OLDEST PLAYABLE ORGAN IN THE WORLD Part 1 | Diane Bish at Valère Basilica in Sion, Switzerland

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  • Опубликовано: 1 янв 2011
  • Diane Bish talks about and plays the oldest playable organ in the world.
    A clip from "New York Times", Paul Hoffman:
    "One of the more unusual attractions of the Swiss canton of Valais is a 600-year-old organ, believed to be the oldest functioning organ in the world. It is housed in an 800-year-old fortress-church on a hill in Sion, the capital of the Canton.
    "The organ, built in 1390 and most recently restored in 1954, is mounted on a wooden pulpit jutting out like a ship's bow from the rear wall of the Romanesque-Gothic church, once the Cathedral of Sion and one of Switzerland's most haunting edifices."
    Organ Specifications:
    (10 Ranks, 8 registers)
    Pedal
    Bass II
    Manual
    Principal 8
    Octaf 4
    Copl 4
    Quint major 2 2/3
    Superoctaf 2
    Quint minor 1 1/3
    Mixtur II
  • ВидеоклипыВидеоклипы

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @pratikgoud1
    @pratikgoud1 6 лет назад +4373

    This video looks older than that organ..

  • @tonywu7298
    @tonywu7298 6 лет назад +2522

    This single organ is older than the USA.

    • @nonchalantree6604
      @nonchalantree6604 5 лет назад +364

      tbh not hard to beat
      the US is relatively new

    • @davidmdyer838
      @davidmdyer838 5 лет назад +283

      My violin is older than the USA.

    • @politicallyinaccuratetoast4757
      @politicallyinaccuratetoast4757 5 лет назад +92

      *as the average American, please dont mention our newness*

    • @davidmdyer838
      @davidmdyer838 5 лет назад +88

      The country, as such (USA), is relatively new, but it is actually the oldest surviving republic in the world. There have, of course, been civilizations in North America for many thousands of years, including pyramids larger than those in Egypt. Those that count North America as a new place are only counting its population by Europeans and discount what happened here before Stonehenge.

    • @brunoblivious
      @brunoblivious 5 лет назад +101

      Oh yeah?
      Well, the USA happens to be home to the world's largest chicken wing at the Hooters in Madeira Beach, Florida.

  • @rls1865
    @rls1865 6 лет назад +2892

    but does it interface with midi

  • @Chris9017
    @Chris9017 9 лет назад +2732

    That has to be the sweetest and most beautiful sounding pipe organ I've ever heard. It's just amazing, and given that it's the oldest working organ, makes it even more special.

    • @benfoster578
      @benfoster578 7 лет назад +37

      It does have a great sound but all of the notes are 1/2 step sharp. Does that have something to do with a historical temperament?

    • @jonnda
      @jonnda 7 лет назад +50

      Benjamin Foster I don't doubt it. That may have even been the local standard at one time. Tuning was like time used to be before the railroad and time zones added standardization.

    • @benfoster578
      @benfoster578 7 лет назад +14

      Thank you for the explaination!

    • @soulfyremac
      @soulfyremac 7 лет назад +7

      Gekkigami: Actually, so do some organists...

    • @jaysparc
      @jaysparc 7 лет назад +11

      Temperament is different than tuning.

  • @brickman409
    @brickman409 7 лет назад +604

    It just blows my mind to think that something is centuries old and is still in working condition. I know it's been restored but still, it's just amazing!

    • @Ucceah
      @Ucceah 6 лет назад +27

      there arent many crafts left, where the creation outlives it's creators. but fine musical instruments are above absolescence.

    • @redfaldas7524
      @redfaldas7524 5 лет назад +11

      @mloutris What you just said is the Ship of Theseus thought experiment.

    • @AlvaSudden
      @AlvaSudden 5 лет назад +3

      If they need more popsickle sticks 5:15 i have a whole drawer full.

    • @MiG2880
      @MiG2880 5 лет назад +3

      @mloutris I've been using the same broom for twenty years. That old broom has had seventeen new heads and fourteen new handles in its time.

    • @pondwithducks3092
      @pondwithducks3092 5 лет назад

      @@AlvaSudden LOL

  • @TheScreamingFrog916
    @TheScreamingFrog916 2 года назад +70

    It's like a fairy tale.
    An ancient organ, in a castle in the sky.
    My heart soars, with each note played.

  • @TortugaLuv
    @TortugaLuv 6 лет назад +674

    I like how the keys look like the teeth of some of the oldest people I know.

  • @elfhighmage8240
    @elfhighmage8240 8 лет назад +1960

    See what happens when man preserves instead of destroying? Hmmm, we should learn from this...

    • @trijigon
      @trijigon 7 лет назад +66

      ElfHighMage this is when man burnt people on stakes and gave stds to their sisters. Yeah. Real beautiful

    • @stephenmelton2532
      @stephenmelton2532 7 лет назад +31

      trijigon-watch the news, that's still happening.

