind of a metaphor for Yahuah's spirit -- the hebrew word for His spirit is ruach=breath. Since we are the temple of His spirit, then He is our breath when we are reconciled to Him through His son. Just like an organ in the temporal church building. HallaluYAH!
it’s almost like the church is built around the instrument and not the instrument is built into the church
@@autiemuse aaaw à we we esßfh
This is stunning . How does one practice without the whole neighborhood hearing ?
@@lettuceprey23 No Chance! I once was tuning a Tuba organ stop which was actually louder than the siren of the fire department next to the church.
This is definitely the most in-depth look I've ever had at a church pipe organ. That thing is incredible.
Y is this 12 hours ago?
Cold Potato17 yea wtf
@@carlosmatosfanpage2856 patreon
lol now it's 6 months ago
I looooove it!
I know someone who owns a retired church organ that he rebuilt and uses for practice. The size of that thing is bonkers, it filled a semi truck when it was disassembled, and it's still a tiny fraction of the size of that beast.
Wow! Has he ever tried gigging with it? Haha
And that’s a great topic for a video if I could find a way to pull it off, learning about the restoration process for something like that would be really fascinating
@@robscallon Well he is a touring musician, but that is definitely not the kind of gig where you have to worry about bringing your own instrument! If you want to check him out he's Jean-Baptiste Dupont, from southern France.
I think it took him a couple of years to put the organ back together. I didn't get to see it happen unfortunately, but I did get to hear it play as it was being built and didn't have a console yet, so that huge machinery was comically controlled by a MIDI keyboard.
There are a few musicians I know about who did a similar thing with a Carillon - as in church tower bells mounted into a steel frame and played with fists on pegs. It can be moved, but the frame itself is usually a semi truck trailer.
im so fucking confused i watched a anthony fantano video before this and your comment glitched and showed "dont let this distract you from the fact he gave MBDTF a 6"
it still says that
what the fuck have you done to my phone melon man
yee lol I'm getting a comment from a sways universe clip wtf
Don't know who is the true artist here. The one who plays it, or the one who builds it. Truly amazing
Both are true artists
Or the one that tunes it! All three wow
Calling anything good an artist/art is detrimental to actual artists... That's why we are all poor and called loser by society nowdays... Anyone and anything can be an artist/art.
@@YskarAlbumLuna You sound like you just watched Ratatouille for the first time and took it way too seriously. Go outside, stop being pedantic, and quit trying to be a pseudo philosopher; It makes you look like a brooding douche. You wouldn't be able to even DEFINE "art" if it slapped you in the face with it's dick, so stop pretending that you're some intellectual.
@YskarAlbumLuna artists arent losers by societys standards, there are hundreds of artists alive today who are recognized for their work. Your art is probably shit, and combined with your thinking, it's no wonder YOU get called a loser as an artist. But dont lump in everyone else as shit while calling other people shit. How miserable can you be?
Did you see that? There is a church inside that organ.
thats crazy right!
Lol lol lol. Well put
Which organ?
@@jonahmeert482 both you just have to look closely in the building sized one
LoL
So, if the ladder breaks while you're climbing it and you fall to your death. Would your cause of death be organ failure?
@ Zach- Of course, you big silly. What alternative would suffice?
No, but I *am* going to steal this joke :-)
I thought it would be an...organized death lol
No.
Not if the fall was from a ladder. if a pipe tips over in front of you and you trip and fall to your death, well that could be called Organ failure
In all of recorded human history…how did we ever come up with this instrument? Truly awe inspiring!
Immense and intricate
The Greeks did it.
Pretty sure it started with a blade of grass held betwixt the thumbs. Then a flute. Then a series of maniacs started wondering why not try to attach several flutes together making the pan flute, then it became 30, 60, 150 and several decades later, hundreds even and possibly a lot of spirits involved someone said : i want to build a church that is half instrument, half pews.
@@Wifibee lol
Magic mushrooms, man. Gotta be. Too weird to be anything else.
"Wait! What if a building was also like, a millions horns!?"
Mushrooms for sure.
for those wondering, the MIDI does actually record the organist's play, so he can later on review how sounds are heard from different sections of the church to optimize the experience for everyone
Please explain what you mean. MIDI does not record audio. It records parameter data.
@@totallyfrozen in the other vid he said it'll like capture exactly what the organist does--so it can play it back exactly as the organist had. It physically plays the organ.
@@totallyfrozen he didn't say it recorded the audio, he said it recorded their play. It keeps track of the notes and replays them
@@totallyfrozenhe’s probably talking about MIDI 2.0
@@totallyfrozen See the video titled "Controlling a MASSIVE pipe organ with my computer" to find out how this organ uses MIDI. It has a hidden MIDI recorder and player and they later installed the missing wiring to get it to take MIDI as input and play the MIDI tracks through the organs.
You can tell this guy loves his profession
I mean it's a beautiful piece of machinery
He must though
This is by faaaaaar the most complex instrument to learn it must have taken years to even remember what all those knobs do
The organist culture is very small now, so we do take pride in what we do
Organist and former professional organ builder here, both are a lost art and we're all proud to show off and keep it alive
@@bastaudio @UCPGnlTCWc_hhJ6JkFnwTQag props to you guys for the incredible commitment
friend: so what instrument do you play? me: *church*
Jarrettastic God would be proud.
Friend: Take me to church
Jarrettastic i’m the 1000th like
HadiBuilds thank you for your service
Jarrettastic 😂
How gracious of the organist to explain and show us all every aspect of this organ. Fascinating!
s tanner It’s just so happens he’s a great guy. I’m sure there’s some jerk organists out there.
