Wow what a wonderful experience watching this how these magnificent organs were made! As a young boy in the 1940`s I used to go with my dad and brothers who serviced and tuned the many pipe organs in the larger churches in western Michigan and being inside the organ chambers and watching them tune the pipes was so fascinating for me also.Most of the organs were SCHANTZ ORGAN Co. from Orville,Ohio as they were the servicemen for SCHANTZ.
Fascinating documentary - I must point out the Grand Organ of Sydney Town Hall is the other monster with a 64' stop - it is called the Contratrombone64. It, is a reed stop, not a flute stop, like at Atlantic City.
This is such an interesting piece of Americana combined with centuries of organ building. I remember tuning a small pipe organ, but I would have needed a team of 50 to tune this baby.
That is one fantastic set of keyboards and stops! One has to be a master musician to understand that and play it for the best effects! Play it like a "theatre organ" (grins) along with the silent movies of the day...
Your comment regarding 64' Ophaclide, believe West Point Chapel has one which is placed under the bleachers in the side upper balcony. And as you mentioned Wanamaker's in Philly.
@Jm4steam its being restored right now....my dads organ company is helping with it so i get to work on it to....in about 9 years it will be playing again...i know its a long time but it will be worth the wait
Some would like to know what tracks were used on the full documentary. For a list of all music, please see Chapter 6 of the Senator's Masterpiece. The Senator's Masterpiece - Chapter 06 - Atlantic City Convention Hall Pipe Organ
Magnificent I'm glad that musical treasures like this is now on RUclips. And I thought that the Wannamaker was the king of mammoth sized pipe organs. Very educational as well as entertaining .
This seven-manual and pedal organ will be quite a project to get all up, especially with the ranks of the three lower-manual divisions being of extended compass. The console looks well designed for handling 200+ ranks (some probably unified to save volume) from its 1,000+ stops.
The ACCHOS, in 1998, did release a CD of various pieces - from classical to popular along with stops samples (as with the Ophiclede stop that uses 100 inches of wind). It was an excellent release. Need to check this out.
Simply amazing! Truly remarkable on every level. I can't imagine hearing and feeling music played by a single musician encompassing every frequency possible to the human ear and beyond...I hope one day to experience that low 64' stop. Technology way, way ahead of it's time!!! Thanks for posting this!!!! Steve
This Organ is great BUT ... The University of Texas has a big tracker Organ in a hall that was built for it " Bates Recital Hall " The best of the best in sound ! Visser Rowland .
I have the DVD of this well made video. It is awesome! This instrument needs to be publicly promoted as the national treasure it is, so that more people become aware of it. Atlantic City has a lot more going for it than its casinos.
I hope they get to complete their dream of fully reinstating this amazing organ,though as to how much is missing and what needs repair/renovation is difficult to discover as this information doesn't seem to be online.
A great irony about this organ is that it contained a small baroque section of a few ranks that helped to spur renewed interest in old organs. Through the efforts of many important people such as Flentrop, Schweitzer and Biggs, the Orgelbewegung movement was born which has brought these wonderful "old" instruments from the past back to life throughout the world. It has also led to an improved quality of other instruments as well. Everybody wins.
Historically, the 1920s was also the era of the Wurlitzer theater organ. Was there ever the impetus for a “duke-out” between the Municipal and the Wurlitzer? I haven’t made it to Convention Hall, but I have been to Wanamaker’s. The guy who escorted me there, Mr. Stephen L. Andersen (1943-2009), would explode with excitement to know that the Convention Hall Municipal Organ was being renovated.
Is that 64' pipe they are showing at 9:10 and afterwards a Diaphone? It is made of wood, square, and tapers out towards the top. They state that it is more felt than heard. Reminds me of the 32'' diaphone at the Organ Stop Pizza in Mesa, AZ. This is a really great video. Thanks for posting!