    • @londonnight937
      @londonnight937 7 лет назад +9

      BUT WE HAVE TRUMP!

    • @infledermaus
      @infledermaus 7 лет назад +23

      Alex Danco Please. Don't remind us.

    • @michaelreeves1147
      @michaelreeves1147 6 лет назад +43

      But this organ was a good thing. Preserve organs.

  • @Maggiolone85
    @Maggiolone85 Год назад +16

    My father grew up in Italy at a parish that was similar in age. I showed him this video & he happily remembers as an altar boy having to pump the bellows on the ancient organ during Mass while the organist would pull down on the manual stops just like here, usually during High Mass.

  • @MrDalewin
    @MrDalewin 7 лет назад +763

    Holy shit! If the organ is 600 years old, how old is the church? These things were built to last!

    • @jcadoo
      @jcadoo 5 лет назад +252

      Michael Persico you’re a miserable person aren’t you

    • @victorroque5667
      @victorroque5667 5 лет назад +61

      @@jcadoo couldn't say it better👍👍👍

    • @jackstrawfromwichita6168
      @jackstrawfromwichita6168 5 лет назад +14

      @@jcadoo Nope, just someone stating the obvious.

    • @alejandrom.4680
      @alejandrom.4680 5 лет назад +38

      @@jackstrawfromwichita6168 This organ was build in the 1390, has more than 600 years...

    • @krollpeter
      @krollpeter 5 лет назад +67

      @Michael Persico
      Neither the video nor the discussion here were about religion. We were talking about a piece of our culture.

  • @AltoonaYourPiano
    @AltoonaYourPiano 5 лет назад +172

    It's amazing to be able to listen to an organ that was built when the Byzantine Empire still existed.

    • @tnix80
      @tnix80 5 лет назад +11

      So that's what he meant by Roman times

  • @brooksiefan
    @brooksiefan 7 лет назад +356

    What a wonderful voice it has

    • @v.dargain1678
      @v.dargain1678 4 года назад +4

      After 700 years it still can sing beautifully for it's people . Awesome 😊

    • @v.dargain1678
      @v.dargain1678 4 года назад +1

      I like classical organ a lot .

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 Год назад

      It sounds so much sweeter in tone than most modern organs. I was struck by how soothing it sounded, compared to the blasting, mighty musical roar more modern organs tend to produce. I actually prefer this old style!

  • @BusterKitten
    @BusterKitten 7 лет назад +217

    playing this instrument must have been a thrill of a lifetime, it would be for me....

  • @salvatoreshiggerino6810
    @salvatoreshiggerino6810 7 лет назад +91

    The organ in its modern form is well over a thousand years old, yet I argue that it's the absolute, unsurpassed pinnacle of human instrument-making.

  • @Froggie24546
    @Froggie24546 5 лет назад +108

    No wonder the organ is considered the King of Instruments. For over 700 years this instrument has been the pinnacle of music played to generations of worshipers . The diversity of sounds that we hear from these organs are a delight to the ear. My love for organ music began as a young chorister in our church in northwest London. We had a wonderful old organist who delighted us at choir practice with an impromptu warm up , bellows initially were hand blown, kept us on our mark as choristers were on occasion sent below to man the pumps . Oh what delight it was .,

  • @hawkfumodee5364
    @hawkfumodee5364 6 лет назад +57

    I am listening to an instrument built over 500 years ago, wow!

  • @annes.6230
    @annes.6230 7 лет назад +22

    Whoever restored and voiced that organ did a superb job! It has such a marvelously bright, clear, and sweet sound. My dad was an organist. He'd have loved this instrument!

  • @georgerikken
    @georgerikken 4 года назад +22

    Sounds so fresh and honest , like birds in a blue sky

    • @gunnarthorsen
      @gunnarthorsen 4 года назад +1

      When they're on the ground, birds lie a lot.

  • @gnarlysoundscapes7210
    @gnarlysoundscapes7210 5 лет назад +33

    There is something magical about old technology, from cars to music instruments.

    • @colincochrane4108
      @colincochrane4108 4 года назад +1

      Indeed. Especially old cars.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      I look forward to the day when vehicles we internal combustion engines become quaint curiosities around which people where masks and use caution because of all of the toxic combusted petrochemical waste they produce. They are so dirty, smelly and loud, and require a ridiculous amount of maintenance.

    • @gnarlysoundscapes7210
      @gnarlysoundscapes7210 2 года назад +2

      @@inkyguy We're at odds then, because I dream of a world where people stop trading in their freedom and ambition for the illusion of safety. A world where people strive to stretch the boundaries of human curiosity, rather than hide themselves away in fear of anything that could potentially be dangerous. A world where people aren't afraid to get dirty, loud, and smelly in the pursuit of their dreams.