Hard to find people like that these days
agreed. I'm sure the bitter organists are the ones who are stuck playing digital pipe organs. It takes true passion to be so happy to share everything about the instrument they can
as long as the religious man is showing the internet his 'organ', and not some little kid, then its all good
That guy is awesome artist, and a very generous host to spend what probably was a whole day showing every part of that magnificent organ
The OG synthesizer. Aside from the tremendous size, the fact that organs can essentially morph any sound they create in nearly infinite variation is basically the definition of a synthesizer. So pimp
A synthesizer, by definition, has to be electronic.
I kinda get what you're saying, but I don't agree as it's nothing like a synth
@@fishingwithleaches They are a lot like a synthesizer. Are they pumping out a raw electrical signal that is manipulated by envelopes and filters? No… Certainly not… but your thinking here is extremely limited.
The process of combining multiple stops to create a new sound is literally additive synthesis!
I don't know what is more amazing. The Instrument or the people who can actually play it.
broazrael1234 I mean.. I guess it would be just like a piano except you have to take into consideration that it might be delayed in some areas because of the size.
Or perhaps the people who can build and tune this kind of Leviathan. Days of tuning. I can well believe it!
@@Monyato organs are slightly different to play but yes.
As an organist, it’s similar to piano but you have a pedal board which may be somewhat difficult for mainly just a pianist
You know what most people fail to appreciate? The people who build it. Shit is complicated!
Brb gotta go tune my organ, I'll be back next week.
More like next year
“How do you tune that thing?”
‘no’
@@Hyzian Idiot. You definitely tune an organ. Re-watch the video. The guy clearly demonstrates how you would tune an organ. Lol.
@@Hyzian Take it from someone that used to install and repair organs for a living. Yes, you do tune a pipe organ! You tediously tune each and every pipe individually. In this case, that would be several thousand pipes, scattered throughout the building.
TBH, a week of tuning won't get you very far in an organ of that dimension.
What's the range?
Diesel truck to dog whistle.
😂😂
Aftermath of bad Mexican to kicked in the nuts.
Elephants talking to 100 little girls screaming in unison on helium.
Jd Sumner to newborn mosquito
A pipe that weighs 1000 lbs.? Wow. Rollin' coal for sure.
I absolutely adore feeling the vibration of the sound hitting my body. When I was a little kid, my mom would take me to church, a neo-gothic structure with a big pipe organ that was played by an organist that loved to play it LOUD.
What a chad. That must have been a delight to hear every Sunday. :)
@TheCrimsonIdol987 I actually loved it. I love the feeling of the vibration of the music going right through my chest. It's like being at a rock concert! And this is a memory from very early childhood. It was the only thing I really liked about going to church.
@armedwithjello My wife when she used to be a home help aid for older folks had a client who was a total boss. He was the main organist for the Presbyterian church in our city's downtown area, and they had an older building that had a pipe organ put in it.
She LOVED listening to him play that organ like a total boss, because that's what he did his whole life.
He sadly passed away, but he was amazing.
@@TheCrimsonIdol987 He sounds amazing!
I love how they were playing it low and soft, like elevator music. I can just see it on church day, as people file in and sit, then the signal from the back as the service is ready to start, kick the baffles open, open it up hit one of those big massive chord combinations and progressions..... "Ladies and gentlemen. God has entered the building." 🤣🤣🤣
The guy playing the organ seems like such a nice dude.
Chris he doesn’t seem like one
He is one
He reminds me of Andy from The Office. :)
When looking for a someone to play the organ in your cathedral, it would be pretty sensible to make sure that they're decent and nice - you don't want to put some scumbag asshole in charge of *_that much_* power and noise . . .
@@saurabhsonic something tells me this guy wouldn't abandon his office and then come back weeks later feeling all entitled to tell everyone to get to work while lying to his boss making him think he was at work those weeks and weeks he was gone.. Also expecting the rest of the office to lie for him.. I could go on, Andy was kind of a total douche in a way... And in another way he was like the nicest dude ever.
us, organists are all very nice ;)
Went to school with John. It’s great to see his talent being showcased.
He's one hell of a musician to be able to play that. I'm in awe over here. Much like Rob lol.
Really? Very cool my man
Im his 2nd cousin
I’m his dog
Im his big toe and he feeds me once a week.. its kinda bad down here in my room... all the time in the shoe.. but at least i get to swim and play on the bed at night.. sometimes when hes asleep so deeply he won't wake up easily i sneak up his leg and crawl into his buttocks hole and i get the most amazing sleep of my life.
I like how these two are very different characters, yet a perfect match to geek out over this great organ.
I do too. I'd love to see a similar video of two people touring the inside of an organ and then playing the hymn tune FOREST GREEN, my most favorite tune in the world.
Music is universal.
yet a perfect match to geek out over this great organ. I dont know why I read that differently
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.......
@@purebliss2669 righto. I'll bear that in mind, I guess.
My dad passed away a few years ago, but he spent his life working with pipe organs. He worked building organs at a company in CT, and later ran his service business, maintaining pipe organs all over New England. He knew pipe organs inside and out, he rebuilt them, moved them, tuned them, restored them, and even pioneered using midi integration in traditional organ consoles so VST instruments can be used through speakers in conjunction with the real pipes, recording key strokes, as well as storing stop settings. Thanks for your video, it brings so many fond memories climbing around pipe organs with my dad.