Thanks for posting this video. I play organ for church, so would love to tickle those keyboards some day. This documentary had the kind of respect for the instrument and the people who made it happen which I love to see. It is not just huge beyond belief, but made to provide everything from the softest to the loudest music. Now I've got something else I've got to do before I kick the bucket. :o)
It is being restored. Progress is just really slow. The left stage chamber has a huge part of it removed and is being restored. The right stage chamber is still the only side that plays, portions of it still have issues. They are trying to replace the internal portions with more modern parts so that it will require less maintenance and be more reliable. I know the Curator through a good friend of mine and he says that it will be awhile before it is completely done.
I had dreams of being a professional organist when I was young, but my fingers stopped growing too soon. I love to listen to organs, all types (pipe to modern electronic ones). This organ is the biggest I've ever seen, it is gorgeous!
I have short fingers but it does not stop me...played the Worcester MA organ riding up from the basement..what fun..played organs all over this country, England, South Africa..practice and begin the adventure with those short fingers.🎶
To Melos Antropon (nice username, by the way - a very obscure pipe organ reference) -- the Atlantic City organ was not "briefly" the largest organ in the world. It is, or is not, depending on how one counts, to this day. The Atlantic City Organ vs. the Wanamaker Organ has been a great debate, with the latter having more ranks due to being mostly 'straight,' and the former having more stops due to its fair number of 'extended' ranks. Atlantic City, either way, has more pipes-- and if that is the true measure of size, it IS the largest. Wanamaker has the distinction, however, of being fully restored and playable right now.
This controversy is a prime example of the inability of many in the US to grasp that, contrary to Liberace's famous dictum, it IS possible to have too much of a good thing.
Finally a satisfying display of this organ.... even finding photographs of the whole thing(as opposed to just the keyboard womb) is inexplicably difficult.
It's really because any picture of the whole organ is really just a picture of the auditorium. With eight pipe chambers spread throughout the room and no exposed pipes, you can't even really tell there's an organ there at all unless the work lights in the stage chambers are on or you notice the console. Normally they turn off the chamber lights for events, even if the organ will be played, but leave them on during the usual recitals.
Never knew there were ,2 organs on the Broadwalk...the one of some 33 thousand pipes and now the Kimble..once there was a Kimble at Carnegie Hall, disappeared years ago.
The 64 is a hybred pipe stop, the lowest ones are diaphone, the others are reed, and from what an organist tells me origionaly the stop was supposed to be both and could be switched to eaither or but they could not make it work so some were made diaphone and some reed they are on 30 inches of wind I was told by someone that took video of the organ or was it 50 inches of wind, the grand is 100 inches which i think they said is about 3 psi
I'll be the first to comment. What an amazing documentary on my favorite Pipe Organ, highly educational and informative. Tho I would hate to be a critic here, I wish they would've shown more of the actual organ itself, i.e. such as its current state of condition, all of the heavy bass stops, the infamous grand ophicleide and it's thunderous roar, etc. Tho I look forward to another video, take this comment into consideration. Many thanks! -Levi S.
I wonder what happens if this organ has a 128' Stop? Someone else told me that there is an organ that has a 216' Stop, It goes down two octaves lower from the 64' and 128'.
Arianna Cunningham those exist but are pointless cause they’re too low to hear and they literally break shit. They use the, to shake the place so you feel it. But they ended up breaking everything
"Back then" it wasn't that long ago,it was constructed in 1929.There a many pipe organs built in the 15th century that are fully operational some with nearly all their original pipes.
Among the instruments i play are theater pipe organs. What is the status of the restoration of this instrument? Sounds like it is up to around 50%. Problem with big programs like this is getting funding and keeping it funded for ongoing maintenance. The Wanamaker was in a similar state of decay but now 100% restored. That being said....just because an organ is huge doesn't mean it is wonderful or has a great sound. Waiting for final completion and a competent performer to see if it lives up to it's promises.