    • @chrissymon
      @chrissymon Год назад

      @@gnarlysoundscapes7210 i totally agree👍👍👍

  • @sleekoduck
    @sleekoduck 4 года назад +19

    Never mind Bach and Mozart, that organ was old when the Tudors came to power. The Black Death was in living memory when it was built. And it still plays.

  • @MagnusMaximusinWales
    @MagnusMaximusinWales 6 лет назад +86

    That keyboard definitely looks very old, I'm amazed it can be played with the keys wobbling around like that.

    • @tnix80
      @tnix80 5 лет назад +3

      She is a very good player which helps

  • @DrewWasMe
    @DrewWasMe 7 лет назад +77

    Just amazing. What an instrument to have survived all these years...centuries! We can hear music from 500 years just as it sounded to the people listening in the cathedral. Spectacular.

    • @tj-co9go
      @tj-co9go 2 года назад +3

      And just think that despite that they all heard much better music than what comes on the radio nowadays!

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 2 года назад +2

      Only if you play it like they did back then, decay also causes changes of sound over time. Historically informed performance is a thing and there's companies that will make decently accurate baroque and renaissance instruments as there's lots of orchestras that like to play that way.
      Also there are working replicas built of a greek hydraulis organ from 300BC. Sounds even more amazing.

  • @judahboyd2107
    @judahboyd2107 4 года назад +105

    A functional organ in a fortress church on the peak of a mountain that has been there since before the discovery of the new world. I want the full story of that place.

    • @KristinkaAranova
      @KristinkaAranova 4 года назад +1

      Vikings came to North America 500 years before Columbus.

    • @KristinkaAranova
      @KristinkaAranova 4 года назад +4

      And many many churches before even 14th century survive in Europe

    • @isabelfuentesnar1
      @isabelfuentesnar1 4 года назад

      @@KristinkaAranova and left nothing.....

    • @KristinkaAranova
      @KristinkaAranova 4 года назад +1

      Isabel Fuentes not true. They found Viking artifacts and a Viking ship in an Arizona desert where a river used to be

    • @judahboyd2107
      @judahboyd2107 4 года назад

      I always found it somewhat amusing that they only discovered the Americas in their search for shipbuilding lumber. The general lack of quality ship timbers in Norse lands, as well as the use of those ship timbers, directly led to the discovery of the American continents.

  • @TheLtData
    @TheLtData 5 лет назад +43

    I've been there to listen and it sure is a special sound. I have a recording from a concert played on that organ by a Dutch musician. Wonderful experience.

    • @deekobald9260
      @deekobald9260 5 лет назад +6

      Wow! Nice when was this? And whom was the organist?🤔 I love the young Dutch organist Gert van Hoef!

    • @beachesboy1994
      @beachesboy1994 4 года назад

      Me too

    • @SR009s
      @SR009s 4 года назад

      May i ask who that recording was by?

    • @j.vonhogen9650
      @j.vonhogen9650 4 года назад

      What was his name?

    • @Aethelhadas
      @Aethelhadas 2 года назад +1

      Could you please post it on RUclips? I think me and many more would love to be able to see it

  • @teslapower220
    @teslapower220 5 лет назад +16

    The sound quality of this thing is amazing...

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly 5 лет назад +43

    The sound is a product of the mechanism and the space in which it is housed. The configuration of that cathedral and its enclosing materials play a large part in the resultant sound.

    • @joannarose5659
      @joannarose5659 5 лет назад +6

      Half the sound of a pipe organ is the building.

    • @olsonbryce777
      @olsonbryce777 5 лет назад

      @ImNotMad ButUR what does sound quality mean to you?

    • @edifyguy
      @edifyguy 3 года назад

      @@joannarose5659 Half of the pipe organ is the building. The building and the instrument are one.

  • @Amywizardozsorel
    @Amywizardozsorel 9 лет назад +86

    Wow! Since I was a child loved this wonderfully powerful instrument, and now I see an old one and enjoy the amazing sound of it. God please do not let me die without learning to play one.

    • @Amywizardozsorel
      @Amywizardozsorel 8 лет назад

      *****
      Thanks! I will be glad to ask :)

    • @szymongorczynski7621
      @szymongorczynski7621 7 лет назад +1

      Judith Alejandra Have you taken it up yet? It's a really rewarding experience.

    • @mikezinn7212
      @mikezinn7212 7 лет назад +1

      start to play!!!

    • @matttheoddmusician2208
      @matttheoddmusician2208 6 лет назад +1

      I hope you have started playing! Organ is super fun to play!

    • @Narayan_1996
      @Narayan_1996 4 года назад +2

      I am doing the same pray as you have done here, that God do not let me die before I play one of those beauties ❤️

  • @walkispacheco88
    @walkispacheco88 8 лет назад +100

    That is some beautiful french by the host.

    • @lepredator189
      @lepredator189 7 лет назад +10

      French is naturally beautiful, trust me. Or should I say, 'was'. These days it's so watered down.

    • @hunteroneill7300
      @hunteroneill7300 5 лет назад +1

      How is it watered down?