Holy shit massive props to John for giving you the tour. This is awe inducing
@Michael Persico haha i was about to say holy shit and then i was like....hm is that okay since they're in a church lol
I hope pun was intended
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.🌻
@@purebliss2669 We don't need your medieval bullshit. Putting a threat of eternal torment of they don't behave isn't love, it's totalitarianism. Think about it. Nobody should need magic thinking in the age of science. Your God used to be pulled out as a joker card to explain most of the incomprehensible things that happened, today, science has explained and thoroughly proved by experimental means and mathematics that all events are results of physics and entropy, period.
Religion has done enough damage already and it's way overdue that people open their eyes and see that therens no proof or even slight evidence of an afterlife, there is no God whichever one you were forced into as a child and this is your only shot at making something good. Stop wasting your time at church and do stuff.
And if you feel like helping others, remember that this feeling comes from YOU because you're a social creature and you want your surroundings not to be a shitty, sad and poor and you don't need a threat of eternal torture in hellfire to be good.
I really love how there is no interruptions the expert talks and everyone listens, that’s always something that annoys me is when a host wants to try and talk over the person trying to explain their instrument or whatever it is
aka jimmy kimmel
This is actually a mini-documentary on pipe organs, and is awesome! Thank you for making this video!
Eduardo Mano Think that’s the point
I definitely agree. They managed to get a skilled musician who can also explain well.
@@louie9373 I believe that guy is the organist and music director from that Church. But anyway, he was a lot welcoming and helpful.
@@louie9373 "John Sherer is the Organist and Director of Music at Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago"
Does anyone know the name of the opening piece in the video???
For those who are wondering what the range is:
Lowest note: C0 (16.35 Hz) 12:29
Highest Note: C9 (8,372 Hz) 12:42
9 octaves
This is true for this particular organ and most medium to large organs.
The lowest note (C0) is produced by a 32 foot pipe, and the pipe for the highest note (C9) is only 1/16 feet.
Some organs may play a few semitones higher.
Smaller organs generally have C1 as the lowest note (lowest C note on a standard piano), sounded by a 16 foot pipe, as there is usually no space for pipes extending to 32 foot.
The human ear can't even hear a 16hz sound. We just hear some remanent noise coming out of the pipe at this point.
@@ora2j251 Yeah.
@@ora2j251 All we hear is things rattling and overtones.
@@ora2j251I mean there’s nothing really to hear pitch wise, at that point it’s not so much of a note as it is a rhythm.
John was my organ teacher for three years. I had the wonderful opportunity to be the “Organ Scholar” at Fourth Pres. this past year, which allowed me to play this amazing instrument every week. Glad to see John and the organ getting the recognition they deserve!!
That must have been quite an experience. I'm sure I speak for a lot of people when I say I'm somewhat envious.
r/thatdidnothappen
"and then everyone clapped"
Guys it’s true I was the organ
@@deaththegrimreaper1824 just look at his profile. r/ithappened
My step uncle tuned and preserved organs. I was involved in dismantling one in an old church in Tacoma WA. This thing was immense. I had no idea before that day just how incredible these instruments are. Even the woodwork was masterful. All Done by hand. I left with an appreciation, for my uncle as well and his dedication to preserving these masterpieces. Thought I'd share. Thanks for this video. Peace my friends
One was dismantled in tacoma?!
I hate this state's aggressive modernization
@@spartz117 I'm hoping they meant dismantled so it could be tuned/restored.
@@spartz117 most likely it was dismantled to be moved and reinstalled. It's alright if the building it's in is being abandoned or the instrument is no longer in use. I would rather the instrument be moved them left to rot.
They are truly the most incredible instrument! (and this coming from someone whose strong preference is the violin)
Sounds deadly
I will never ever complain tuning G string of a guitar after watching this.
Yeah, I gave up on trying to tune my G-string. The tauter the string got, the more worried I became that I wasn't going to be able to keep my guts inside any more...
Get a wound g string, for real
Ive never complained about tuning ANY g-string. I don't play guitar though....
And there's only a few pipe makers left in the World which are the only ones that can also tune the pipes.
I like G-string
Organs are such a fascinating instrument to me. They're so complex and involved. It can emit incredibly powerful & calming sounds, even sound like other instruments, all controlled and played by a single person.
the real god in a church is the organist.
I may start going to church.
Never realized just playing the organ was such a full body experience.
If you're ever in Salt Lake City, they do tours of the old pipe organ in the Tabernacle on Temple Square and sometimes they even have free concerts. It's usually church music, but if you catch a taping of Music and the Spoken Word they usually do at least one classical piece.
I got to see the organist doing this one piece where it looked like he was dancing on the foot pedals because his feet were moving so much and so quickly.
It used to be the third largest organ in the world, but I don't know if it still is.
Rick Feith lmao
@@bobdole4916 Classical organ music was generally written for the church.
@@rileymarth6824 Yep, churches have often been the impetus for the creation of the arts - not only because the subject matter tends to pull such strong feelings and thoughts out of people, but also because churches (especially the Catholic church) often were the patrons who commissioned the work from the artists.
One of the most famous organists was blind.
I LOVE how this man not only has a smile on his face when he explains and plays his instrument of choice, but that he lights up when he sees Rob just noodling around and seeing the joy of the instrument take over someone yet again. Just from a 3rd person perspective, instead of a 1st. I feel like he must have done and felt the same way Rob did, hitting that much closer to home.
I'd like to see the inside of an organ in (undisclosed location) where I live. When churches reopen I will ask my organic friend to please give me a tour of the inside of the organ. And then I'd ask him to play hymn #398 while I am inside the organ so I can see the pipes move.