Wonderfully informative documentary excerpt. How grand it would be if they could have a statewide yearly telethon to raise the funds to totally restore this magnificent instrument. Perhaps the casinos could donate much needed monies. Surely there are musical non-profit organizations that could help as well.
what a masterpiece. and lets just hope no penny-pinching chair pusher gets the idea to silent that. and replace it with a, cheaper to maintain, electronic tin can.
dear Mr Goddman, what you say is fascinating - spoilt by the malapropism of the word "enormity" which doesn't mean "big" - it means "an horrific crime". What was accomplished was an engineering marvel. Regards
The 64' stop isn't even close to the loudest note. Here's exactly what you do if you want to play the loudest notes: 1. Open the panel on the wall to the left of the console. Press the green buttons under "Generator", "Low Great", and "Compressor" in that order. 2. To the right of the keyboards, locate a group of stop tabs called "Grand Great". Press "Grand Great on" and "Ophicleide". 3. Play whatever you want on the second keyboard from the bottom.
Some could say that is the quintenssence, but for me such "grandiosity" is not necessary: once upon a time I dreamed of a very smaller instrument on that one could play all the literature. Now I tell that I found an even smaller that pleased me enough: the Paul Fritts & Co. instrument at the Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, WA. I have recording of some J. S. Bach's organ works (BWV 572, 541, 544, 546, 548 and 769) played by Joan Lippincott (Gothic CD G 49202).
this one is bigger in terms of manuals and stops however it's not playable and will never be so; the Wanamaker one in Philly is the world's largest playable musical instrument/organ.
The restoration's going full steam ahead, it's gone from 25-33% playable to 50% playable in about three years and should be complete by 2023. It WILL be fully playable unless money runs out, which is unlikely as more and more people learn about it as more and more of the organ comes online.
frispo73 speak english. jeez... fireburst102 the organ wouldn't explode but the convention hall might shake violently ASSUMING that the blowers could supply enough wind for all of those pipes at the intended pressures but i guess that most of the shaking might come from the 16,32,and 64 foot pipes and everything else just might damage your eardrums
HORC is the organization you're looking for. ACCHOS was just for raising awareness and money, HORC is actually doing the restoration and now has the organ 50% playable. www.boardwalkorgans.org/, instagram.com/boardwalkorgans/, facebook.com/BoardwalkOrgans
I always thought the Wannamaker was considered the world's Largest (?). I guess organs are like rollercoasters! Anyways, I would sooooooooo love to hear this organ in person (with an accomplished organist, of course!). Since I live in Indianapolis, I suppose my chances of this are few. Thanks for the post..........interesting stuff, for sure! peace
The main problem with an actual demo of that organ is the fact, that it had to be restored at the time the documentary was made.. A few years back during renovation of the building, a workman cut the consoles main cable rendering the organ largely inoperative. The documentary was partly intended to raise funds for the organ's restauration.
I don't think the cable to the main console has ever been cut, has it? One of the relay rooms was cut out and disassembled, and the cable to the portable five-manual console was cut decades ago. As far as I know, the main seven-manual console has never been disconnected, and the Right Stage Chamber, restored in the 90s and damaged during the building restoration, has been restored again.
The left stage chamber's relay (which also runs the left forward) was removed as part of the 1998-2001 renovation of the hall, as it was located under the old balcony seating and its entire room was being removed in the renovation. The left stage chamber has since received a modern solid-state electronic relay, this will eventually be installed throughout the organ but the old relays will be kept connected for historical purposes. The secondary console's cable was cut a while ago, but the main console has always been operational. The plan is to restore the secondary console to play the organ wirelessly through only the new relay.
A lot of the pedal ranks are extended upward to 7 octaves. These extended ranks are in the Grand Great and Grand Choir divisions, the extended manuals allow the entire ranks to be played from them rather than the bottom two octaves only being playable on the pedals. The loudest organ stop, the Grand Ophicleide, is one of these. You'll find a 16 foot stop for it in Pedal Right and an 8 foot stop for it in Grand Great, but you can still play the 16 foot octave on the Great manual since it's extended.