    • @TheMusicalKnokcers
      @TheMusicalKnokcers 5 лет назад +1

      he speaks normally

    • @ThePyrosirys
      @ThePyrosirys 5 лет назад +9

      @@lepredator189 Les ievnes de ces iovrs deſtrviſent en effet le françois monſieur. Dans le bon vievx temps, tout eſtait bien mievx.

    • @Ardjano234
      @Ardjano234 4 года назад

      Eh bien...

  • @shaneduyvenedewit5197
    @shaneduyvenedewit5197 3 года назад +5

    This organ’s timbres are incredible! Much sweeter and colourful than the modern counterparts. I’ve come back again and again to this clip just to listen to these ancient, beautiful pipes.

  • @jameshockin3805
    @jameshockin3805 7 лет назад +32

    Very nice clear sound - remarkable. The keyboard shows the age but the sound does not! It shows the TLC required and how it pays off!

  • @AlvaSudden
    @AlvaSudden 5 лет назад +8

    The bellows are shown at 7:30. Also when the player adjusts the stops while playing 5:42 5:51 6:24 you can hear it. All the "funny noises" of old organs are explained. Fantastic!

  • @donaldblake2883
    @donaldblake2883 8 лет назад +618

    Did she say that television equipment from the 1400's was heavy?

    • @mrmaniac3
      @mrmaniac3 8 лет назад +17

      +Donald Blake of course!

    • @lemay1973
      @lemay1973 8 лет назад +29

      i think she was referring to the camera equipment they used to tape this video, was shot easier than 2011 and was probably not the digital cameras of the time

    • @brickman409
      @brickman409 7 лет назад +87

      Yeah man, haven't you seen the Flintstones? lol

    • @Bensinn86
      @Bensinn86 7 лет назад +3

      :D lol

    • @Vlogghumor
      @Vlogghumor 6 лет назад +4

      and cumbersome

  • @chriscrepon1283
    @chriscrepon1283 8 лет назад +168

    It's a nice sentiment to know when you hear a pipe organ in a Cathedral/Basilica today it's so close to what people in the 1400s were hearing for music... and it was probably almost the only music they heard back then.

    • @trespire
      @trespire 8 лет назад +38

      Listening to her play, & looking at the period artwork. That was probably the height of entertainment in the 1400's

    • @tom7601
      @tom7601 7 лет назад +11

      trespire
      Organs were cheaper than a full orchestra.

    • @clone2255
      @clone2255 7 лет назад +61

      trijigon You realize the swastika was (still is, just not as common) originally a symbol of peace in Hinduism?

    • @weltgeist2604
      @weltgeist2604 7 лет назад +45

      How ignorant, that's not the swastika the Nazis used.

    • @infledermaus
      @infledermaus 7 лет назад +29

      Clone225 For native Americans in Arizona it symbolizes the sun. Too bad the Nazis ruined it.

  • @crxstalline_
    @crxstalline_ 5 лет назад +59

    That must’ve been a technological MARVEL of its time.

    • @Yadangable
      @Yadangable 5 лет назад +7

      Not really, the organ was first invented by a Greek engineer in Alexandria in the 3rd century BC. Nearly 1000 years older than the oldest remaining organ XD I'm sure that one was not as advanced as this 14th century organ, however.

  • @nsmc99
    @nsmc99 7 лет назад +15

    This organ along with the stops being used sounded cute. Something about it is just ever-so-pleasing.

  • @russ117044
    @russ117044 7 лет назад +808

    Bach, himself, could have played this organ...

    • @musicresources788
      @musicresources788 6 лет назад +66

      SEBAS K he just meant its so old it was around back then

    • @brothergoodfoot
      @brothergoodfoot 5 лет назад +190

      And Bach probably thought “Who wants to play that 300 year old relic? Give me one in the cutting-edge equal temperament!”

    • @johannsebastianbach9829
      @johannsebastianbach9829 5 лет назад +261

      Unfortunately I did not. I was stuck in Leipzig my whole life.

    • @bronktug2446
      @bronktug2446 5 лет назад +54

      Johann Sebastian Bach your whole life? Oh really now, what about the köten Years? Lüneburg? Lübeck? Got ya there!

    • @alejandrom.4680
      @alejandrom.4680 5 лет назад +5

      @@bronktug2446 haha, good one my friend.

  • @HappyHauptwerk
    @HappyHauptwerk 10 лет назад +591

    I misread this as the "Oldest Playable Organist..."

    • @micktulk
      @micktulk 6 лет назад +17

      No, sir. The lady is the oldest pliable organist in the world, which means she has retained the glorious flexibility of her youth.

    • @Aishiya1
      @Aishiya1 6 лет назад +1

      Greg McAusland That organist might be lonely up in that fortress. He might be all right with being played. 😂

    • @icp818
      @icp818 6 лет назад +3

      Don't be mean mr. Greg!