I Sing the Almighty Power of God, tune "Forest Green", the best melody ever composed. Yes, I would love to be inside a pipe organ while someone plays the "Forest Green" tune. I love pipe organs and I love "Forest Green".💚🧡💖🎼
@@claireforestgreenorgangeek7882 Not to be *that* guy,...but you would blow your eardrums out and cause some actual lasting damage if you played an organ like this, whilst inside it. Please, live your dream, explore the precarious inners of said organ. Hell, move the shutters open and closed while in there. Just PLEASE make sure only ONE person has permission to touch to keys, and that *that* person is with you while you're inside it.
This is white culture
Thats a real musician for you! They want to share the joy of music =) expecially if this spark of joy comes from an instrument that not a lot of people consider playing. Our Music director in our church took hours to explain our pipe organ to the kids in our congregation just in the hope that 1 of them might stick aroud to want to learn this beautiful instrument. I think if you're that pationat for music and the instrument you're playing you just want to share that passion and you're just happy if you can see someone else infected with that spark.
I started to learn the pipe organ myself so I did not really learn new stuff in this video but I enjoyed watching it so much just because of all the fun everyone was having! Makes me want to go to my church and start playing again
@@claireforestgreenorgangeek7882 i can respect your sentiments. But PLEASE.
Wear hearing protection if you're gonna be inside an active organ.
Did he just play the windows error sound at 17:23 ?????
Apparently so.
yes
shity timestamp or what
HackanHacker no you’re just dumb
HackanHacker listen for it
My mom was an amazing organist for over 50 years. She played a very similar instrument as this one. I get very emotional when I hear organ music. After she passed, I was in England in various cathedrals. Each time the organ was being played. The 2 other times I was there, I never heard them play. It was like her spirit was there playing just for me.
My dad was an organist and I get where you are coming from.
This is literally where words like pre-sets, registers, pulling of stops etc. come from.
Gotta love that "everything" preset :-)
He basically can save patches with certain stops pulled out, its so hi/low tech at the same time
I've been playing the organ for 13 years now. 'Mine' is obvs not as big and powerful, but what I love about this instrument is how you really play a whole room. When I hit the lower notes I can hear the window panes moving and feel the wood around me vibrating with the sound. I love experimenting, playing pop songs, meditating with the music. And it feels like I hold so much power in being able to produce such forceful sounds and playing the 'Queen of instruments'.
Wich one is the King??
@@hess1 Pipe organ is the KING of instruments.
@@hess1 the violin??
But can you play things by 'Queen' on the 'Queen of Instruments'?
@@OrganMusicYT The King of the Instruments!* I love playing the organ! It’s even more fun than piano.
Not only does John clearly love his profession, I adore how interested Rob is and how happy to explain John is!
I knew pipe organs had big pipes, but I never imagined they use the tiny ones. This is one of the coolest things I've seen on your channel. Thank you.
"Bro, check out my sick analog set-up...." The Church..."Hold my communal wine.."
Haha.I like what you did there.
Well actually this is not a fully analog instrument anymore. Most of modern organs have a digital pult and there is a datalink to the pipe house, where you have digital actuators, that control the wind.
jimpesh comments like this deserve more likes. This is amazing
@@dermozart80 While some church organs aren't fully analogue (due to price of maintenance resulting in the shift), this one would be still considered fully analogue, as they are still using every single pipe for every single sound, versus substituting for an electronically produced sound. Organs that also use an "enhanced" control board versus the typical control board of older organ models also could still be considered analogue, as the board is only actuating, while the pipes and physical system itself is still doing what it would have been doing before (but with more efficiency)
Grape juice
The complexity and the skill required to build, maintain and operate such a thing is breathtaking alone.
yellowbusguy no u are breathtaking
@@ItsNash0 Gosh, thanks!
My brother builds pipe organs. I almost want to spend my next vacation going with him to see him at work now.
No
I'm breathtaking
Jk you are
Wow! this is the most metal instrument in existence.
Holy shit, I didn´t know you could be so expressive with the sound. Amazing!
because metal is an expressive type of music? yeah right
EpicZEVEN wait till you see the carillon video
@@bigcoop8442 hahaha, The Metallica cover was nuts :)
I watched the entire video with a giant smile on my face that my cheeks hurt. it is... just magnificent, ablosutely magnificent. One of the best things humans ever made.
Yes it is, right along with the glass armonica and the glass violin....as a child I got to play on the pipe organ at our church us kids all loved the sounds it made.
I remember being 10 years old, in church, looking over at the organist and being amazed at what he was doing. So I just straight out asked him "could you teach me that?"
Skip ahead to now and I've been taking organ lessons for 8 years. Amazing feeling when you get to pull out all the stops.
It's amazing that once upon a time somebody was so dedicated to music that they would design and build something so colossal.
Considering this organ was built in 2015-2016, it's not so "once upon a time" ago. :)
Silent Gloves he said design, meaning when it was created. Although it was a process. At the beginning it weren’t that big, bet they kept growing as the churches were build bigger in the gothic age
@@SilentGloves I'm pretty sure it was only restored then. This place is much much older. Research *The Mudflood* Churches
@@herbienbrian2 Though about 25% of the original pipes were refurbished, the rest of the organ is brand new, built by Quimby Pipe Organs in 2015. The previous organ was completely removed do to its poor condition. Even the console was replaced with an entirely new console. Information can be found here: www.fourthchurch.org/music/organ/index.html
@@herbienbrian2retard
I finally realized why it’s called an Organ. It’s literally the organs of the building in which it lies. In this case being a church and it’s absolutely beautiful.
I’m not a religious person but when I do go to church with my wife I love the organ
@@bcc5701 Just say what you want. Who cares if you're religious or not?
@@bcc5701 Romans 10:9-10 "That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved."