***** What about "128 pipe"? The exact number of pipes in this organ is not known, due to some odd arrangements with many of the ranks. However, the exact number is somewhere between 29,092 and 33,893. Even at the lowest possible number, it is the largest organ in the world by number of pipes. There has been reference made to a 128-foot organ stop. It can be done as a resultant pitch by putting two conflicting pitches of adjacent ranks together, the way a 16-foot stop and a 10 2/3-foot stop can create a resultant 32-foot, and a 32-foot and 21 1/3-foot can create a resultant 64' (the latter commonly labeled Gravissima). No actual 128' stop exists in any organ, nor is there a stopped (half-length) 128' stop.
I remember reading about this organ a few years ago. Sadly, I think I read that it needed tremendous repair work done on it. So as far as I know, it just sits. :(
It definitely does not just sit. A little over one third of the organ is in working condition, with fundraising campaigns and planning sessions in continuous swing. The organ is played often, but normally only over lunch, because it is too disruptive to the folks in the offices during the rest of the work day...
Jared Shrader now the whole organ is playable they brought the left stage chamber Beck on in late August and tuning is expected to be completed sometime in mid 2017
Pure seminal joy! The sound comes at you from all directions. It is absolutely a joy! Imagine how she'll sound when she's fully restored!
Thank you Vic Ferrer for this posting.
Wow what a wonderful experience watching this how these magnificent organs were made! As a young boy in the 1940`s I used to go with my dad and brothers who serviced and tuned the many pipe organs in the larger churches in western Michigan and being inside the organ chambers and watching them tune the pipes was so fascinating for me also.Most of the organs were SCHANTZ ORGAN Co. from Orville,Ohio as they were the servicemen for SCHANTZ.
Did you know that John Shantz
How I would like to travel there and hear that organ played by a master organist !
Great documentary. Thanks for posting.
Amazing talent. Simply effortless, and perfect.
The amazing things man can do when he is not fighting one another. Time to stop all wars and make this the greatest planet in the Universe.
Fascinating documentary - I must point out the Grand Organ of Sydney Town Hall is the other monster with a 64' stop - it is called the Contratrombone64. It, is a reed stop, not a flute stop, like at Atlantic City.
This is such an interesting piece of Americana combined with centuries of organ building. I remember tuning a small pipe organ, but I would have needed a team of 50 to tune this baby.
That is one fantastic set of keyboards and stops! One has to be a master musician to understand that and play it for the best effects! Play it like a "theatre organ" (grins) along with the silent movies of the day...
MY GOD WHAT ORGANS, I NEVER KNEW ABOUT THESE ORGANS, AND THIS SIZE....THE PIPES. AMAZING.
Thanks for this posting, it made me feel good on a rainy day.
Great Video Vic. Thank You for posting!
Magnificent! Thank you for posting this; I would love to visit this hall and experience this piece of history firsthand!
Your comment regarding 64' Ophaclide, believe West Point Chapel has one which is placed under the bleachers in the side upper balcony. And as you mentioned Wanamaker's in Philly.
This Is TOTALLY AWESOME, thank you for this video..............
@Jm4steam its being restored right now....my dads organ company is helping with it so i get to work on it to....in about 9 years it will be playing again...i know its a long time but it will be worth the wait
Some would like to know what tracks were used on the full documentary. For a list of all music, please see Chapter 6 of the Senator's Masterpiece.
The Senator's Masterpiece - Chapter 06 - Atlantic City Convention Hall Pipe Organ
Magnificent I'm glad that musical treasures like this is now on RUclips. And I thought that the Wannamaker was the king of mammoth sized pipe organs. Very educational as well as entertaining .
This seven-manual and pedal organ will be quite a project to get all up, especially with the ranks of the three lower-manual divisions being of extended compass. The console looks well designed for handling 200+ ranks (some probably unified to save volume) from its 1,000+ stops.