    • @micheleotocione9907
      @micheleotocione9907 5 лет назад

      Ahahahahahahhjajah

    • @michelea.w.9697
      @michelea.w.9697 5 лет назад +1

      Greg McAusland 😂😂 I’m just trying to enjoy the sound then I read this

  • @stefanodomeni
    @stefanodomeni 7 лет назад +414

    It's pretty amusing that she speaks to him in English and he responds to her in French and they understand each other perfectly.

    • @Discrimination_is_not_a_right
      @Discrimination_is_not_a_right 7 лет назад +85

      That's Switzerland. It'll be the U.S. in about fifty years. Ninety percent will speak English and Spanish and the other ten percent will be paranoid.

    • @lepredator189
      @lepredator189 7 лет назад +20

      La beauté de la communication.

    • @stefanodomeni
      @stefanodomeni 7 лет назад +1

      Agreed. :)

    • @hedegaard8
      @hedegaard8 7 лет назад +33

      StivenCabrera3 because he, like many French, are too snobbish to stoop to English

    • @MeinnameistDreck
      @MeinnameistDreck 7 лет назад +20

      Diane Bish studied organ in France for several years. I believe she understands and speaks it well...

  • @shannonmillamena3386
    @shannonmillamena3386 4 года назад +290

    idk why youtube recommended me this
    It's 2020.

    • @cptcrogge
      @cptcrogge 4 года назад

      ye...

    • @gunnarthorsen
      @gunnarthorsen 4 года назад +10

      Because talent, great music, ancient instruments and churches, cultural heritage and beauty never go out of fashion?

    • @2Live4Christ1
      @2Live4Christ1 4 года назад +1

      Here I am on this good shut in watching it on a quarantine Saturday morning...🤦🏾‍♀️🤣

    • @juless3568
      @juless3568 4 года назад +1

      @@gunnarthorsen Very true and I agree with you Gunnar Thorsen.

    • @solbeckman
      @solbeckman 4 года назад +1

      Wow! Awesome comment! Original, hilarious, and relevant! Here's your medal.

  • @oscarbertola2259
    @oscarbertola2259 4 года назад +8

    In South Spain, at Garrovillas de Alconétar (Cáceres) is the oldest currently in use in Spain and among the oldest in the world. It was built in 1555.
    It is in perfect state of conservation and use and is part of the Renaissance music festival every year

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      Being about 60 years after Columbus reached the Americas, while this organ was begun around 100 years before.

  • @picksalot1
    @picksalot1 4 года назад +6

    Magnificent sounding organ, and beautifully played. I would have never guessed that the oldest playable organ would also be one of the best sounding! Thanks

  • @KB65YT
    @KB65YT 4 года назад +47

    choir: umm can we buy a new organ
    church: no the organ is still fine
    the organ:

  • @thomashogan16
    @thomashogan16 3 года назад +2

    What a treat to hear something built before America was founded. And the church itself is perfect for the instrument itself to sing.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      Long, long before America was founded and a hundred years before Columbus bumped into the Americas on his way to the West Indes.

  • @schaerffenberg
    @schaerffenberg 4 года назад +7

    Incredible that this organ, still able to sound with such precision, clarity and sweetness, was heard when Christopher Columbus was alive! Ms. Bish plays it very well. The instrument is itself a work of genius technology. The town of Sion is connected by very old, but consistent and living oral traditions surrounding the Holy Grail, which was said to have been guarded in a high mountain fortress.

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      Diane Bish is a world-renown American organist, composer, conductor, as well as executive producer and host of “The Joy of Music” television series.

  • @Kamikaze_4
    @Kamikaze_4 3 года назад +4

    What a time to be alive. I can sit in my family room eating cereal and at any moment I can hear the oldest playable organ be played. Thanks for posting this :)

  • @here_we_go_again3300
    @here_we_go_again3300 4 года назад +3

    Many thanks to you and to Mr. Wenger for showing
    us, your fans, this ancient pipe organ. And Ms. Bish
    for your beautifully done rendition.

  • @whalesong999
    @whalesong999 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you, Diane, quite the great treat to witness this instrument and it's history. What a sweet sound it has, great depth to this story.

  • @arobinsonneal
    @arobinsonneal 4 года назад +1

    Oh, the voices of this instrument! It just brings tears to my eyes. Thank you for sharing

  • @wickandde
    @wickandde 4 года назад +7

    Toccata No.14 by Michaelangelo Rossi
    I can't find a better version on RUclips than this played by Diane

  • @1Cyberix
    @1Cyberix 5 лет назад +4

    This is truly amazing, thank you for posting this. Wow, a real timemachine and really fantastic to hear such an old instrument, the king of instruments. And it sounds beautiful to! Thank you Diane Bish.