And please follow God's commands too, before it's too late 🙏
No. "The word organ is derived from the Ancient Greek ὄργανον (órganon),[17] a generic term for an instrument or a tool,[18] via the Latin organum, an instrument similar to a portative organ used in ancient Roman circus games. " en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_organ#History_and_development
@@reclusiarchgrimaldus1269 God is dead
AHHHH THIS IS MY SPOTTTT I was a teen in recovery and was cold outside one day downtown and decided to walk in to this same church cause I heard crazy music coming from inside ! It was just the organist warming up so it sounded kind of like chaotic noise but it was amazing I'd never heard nothing else like it , blew my mind. Literally changed my life. Found God n everything 🤣🙌
If there was ever a Machine that a Man could ever claim to Speak on Behalf of God.
I'm certain that this Organ would be a reasonable choice.
I’m an atheist but this organ is dope as hell
Good for you
If you’re anywhere near this place (4th Presbyterian, Chicago).... go on a Sunday morning. Grab a hymnal & sing along. That would be quite an experience! I like this organist :)
"Exploring" an instrument has never been so literal before.
new musician goals:
buy a church
keep the organ
@@theshyguy1580 Or you could donate a bunch of money to Atlantic City in Seattle to help restore the Atlantic City Boardwalk Theater Organ, the largest instrument in the world, currently under restoration. Will be finished in 2023, it's gonna be grand.
You know an instrument is intense when it literally has a COCKPIT
You right
You right
You right
Your mom is intense
@@LeglessWonder nice
What a guy to take you on a "tour" like THAT.
GREAT video.
no
just no
@@keklord3021 stfu
He seems so eager to show off his instrument. It's so cool and amazing! I LOVE this instrument!
"this is called the great division because it is great"
The greatest description i've heard wow
Arlene Maroto inwonder where the joy Division is
playing the pipe organ is as dangerous as flying a plane. Here, if you commit a mistake, you don't crash, but the whole city notices it.
I like how you say commit a mistake as if it is a crime made me laugh
@@yeetreviews instant crucifixtion if u mess up
🤣🤣🤣🤣
Makes me wonder how they practice
@@adityakansotiya8528 that’s WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaAAAAAAAAA give me a sec AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY to far
I really like how at 26:44 u do something that could be mildly aggressive towards the 1850 organ and then it immediately looks like he's putting you in jail
Haha 😂
Zack Santos bruh straight up got me fuckin laughing in the middle of the night good comment 😂😂
ahahahahah
I'm howling 😂😂
TO THE DUNGEON!
As a metalhead who visited a couple of churches in Europe (mostly Germany), I can say almost all organs here usually have more than thousand pipes
I heard Montreal's Notre Dame in person and it has over 7,000 pipes. Absolutely incredible sound
@@DevynCairns The 1921 E.M. Skinner 328 Magnum Opus organ at the Cleveland Public Auditorium in Cleveland,Ohio has almost 10,000 pipes! It cost over $120,000 dollars (which was an ass ton of money back in those days) and was paid for by John D. Rockefeller. It was the largest and finest orchestral concert Organ Ernest Skinner ever built! It’s still there to this day,but sadly it was neglected for many years. Efforts are underway to restore it. Two of the five manuals on it are fully playable. The other three are in a sad sounding state,and are not played. It is a monster of an organ. Severance Hall also in Cleveland,Ohio has an E.M. Skinner. Skinner revolutionized the American orchestral pipe organ sound,which is in many people’s opinion, is far more superior than European built organs. Ernest Skinner was a genius! The console in this video is very similar to a Skinner.
Most nowadays do, especially considering the fact that basically all organs have mixture stops with higher levels of ranks increasing the count significantly
I only just recently learned that even the organs in our local churches have hundreds, even thousands of pipes. It’s kind or sad that most people don’t even know how majestic these are.
Truly the king/queen/tsar/kaiser of instruments
Wannamaker Organ in Philadelphia beats out all of them, world wide. It's seven storys tall, and has held the record since it was upgraded in 2017. It has 6 manuals, and a total of 28,750 pipes. This organ featured on this video is little. I recommend going to Wannamakers (Macy's) in Center City Philadelphia.
I really like to think the organ as the synthesizer of pre-electronic times. Loads of sounds and complicated to figure it all out.
Yep. Tone and timbre shaped by pipe shapes instead of oscillators and filters.
If you stack them up it's like additive synthesis.
The ironic thing is that modern organs use MIDI to control the valves that let air into the pipes. And the source of that air is a compressor which re-fills automatically. Back in the day, all the valves were mechanically linked to the keys, which as you might expect required constant maintenance. The air was supplied in real-time by someone (usually the organist's apprentice or a boy under the church's guardianship) frantically squeezing a bellows. So with modern these additions, the organ has become much more like a synthesizer, but with an analog rather than digital sound source.
@@elbschwartz thanks for the impromptu history+music lesson ^_^
Musician 1: I play the violin
Musician 2: I play the trumpet
Musician 3: I play the clarinet
Musician 4: I play the building ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Actually Musician 4 says "I play with my massive organ"
here we see:
1. a dad
2. a child
i play de mayonaise and i know a few peenists
@@EpicStuffMan1000 you stink.
Musician 5: I play the giant bass.
This is EXACTLY the reason for what RUclips was created for, PERIOD.
ngl you're right
'Member when RUclips had the slogan "Broadcast Yourself" back in the day and it was ordinary people broadcasting anything and everything.
Makes you almost miss the days of Fred Figglehorn. Almost.
