Phantom of the Opera, recorded/played by Jelani Eddington on the Carma Labs organ.

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  • Опубликовано: 11 авг 2022

Комментарии • 20

  • @clydesight
    @clydesight 4 месяца назад +2

    What a wonderful theater organ -- and in such an unexpected location! Wonderful preservation.

  • @TheCLPVideos
    @TheCLPVideos Год назад +5

    That is such an amazing "Franken-organ". It has been a delight to watch it grow over the years.

  • @nightmaremermaidanimations5649
    @nightmaremermaidanimations5649 29 дней назад +1

    This would be rad as an overture!

  • @daviddiffenderfer3836
    @daviddiffenderfer3836 Год назад +3

    Wonderful!!!!!

  • @ryanbolton9384
    @ryanbolton9384 8 месяцев назад +1

    I would absolutely love to hear As The World Falls Down from theLabyrinth movie on this beast!!

  • @LeeBerache
    @LeeBerache Год назад +1

    Marvelous arrangement!!!

  • @kellyklawes5890
    @kellyklawes5890 Год назад +1

    Fantastic !!!

  • @daviddiffenderfer3836
    @daviddiffenderfer3836 Год назад +2

    Wonderful

  • @colinarmitage3631
    @colinarmitage3631 Год назад +3

    Fantast what an instrument

  • @transmaster
    @transmaster Год назад +2

    This instrument has the Wurlitzer Pianola/Player Piano Rolls player. Not many are still installed. What is so interesting is they emulate the player that “recorded” the roll.

    • @The2010SnowDay
      @The2010SnowDay Год назад +2

      It has a Moller Artiste player, but Jelani played this into the Uniflex.

  • @wizardofodds8239
    @wizardofodds8239 Год назад +3

    Woulda-coulda be more enjoyable if video showed Jelani playing the console. Or at least the computers playing back what was recorded and saved. This is great for fans who love to see what a theater organ uses to play the music.

    • @scottmusic242
      @scottmusic242  9 месяцев назад +3

      Jelani comes in very late at night sometimes and records. We aren't always around when he is in the building. If I'm in the building when he's practicing/recording, then I'll try to capture it on video. I feel the same way sometimes...when he records an amazing piece of music (which is pretty much everything he plays), I'm always wishing I would have been in the buidling. Sadly, I don't know when he is coming or going, so I'm not so lucky to see him most of the time.

  • @square-on-wheels
    @square-on-wheels Год назад +4

    Would love to experience this in person. Are there any public concerts coming up?

  • @kegginstructure
    @kegginstructure 9 месяцев назад +1

    Looks/sounds like it has some really good junk. Before anyone blows up on that comment, "junk" is the term organists often apply to organ sounds other than the standard pipes; things like drum elements, gongs, bells, marimbas, ... anything percussive. Or things non-melodic, such as sirens or air horns. And whatever voice was used around 5:35 plus, that was was LOW. We could hear the flutter, which means approaching sub-sonic on the fundamental pitch. Also around 8:40. Does anyone know if Carma Labs has published a voice list for this behemoth?

    • @scottmusic242
      @scottmusic242  9 месяцев назад +1

      I've been talking to the organ builders about putting the entire list of voices together. Some are on a documenmt,. and some are literally just in their heads and not on paper. Eventually, when the voice list is fully updated, I will publish it. And as far as the 32-foot voice(s) you heard....It's very difficult to hear and capture when I'm literally 10 feet away from the 32 foot pipes. The sine wave is so large that it literally goes over me when I stand so close, you don't really hear the tone. You can only feel the rumble from the air movement. You need to be at least 50 feet away from the pipes to hear the tone....because then the sine wave can hit your ears instead of going over the top of you. Those crazy physics!

  • @semilberger6742
    @semilberger6742 Год назад +1

    No Body at the keyboard. Must be the Phantom.

    • @scottmusic242
      @scottmusic242  4 месяца назад +1

      I'm taking the day to go back through a year of comments and ran across your comment. The organ is a MIDI instrument (musical instrument digital interface). In laymans terms: every "stop" tab that the organist sets and every keystroke he makes gets recorded into a computer. After playing the piece of music, the computer can play back the music (wind through pipes...no speakers) just like a player piano. Except the keyboards do not have the mechanism to activate the keys being depressed.....even though the actual "stop" tabs do have the mechanism built in. This way, we can play back a piece of music that an organist once played into the organ when the organist isn't present to play.