  • @DickotheClown
    @DickotheClown 5 лет назад +1

    Liked this video because I love watching your hands moving on that keyboard. Your passion comes through your fingers, it's awesome to watch

  • @DorothyGTyas
    @DorothyGTyas 4 года назад +2

    *Simply ethereal, sublime and otherwise very deeply moving!* 🎶🎵💜🎵🎶

  • @tommax26
    @tommax26 13 лет назад +8

    Thank you so much, Diane. The stops have marvelously brilliant vocalizations. Wouldn't it be fascinating if it were possible to identify all the persons who have left fingerprints on the keys, over the years?
    In those days of the bellows action, it would be a royal community commitment just to play a simple hymn.
    Amazing.
    Tom

  • @camphil321
    @camphil321 4 года назад +4

    Une sonorité tellement joyeuse et si merveilleusement joué. Merci.

  • @venta004
    @venta004 4 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing this amazing educational documentary. Such charm and wonderful personality of the host and guest in this interview. Love the sound of the Renessaince music on the organ and amazing musicianship of the organist.

  • @contralto25
    @contralto25 9 лет назад +2

    Great instrument, what a wonderful sound! Thanks for this piece of history.

  • @locoCP1900
    @locoCP1900 12 лет назад +5

    4:15 In Portugal and Spain we can find a specific type of organ that were built only in these two countries on XVII/XVIII centuries - are called "Iberian Organs". They also have the short octave, as this organ of Sion, and have other special caracteristics; for example, the keyboard is divided in two parts and we can have a registration on the left hand and another to the right hand, don't have pedals and have the "Horizontal Registers", as the "Trombeta Real", "Clarão", "Corneta de Batalha"...

  • @christianruiz2640
    @christianruiz2640 5 лет назад +4

    Man even the building itself is its own gem :)
    Beautiful organ as well

  • @BlackMytilus
    @BlackMytilus 4 года назад +1

    Amazing...after so many centuries still sounding so beautiful!

  • @DmendoBoteli
    @DmendoBoteli 4 года назад

    Fascinating. What a magnificent research job. I hope those museum pieces will be preserved for many more years to the delight of the next generations. Many congratulations on your channel

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 5 лет назад +145

    Humans are interesting creatures. One minute they make lovely music, the next they make war and destroy everything in sight. Go figure!

    • @RedPop4
      @RedPop4 5 лет назад +23

      Each one is unique, quite often those making lovely music are not those waging war.

    • @brown9671
      @brown9671 4 года назад +2

      How Steven, so deep

    • @miket7281
      @miket7281 4 года назад +1

      Might be a prerequisite for both. I mean u can't have the lovely music from a creature who doesn't also make war. Sad but it might be true.

    • @yuinurahilyon5711
      @yuinurahilyon5711 4 года назад

      Steven Yourke War isn’t made, it naturally begins when humans exist due to their opposition of ideas through ambitions.

    • @mypenisisunbelievablysmall5650
      @mypenisisunbelievablysmall5650 4 года назад +1

      that's so deep bro

  • @TheOrganPro
    @TheOrganPro 13 лет назад +6

    @db0956 She activated the manual to pedal coupler which allows the manual to be playable by the feet. Because this is a mechanical instrument, keys move together while coupled. When she activated this coupler, it connected the manual to pedal which makes the pedal that she plays with her feet cause the same key on the manual to also play. This is also known as "Phantom key movement." On electro-pneumatic organs, keys don't have to move together because there are no mechanical linkages.

  • @TheAlphaOmega78
    @TheAlphaOmega78 4 года назад +1

    Lol!! Loving how this came up for recommendations for me!! Always found myself so intrigued by organs. Grew up around them and playing on them. Wishing I’d learned how to play. Enjoyed this clip very much. Thanks for sharing.

  • @scrabbleroad
    @scrabbleroad 5 лет назад

    Love this presentation & music. Thank you for doing this.

  • @twinicebear775
    @twinicebear775 4 года назад +8

    Very interesting how even though it's 600 years old it's still tuned to A 415. I didn't know they used baroque-style tuning back then!

  • @augustaverbian
    @augustaverbian 2 года назад +3

    Organ is amazingly rare, not like other instruments that can easily picked up by nowadays audio equipment. But, organ sound span is so wide and it almost always meant to played so loud you could feel the vibration in your body. You might never fully experience it until you hear in person

  • @corey57255
    @corey57255 3 года назад +2

    The best part of this among all the best parts is her choices of pieces to play. So much breadth of repertoire she knows!

  • @lars1588
    @lars1588 4 года назад +2

    I would love to play this organ someday. What a way to worship Him.

  • @GARYKNERR
    @GARYKNERR 10 лет назад +9

    Thanks for the historical information on this old pipe organ as it was
    so interesting. I think the important thing here is that it has been preserved these many years..... Last May I think I saw this beautiful castle on the hill in Sion traveling to Montreux on the Swiss train.

    • @WCM1945
      @WCM1945 10 лет назад

      I wonder how much of the organ is original. Surely much of it has been replaced, because repair can only go so far. Nevertheless, it is amazing that it has been preserved for so long.