Tampon
@Xovion // Games, Commentary, and MORE!!! yeah reminds me of rainbow 6 siege. 18+ game yet you get banned for cursing
I'm sorry, but you forgetting the Numa Numa Guy
THE_CHLORINE_CONTROLLER random quirky
The pipe organ is by far the most impressive insturment to exist. And someone who knows the ins and outs of the organ is just as impressive
john bored at night playing his organ
chicago: here we go again....
“Who is it this time?”
😂😂
me chuckling to all these jokes
The only way to receive true happiness is to be born again. Jesus loves you and is coming back to earth soon. This year is giving signs of end times. You need to repent. Please believe and spread the word to your friends, family etc so they can be saved. I'm doing this because I care about where your gonna end up on judgement day Jesus loves you.🌻
as soon as he said 7:40 "this is one of the most famous organ pieces" i knew exactly what he was about to play
I learned about this song 2 days ago and I don’t regret it
Same
Actually on the original sheet it doesn t say it is for organ. It sounds good on violin also. Search for Bach Toccata on violin. Even worst than that it wasn't found through Bach's original papers but as a copy by someone and publisht 80 years after he died
i guess toccata and fugue ?
I know XD
Band about to jam
_1 sec boys, let me tune my Organ real quick_
*Week later*
@@teknopoju SEVerAL Days lAtEr
*goes to hospital*
Fuck me if I had to replace a pipe in there I’d commit ropenecc
@@mfThump a week wasn't good enough?
These are the best sounds I've heard from an instrument. Learning to play this thing is a science in itself
Come to Germany, its easy to learn it here.
I now have even more respect for my music teacher.
just imagine how good that would sound in person even rob said some notes you can't even hear. just imagine the vibrato it would crazy
I.ve been told it's right up there with the brain of a jet fighter pilot!
I love how not only Rob laughs so hard learning how to play and having fun, but all the teachers are laughing of joy from teaching something that they have so much passion for. So wholesome.
Next video: giant pipe organ metal
That's like 10000 of me
Would love to hear someone play Deep Purple's "Perfect Strangers" on this organ.
I always thought the pipe organ would be a perfect instrument in metal, quite a shame it's never used
@@GSVRemix At least on album. You'd have to rent out cathedrals and stuff for live shows...which would likely be "iffy"
@@jedinightwing Christian metal would be new favorite genre if someone used a pipe organ like this
kudos to this guy for being so accommodating. Awesome video rob!
Not only is the instrument amazing but the engineering behind all of it is wildly complex.
The pipe organ is, without contest, the most glorious instrument ever conceived by the mind of mankind. Thanks for delving into this amazing work of art Rob!
But, the real question is, does it djent?
@@tedarcher9120 yes
Ted Archer Did you HEAR that super low low bottom register note? No? That's because it was so subsonically low it can only be FELT....so, it TOTALLY djents!
@@celticfury7328 but what if we build a harp the size of the building. That would djent better
Ted Archer Maybe...very possibly...but only if you can find a djent god the size of a building to play it! ;-)
me:so what what instrument do you play?
them: oh, it's the one on the corner of east 9th and st claire
good one xD
🤣😂
How overwhelming and divine such an organ still sounds, imagine hearing this a few hundreds of years or even one hundred years ago. Before electrically let alone digitally enhanced amplified sound. Mind-blowing powerful.
- edit: that blown-pun was not intended, nevermind, I'll let myself out -
I'd still prefer listening to an organ huhuhuhu
Not sure if the video hits on it, but years ago there was an army of people pumping the billows to create enough air flow.
This is genius engineering. Absolutely incredible. I'm in awe
So where do you hook up the wah pedal?
is that you kirk
David Nwokoye LMAO
xD
idk but that 1850's organ had a whammy bar lmao
*WEH*
Wow I knew that organs were big but that is huge it's literally the whole church!
Literally not lol
This is what happens when a congregation says "More, More, More."
Yup they must've said that about 10 times in the video
My friend has a small organ in his basement. It’s interesting in that it has 6 real stops and 24 synth stops, it’s very strange. The 6 real stops are vox Humana, trombone, trumpet, violin, cello, and viola, the rest i felt they could get away with synthesizing in the late 1980s. It’s very strange cause it has amplifier output meters and a pressure gauge and a vacuum gauge. It’s weird.
@@dlwatib
Organ Builders: Okay, we're making a pipe organ. How many pipes do you want?
Church: *YES*
Guitarist: "My guitar is so loud."
Organist: "Hold my stops."
Rob scallon "hold my pedal boards"
1850s Organist: "pump my air"
I was complaining that my guitar was too loud bc i know i have neighbours so i cant play late... This video made me glad i didnt choose the pipe organ as my instrument of choice
@@daniwalmsley611 because u would fit this in your house xD
I could have a very large house, I could get a smaller organ or do what any reasonable british person would do and shove it in a police box xD
Respect to the guy who's playing the Organ. Sooooo much going on in one sitting it's mind blowing. I love his enthusiasm talking about the instrument.
And it comes with hall reverb XD
Cathedral reverb
Chorus if you activate that section too
@@christianwhatthataintenoug3604 i really wish the one in my church was this big and had that many options 😅
How do ya turn those effects on?
👏🏽
The building IS a part of the instrument. This organ sounds great in the stone church. Imagine how they sound in an old wooden church where the sound isn’t just reverberating off the walls but is vibrating them?
Even in stone churches, you ARE vibrating even the stones when you play an organ there. Talk about feeling a sense of power when you can make that happen.
Wood age, stone age, bronze age... imagine how it would sound in an all-bronze church. Probably vibrate your eyeballs right out of their sockets.
I could’ve watched another half hour of this, this was amazing rob keep it up!
I had no idea that any of the old churches and cathedrals were so fully plumed. Such beauty in form and function, the whole massive machine .