00:37 I recognize the organ's big entry in Camille Saint-saens' final movement of the Organ Symphony Nr 3. Nice animation too, very expressive.
Amazing, Exciting, Interesting - Wonderful Instrument !
The ACCHOS, in 1998, did release a CD of various pieces - from classical to popular along with stops samples (as with the Ophiclede stop that uses 100 inches of wind). It was an excellent release. Need to check this out.
Simply amazing! Truly remarkable on every level. I can't imagine hearing and feeling music played by a single musician encompassing every frequency possible to the human ear and beyond...I hope one day to experience that low 64' stop. Technology way, way ahead of it's time!!! Thanks for posting this!!!! Steve
This Organ is great BUT ... The University of Texas has a big tracker Organ in a hall that was built for it " Bates Recital Hall " The best of the best in sound ! Visser Rowland .
I have the DVD of this well made video. It is awesome! This instrument needs to be publicly promoted as the national treasure it is, so that more people become aware of it. Atlantic City has a lot more going for it than its casinos.
I hope they get to complete their dream of fully reinstating this amazing organ,though as to how much is missing and what needs repair/renovation is difficult to discover as this information doesn't seem to be online.
A great irony about this organ is that it contained a small baroque section of a few ranks that helped to spur renewed interest in old organs. Through the efforts of many important people such as Flentrop, Schweitzer and Biggs, the Orgelbewegung movement was born which has brought these wonderful "old" instruments from the past back to life throughout the world. It has also led to an improved quality of other instruments as well. Everybody wins.
Historically, the 1920s was also the era of the Wurlitzer theater organ. Was there ever the impetus for a “duke-out” between the Municipal and the Wurlitzer?
I haven’t made it to Convention Hall, but I have been to Wanamaker’s. The guy who escorted me there, Mr. Stephen L. Andersen (1943-2009), would explode with excitement to know that the Convention Hall Municipal Organ was being renovated.
Is that 64' pipe they are showing at 9:10 and afterwards a Diaphone? It is made of wood, square, and tapers out towards the top. They state that it is more felt than heard. Reminds me of the 32'' diaphone at the Organ Stop Pizza in Mesa, AZ.
This is a really great video. Thanks for posting!
My chest swells with pride having been born in and residing in the state of New Jersey where this behemoth can be found!
Thanks for posting this video. I play organ for church, so would love to tickle those keyboards some day. This documentary had the kind of respect for the instrument and the people who made it happen which I love to see. It is not just huge beyond belief, but made to provide everything from the softest to the loudest music. Now I've got something else I've got to do before I kick the bucket. :o)
It is being restored. Progress is just really slow. The left stage chamber has a huge part of it removed and is being restored. The right stage chamber is still the only side that plays, portions of it still have issues. They are trying to replace the internal portions with more modern parts so that it will require less maintenance and be more reliable. I know the Curator through a good friend of mine and he says that it will be awhile before it is completely done.
this needs to be restored.
So this is larger than the Wannamaker at Macy's? Fascinating!
I don't know how I got here but I'm glad I learned that
Great video!
I would love to pull out all the stops!
I wish they focused more on the mechanics of the organ. I'd like to know about the pressures and such.
I'm amazed it's still around for how under used it is now.
Including hurricanes which practically destroyed that organ..including Sandy a few years back.
i love the little cartoon in the beginning!
I had dreams of being a professional organist when I was young, but my fingers stopped growing too soon. I love to listen to organs, all types (pipe to modern electronic ones). This organ is the biggest I've ever seen, it is gorgeous!
Luis founsi despasito nu Starship five
I have short fingers but it does not stop me...played the Worcester MA organ riding up from the basement..what fun..played organs all over this country, England, South Africa..practice and begin the adventure with those short fingers.🎶
Excellent documentary, Vic Ferrer. Do we know the identity of the woman in the group photo at the end of the trailer?