    • @modularshop6513
      @modularshop6513 4 года назад

      @@WCM1945 As long as the bulk of the pipes and the wind table is original I'd say it qualifies, those are the heart of the organ. Even the console could be replaced and it would sound just the same. Organs were routinely added to, removed from and moved around whenever a church was enlarged or some other big change was made. Quite a few of the remaining organs in the world do not live in their original homes and if they do you can bet that at least some ranks were added or changed, sometimes even new manuals added.

  • @jakegearhart
    @jakegearhart 5 лет назад +48

    This organ has definitely been touched and not restored to its original design. It plays with the modern tuning, (using √12 to calculate the frequency of the next note) which means the pipes must've been tampered with. In the old tunings, you wouldn't hear the "wowowow" sound like you do at 2:09 because old tunings used perfect intervals to build their instruments. (We don't use old tunings today because you can only play in one key with them.)

    • @morrisl7
      @morrisl7 4 года назад +2

      war on music, like how everything now is 440hz instead of 432, reason being it was healing energy, organ was good for the organs, they'd rather have us buying death pills. its all satanic rebellion.

    • @elliotmadethis
      @elliotmadethis 4 года назад +10

      Luke Morrison you’re joking right?

    • @morrisl7
      @morrisl7 4 года назад

      @@elliotmadethis lol nope

    • @Charccy
      @Charccy 4 года назад +1

      @JakeTheGearHeart - are you a kid or just another "smart guy" ? Don't comment subjects you obviously and utterly don't understand.

    • @bacicinvatteneaca
      @bacicinvatteneaca 4 года назад +8

      @@morrisl7 432Hz is pseudoscience, pure numerology. Watch the two Adam Neely videos about it. And it has nothing to do with temperament.

  • @Scotty.Bippin
    @Scotty.Bippin 5 месяцев назад

    This is amazing. I am speechless. What I have experienced, even just from this short video. It is simply beyond words. Thank you kindly. Be well Frens💚

  • @juless3568
    @juless3568 4 года назад

    Thank you for filmind a location I wish I would of known about when I visited Switzerland. I shall say "YES" to an opportunity to visit Sion and it's Gothic Fortress church and one of the world's most oldest organ. May the organ in the Cathedral of Sion play for many years to come. Merci (thank you).

  • @nikolaevkatesla3823
    @nikolaevkatesla3823 4 года назад +68

    When you realise that this is as old for Mozart as mozart to us

    • @88keysperfeel1ng9
      @88keysperfeel1ng9 4 года назад +2

      Mozart? Try Bach.

    • @RyanAl92
      @RyanAl92 4 года назад +1

      @@88keysperfeel1ng9 Perhaps you misread his comment?

  • @austinhuff8810
    @austinhuff8810 3 года назад +4

    Xbox: we build our consoles to last forever.
    Gothic engineers: hold my beer...

  • @retroman8424
    @retroman8424 4 года назад

    A wonderful sounding organ and wonderful acoustics to complement it!

  • @mosquito5
    @mosquito5 4 года назад +1

    This should be brought to the world as a heritage site of beauty and the most beautiful sounding organ that exits .🇬🇧👌

  • @oskardolch9281
    @oskardolch9281 7 лет назад +15

    The oldest organ manual looks like it is going to break apart very soon under the virtuoso fingers :-)

  • @sxymike12
    @sxymike12 5 лет назад +9

    As always instruments always get better sounding with age If you take care of them

  • @Maggiolone85
    @Maggiolone85 2 года назад +2

    We have to keep this knowledge going.

  • @scottnyc6572
    @scottnyc6572 Год назад +1

    The sound reverberating up through the bell tower gives extraordinary acoustics!!

  • @slayrx
    @slayrx 5 лет назад +30

    Damn, that Bish knows how to play.

    • @zenasm.savage1999
      @zenasm.savage1999 5 лет назад +5

      yeah she can lay it down.

    • @mamamia5668
      @mamamia5668 4 года назад

      Ye she do be vibin that hooka

    • @v.dargain1678
      @v.dargain1678 4 года назад

      @@zenasm.savage1999 truth .

    • @auxxik3805
      @auxxik3805 4 года назад +1

      @Michell Montes its a pun dude her last name is bish

  • @7REDDRACO7
    @7REDDRACO7 6 лет назад +3

    oh thank you i love it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @TheScreamingFrog916
    @TheScreamingFrog916 2 года назад +1

    This is so wonderful!
    I have been playing keyboards since I was in diapers, LOL.
    This lovely video, brings tears of joy, every time I watch it.
    Thanks so much, to Diane Bush and her crew, for making it, and to you for posting it here, for us to enjoy.

    • @scottw6704
      @scottw6704 3 месяца назад

      It's "Bish"; by the way...I only correct because if you meet another organist and refer to her as Diane Bush, you might never get a keyboard gig again.

  • @richardsnyder8
    @richardsnyder8 11 лет назад

    Wow! Thank you Diane!
    This is just wonderful.