Thank you for this. Our world is an unending bounty of profound amazement and you fellas all did a great job at capturing for me, the gloriousness of the pipe organ!
the people who disliked this are all organ tuners.
nothing like a B3 hidden in the stacks... oh the tuning, the tuning... so sad
Why would they dislike?
@@Mike-kr5dn it's pretty damn hard to tune organs
Im your 500th like. Feel happy
Actually it dont seem like they need tune, these are pipes guys, but the guys who change the pipes disliked
I was passing by Grace Cathedral in San Francisco one Saturday and heard the organist practicing. I went inside and stood in the middle of the cathedral to listen. It was incredible. Earth-shaking lows and ethereal highs. Given that many churches were design in part to showcase the organ and compliment it, the organist really is in a sense playing the church.
I bet that made that organists year
I had a massive smile on my face all the way trough this video, amazing showcase of an amazing instrument.
But where is the link in the description to where I can buy one ;)
If you've got $1,000,000+ to burn, there's plenty of organ makers that'd work for you to build an organ close to that size. Definitely among the most expensive, if not the most expensive instrument to buy.
@@Bragituba This Organ's restoration was 3 millions alone... Can't imagine you'd get close to half that size at all for a million brand new... The local church here had their pipe organ restored in 1991 for 100 000$ and it's about a tenth the size of this one...
@@adelphus515 The Letourneau organ at CSU in Legacy Hall was about $1.5 million brand new, and it has a little over half that number of pipes. Considering the age of the organ in this video, I'm not surprised it costs that much to maintain. Especially if part of the organ is over 100 years old at this point. I made sure to put $1,000,000+ because I wasn't entirely sure what market value is for different organ manufacturers coupled with historical value.
My former employers at Wicks Organ Company have some small ones for sale in the tens of thousands.
@@Bragituba I'd imagine buying a church would be cheaper.
After playing keyboards all my life, in 2020 I played on a church organ for the first time in my life. Crazy experience. The whole church trembling under my feet. Chills all the time!
19 years in Chicago and I've never been in this church nor heard of the pipe organ. Thanks this has been very informative and terribly interesting.
You will find it even more interesting if you'll go for a service or sometimes these churches do organ recitals. There is no way to compare a video of the organ to actually hearing one in the flesh.
@@lancehol Thank you, will do, the next time at the Golden Mile, the Windy City
The funny thing is that the largest pipe organ in North
America used to be in the old Chicago stadium. They didn't move it to the United Center because they claimed it would cost too much money. Cheap Skates
Is one player even enough?
It's crazy how such an instrument came to be, even hundreds of years ago.
It's truly the original Synthesizer. And it moves a lot of air.
THOUSANDS of years, too!
The Radio City Music Hall organ has two consoles, so two organists can play together.
ruclips.net/video/K0-ipcT-vGU/видео.html
How did the ancient Greeks make this monstrosity
Religeon comes with alot of cash
My foster father worked and retired from Shantz Pipe Organ. He was a toner/finisher of the pipes and pipe organ after it is installed. His main duty was to give the finished pipe that was made its initial sound and tone. I was able to learn some of his work and actually have some pipes out there that I had made go toot toot for there very first time. His secondary duty was to go to where the pipe organ was installed and do all of the final tuning and adjustments to the pipe organ giving its final home its sound and life. I learned how they were built from the raw materials to the finished product in its new home. They had their own smelting areas to melt the metals needed for the pipes and would pour the molten metal into the molds to create the sheets of metal in various thicknesses that were later cut and shaped by hand into the pipes themselves. They have an area where the wood pipes are built as well. They also have an area where the consoles were built. Then they had a special area where they built each section of the pipe organ to make sure that things all matched to the blueprints and tested out each section to make sure it worked properly before tearing it all down and packing it away for shipping.
I also had many opportunities to see other pipe organs from the small home practice ones to the largest theater pipe organs. I had the opportunity to actual help restore and rebuild pipe organs as well. The saddest accomplishment was when I was helping to remove the pipe organ from the Minneapolis Civic Auditorium prior to its destruction to be rebuilt. They claimed they were going to put the pipe organ back in the new building but still to this day that has not been done. It sits in the warehouse in many boxes and crates that were custom built to house the various components. The largest pipe I could crawl down inside of it.
Pipe organs are the most fascinating instruments every created by humans. Sadly far to many are being ton apart and never rebuilt or replaced and these majestic instruments are fading away.
Thanks for sharing your fascinating view into making them.
Heartbreaking to be taking them down for good.
I hope the company is still in business.
Oh my god thats impressive ad fuck
That’s incredible! Since pipe organs aren’t portable, they aren’t as popular as they deserve. Thanks for sharing your experience. I’m a bit jealous. LOL! What a unique experience your had with your dad. 👍🏻
@@totallyfrozen ... I used to get out of school and walk to Shantz Pipe Organ and go into my foster fathers work section and I would sit there and we would chat away as he made the pipes speak their first notes.
I forget where it is but he had taken me to see a HUGE tracker pipe organ and I was able to crawls around inside of the chambers and see how it all came together to function. A part of that trip was for him to tune the organ and I was the one that held the keys as he tuned the pipes.
The most fascinating aspect to me back then and still today is seeing the trackers from the console to the chambers all hidden under the floors of the stage.
In Milwaukee there was a pizza joint called Pizza and Pipes. The main feature was it had a huge restored theater pipe organ in there and they had different people come in to play throughout the week. All of the pipes were in chambers that had windows so you could see all of the pipe. All of the extra instruments were placed all around the place and you could see them in action as they were being played. The largest of the wood pipes were on the outside of the chambers laying on their sides. You could sit on them and feel them vibrate They even had a mini disco ball and other lighting to set a great atmosphere for the songs. That place was packed every night.
