+Ian Thompson Hi Ian, thanks for your nice and always-supportive comments. I like this era for Liszts; the big pipe-top one (1892) was the only one that ever sounded nicer. The very early ones seem thinner or reedier(?) The later ones seem a bit tubbier/more muddled. Of course the 2M 901/902 rules them all. You must get your example put back together; I've not forgotten you mentioning it.
Does this organ have the knee-operated lever under the keyboard used to hold individual notes in the bass like a pedal point? I believe Mason & Hamlin had this feature on some models.
Fascinating! I've never seen a Queen's-cased Liszt before. Looks and sounds wonderful!
+Ian Thompson Hi Ian, thanks for your nice and always-supportive comments. I like this era for Liszts; the big pipe-top one (1892) was the only one that ever sounded nicer. The very early ones seem thinner or reedier(?) The later ones seem a bit tubbier/more muddled. Of course the 2M 901/902 rules them all. You must get your example put back together; I've not forgotten you mentioning it.
Mason & Hamlins are so cool. Who would not want one? Or two??
Does this organ have the knee-operated lever under the keyboard used to hold individual notes in the bass like a pedal point? I believe Mason & Hamlin had this feature on some models.
This one did not come equipped, but others I owned did. A great and useful feature for sure.