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn 6 лет назад +9

    People underestimate the wondrous culture and music of the middle ages.

  • @arspolonica
    @arspolonica 7 лет назад +50

    This is NOT the "Prelude by Frescobaldi", but Toccata XIV by Michelangelo Rossi (~1602-1656).

    • @legaleagle7226
      @legaleagle7226 7 лет назад +6

      Go check out the Noel "Grand Jeu et Duo" by Daquin, number 10 of his 12 Noels for Organ
      If you like it, check out the other 11, all similarly delightful, yet completely different.
      The music suits older organs.

    • @samuellabrecque880
      @samuellabrecque880 7 лет назад +5

      ArsPolonica I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who noticed! it's a lovely piece.

    • @computerdynamo
      @computerdynamo 4 года назад +1

      Thank you for clarifying. I was looking for the name of the piece.

  • @JimPigMuseumOfSound
    @JimPigMuseumOfSound 11 лет назад +1

    The music and the church in this video are beautiful ! The church has always been a great preserver of history and culture. Thanks for this facinating video !

    • @inkyguy
      @inkyguy 2 года назад

      Except to be fair, that which it intentionally destroyed. Something in the neighborhood of two-thirds of Da Vinci’s papers were destroyed because the priests which had them after his death didn’t like their content, to name just one example.

  • @charlieredeemed
    @charlieredeemed 2 года назад +1

    600 years later it looks beautifully worn. It would be awesome to know every person that ever touched it...

  • @jaguar222222
    @jaguar222222 4 года назад +3

    Only 1400's kids remember this.

  • @Zoey12285
    @Zoey12285 4 года назад +19

    Why is this in my recommend section...in 2020 lmao

    • @amnimotuspictures2205
      @amnimotuspictures2205 4 года назад +4

      They couldn't recommend this to you in the 15th century xd

    • @hemmahos3l117
      @hemmahos3l117 4 года назад

      Perhaps because it´s timeless!

    • @scottw6704
      @scottw6704 3 месяца назад

      Yes, how dare they suggest something historical. We only want to learn about things that happened today! Not before I was born! Who cares about that? No one. ALL MUST CONCENTRATE SOLELY ON MY GENERATION. And nothing more. The younglings have spoken.

  • @ernestjenner1383
    @ernestjenner1383 10 месяцев назад

    This is a much appreciated video!

  • @johnswimcat
    @johnswimcat 4 года назад +2

    This is absolutely fascinating. And just imagine having the ability to adapt to an instrument like this. No electronic contrivance will ever match a sound like this

    • @saharatul
      @saharatul 2 года назад +1

      Because the cathedral itself plays a huge part in the reverb

  • @tuklplubl
    @tuklplubl 7 лет назад +3

    wow it sounds really great.

  • @nsmc99
    @nsmc99 7 лет назад +20

    Also, this organ doesn't seemed to be tuned to A=440, which I love because it feels that much more authentic.

    • @limu6719
      @limu6719 6 лет назад

      nsmc99 it is most likely tuned to A=432 Hz.

    • @elliotmadethis
      @elliotmadethis 5 лет назад +12

      Asronomīs369 nope much more likely 415 or 395 or somewhere therabouts. 432 has no significant historical precedence and derves no purpose other than wierd new agey bullcrap

  • @TheIsacBand
    @TheIsacBand 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing!!! Beautiful!!!

  • @GodsFavoriteBassPlyr
    @GodsFavoriteBassPlyr 6 лет назад

    Amazing sound... and brilliantly played.

  • @zachlafleur6651
    @zachlafleur6651 10 лет назад +3

    Wow, that sure gives us hope for our organ at St. Agnes Catholic Church in Fowlerville, MI! Ours is only as old as I am (installed in 1974) and isn't played very much as of 2014, despite having a 1950s era refurbished Wicks Console installed in 2005! What I find amazing about the 1390 organ is its pureness of tone particularly for having only one (shorter than most) manual and pedal board as well as the purely mechanical stop lever action! It appears to be that only the blower for the wind chest was electrified, but just to be on the safe side, they left the bellows intact, so music could be played in the event of a power failure! (Two people would have to be trained to rhythmically pump the bellows, however if they needed to)!

  • @lassehoei
    @lassehoei 6 лет назад +43

    1400s television equipment is quite cumbersome

    • @prebooomer
      @prebooomer 5 лет назад

      @ImNotMad ButUR You should see the cars, the Cugnot is cumbersome as all getout, but it can travel at the light speed of 3 miles per hour. :-)

  • @bongoscongasantiquecashreg4544
    @bongoscongasantiquecashreg4544 4 года назад +1

    Wow wow wow! For being that old & still playable is just amazing to me even before restoration plus never heard an organ sound this good! Yes proves that things in the old days were made better & made to last just like my antique cash registers for instance they still work even when not being restored so this organ fascinates me!