Most of the organs in the churches were fairly boring at times but even those still hold a majestic feeling when played. Many churches hide it all and it takes away from the instrument in my eyes.
If it wasn't for pipe organs and my foster father I more than likely would not have gained an appreciation for classical music as well. Concert Band in school had its place but it is not the same type of experience.
@Rispatha I hope these organs are never completely gone. There is no comparable instrument, and certainly not in digital form.
My favourite place for birthday parties as a kid was the Organ Grinder restaurant on the Esplanade in Toronto. (It no longer exists, but was in the space now occupied by the Bier Markt. ) The centrepiece of the place was a Wurlitzer organ, which not only played the traditional pipes, but was connected to over 100 other instruments around the building such as drums, xylophones, bells, horns, and tambourines. The organist would take requests on slips of paper, and everyone sang along. It was a noisy, chaotic, gloriously joyful place. They mostly served pizza, which I recall was also pretty good. But I didn't much care what they served. It was the music that was the main attraction! I really miss that place.
What a great teacher and presenter for this instrument.
as a 16 yr old organist it's really cool to see the pipe organ get more exposure beyond just the wedding march being played in rom coms. Thank you for this Rob.
John Zhang Agreed! Another teenage organist over here 😁👋
More agreement from an 18 year old organist. I live in Germany, so there is a little more exposure, but not much. But we also have organs from the 18th century over here...
John Zhang hey we in the same boat here fricken cool
The work put into this video deserves nothing but praise and respect.
17:23 tell me you didn’t hear that windows error sound
hahaha
lmaoo
I didn't hear that windows error sound.
Sounds like an sound effect from GTA Vice City lol
I’m dead asf😭🤣
The organ has been used as a symbol of power, it isn't just those who used it, owned it, or built it, it's the instrument itself that's powerful.
As a lifelong organist all I want is 2 hours on this instrument! I was not familiar with this organ builder though I have played many Aeolian Skinner organs. I lost a good part of my sight at age 58 so I’ve given up playing now. It is too frustrating and depressing to play given what I once could do. Fun to see what a non-organist will try.
I hope you still play a piano or any instrument.. it would suck going blind but bravo to you sir
Oh, he was saying AEOLIAN. I thought he was saying alien lol
Haha, as someone who cant even touch a piano, i think Id have a stroke
I didn't think I'd ever be impressed by an organ, but holy shit. This is amazing.
Man I share the exact same thought, I am astonished wow
same was all ways like a organ BORING yet this one im like GOD OF WIND 🙈
I work in a factory in Portugal where we build this pipes and we send them all over the world. I see pipes in all sizes and shapes. It was really great to see how everything comes together.
This organist is so knowledgeable I could spend a whole day with him learning. John Sherer is amazing.
His passion for the pipe organ is so powerful I could listen to him talk about it for hours
My great grandpa used to tune this organ for many years from at least 1945-1975 every other Saturday. He also did the organs in Rockefeller Chapel, Orchestra Hall, and First Methodist and St. Lukes church in Evanston. Plus my great great grandpa did this as well but my grandpa doesn't know the specific years but he assumes 1930ish-1940.
Not this one. The guy clearly said it was done in 2016 and only has 25% of the pipes from the one that was there in 1971
really, every other saturday? I can imagine that they are kind of sensitive to changes in temperature and humidity (which, thinking of it, shouldn't happen that much in a church), but do they go out of tune that much/that fast?
Or is it more of a "rolling maintenance" thing, ie. one day one section of the organ is tuned and two weeks later the next section?
@@trod146 I think he means whatever organ was at that same place.
@@jk9554 They don't go out of tune that fast, at least not to a point where the instrument becomes unplayable. The organ I play gets tuned twice a year, and even then, every single pipe is not tuned, just the ones that are noticeably out of tune. Sounds like the organist at this church was obsessive about intonation.
@@jk9554 They are most sensitive to humidity changes - especially the "reed" pipes - 61 of them per stop knob (at least). Rolling maintenance would render only the most recently tuned pipes "usable" while the rest would vary based on the length of time since their last tuning.
this is genuinely one of the best videos you've ever made. It's so interesting
Tell me about it, it's insanity
It is!
Doctor, doctor doctor
That was more than AWSOME! We have the Etsey pipe organ at First Baptist/Urban Grace in Tacoma, WA. I sat in on a tune up job 2004 was hosting a guest organist from Massachusetts..I thought that was a learning experience, Didn't hold a candle to this video! Thanks....
"Father they're falling asleep again."
"Pull out ALL the stops!"
ALL the stops?
ALL the stops!
Jarvis Colorado: OH YES OKLAHOMA BOMBOGENESIS
Underrated comment right here.
Some bass would wake em
2nd officer. " PULL OUT ALL THE STOPS."
115Db? That's like
_really_ loud
that's three-feet-from-a-lawnmower loud, aka shouting is barely audible
You can get 115 Db from a 20W 112 guitar amp
110 db at 1 meter is different than 110 db at 20 meters...people just think dB the wrong way, also the weighting is important...110dbA are really different than 110 dBC.
110 dB at 20 mt are WAY more than 110dB at 1mt
That’s like a full drumline right in front of you.
Coming from a building sized instrument though? Considering you can here choirs over it you gotta wonder how loud they're singing.
Q: So who paid for all this?
A: Organ donors
Lol
bad
I actually felt physical pain from this.
They had to literally sell their organs because it was so expensive
lol
Organs are my favorite instruments man. It’s just incredible how ahead of their time they are