What's is the status of the instrument? Completely restored, starting?
Wow! "King of Instruments" this would be my worlds ambition to see, hear, & play this!
To Melos Antropon (nice username, by the way - a very obscure pipe organ reference) -- the Atlantic City organ was not "briefly" the largest organ in the world. It is, or is not, depending on how one counts, to this day. The Atlantic City Organ vs. the Wanamaker Organ has been a great debate, with the latter having more ranks due to being mostly 'straight,' and the former having more stops due to its fair number of 'extended' ranks. Atlantic City, either way, has more pipes-- and if that is the true measure of size, it IS the largest. Wanamaker has the distinction, however, of being fully restored and playable right now.
This controversy is a prime example of the inability of many in the US to grasp that, contrary to Liberace's famous dictum, it IS possible to have too much of a good thing.
just AMAZING!!! :)
Awesome to say the least.
Finally a satisfying display of this organ.... even finding photographs of the whole thing(as opposed to just the keyboard womb) is inexplicably difficult.
It's really because any picture of the whole organ is really just a picture of the auditorium. With eight pipe chambers spread throughout the room and no exposed pipes, you can't even really tell there's an organ there at all unless the work lights in the stage chambers are on or you notice the console. Normally they turn off the chamber lights for events, even if the organ will be played, but leave them on during the usual recitals.
Never knew there were ,2 organs on the Broadwalk...the one of some 33 thousand pipes and now the Kimble..once there was a Kimble at Carnegie Hall, disappeared years ago.
That is too many goddamn keyboards. The magnitude of this thing is absolutely mind-blowing.
Just think about it as the cockpit of a 747..lol
The 64 is a hybred pipe stop, the lowest ones are diaphone, the others are reed, and from what an organist tells me origionaly the stop was supposed to be both and could be switched to eaither or but they could not make it work so some were made diaphone and some reed they are on 30 inches of wind I was told by someone that took video of the organ or was it 50 inches of wind, the grand is 100 inches which i think they said is about 3 psi
i have got to have a go at that
I'll be the first to comment. What an amazing documentary on my favorite Pipe Organ, highly educational and informative. Tho I would hate to be a critic here, I wish they would've shown more of the actual organ itself, i.e. such as its current state of condition, all of the heavy bass stops, the infamous grand ophicleide and it's thunderous roar, etc. Tho I look forward to another video, take this comment into consideration.
Many thanks!
-Levi S.
The 2nd largest organ with 64' pipes must be the one in Salt Lake City at the Mormon Tabernacle. It's might
I like the first part lol I will be excited the same way COOL😍😍
My dream pipe organ to play someday 😊☺️♥️
I wonder what happens if this organ has a 128' Stop? Someone else told me that there is an organ that has a 216' Stop, It goes down two octaves lower from the 64' and 128'.
Arianna Cunningham those exist but are pointless cause they’re too low to hear and they literally break shit. They use the, to shake the place so you feel it. But they ended up breaking everything
Is that like a B3 and a Leslie 122?
What recent progress have they made with the instrument? I'd love to visit it someday.
Wow! 'Nuff said.
"Back then" it wasn't that long ago,it was constructed in 1929.There a many pipe organs built in the 15th century that are fully operational some with nearly all their original pipes.
love the trumpets , reminds me of st andrews cathedral grand rapids michigian chancel 8 trumpets.
Among the instruments i play are theater pipe organs. What is the status of the restoration of this instrument? Sounds like it is up to around 50%. Problem with big programs like this is getting funding and keeping it funded for ongoing maintenance. The Wanamaker was in a similar state of decay but now 100% restored. That being said....just because an organ is huge doesn't mean it is wonderful or has a great sound. Waiting for final completion and a competent performer to see if it lives up to it's promises.
¡Impresionante! este monumental Órgano de Iglesia. Me gustaría saber su precio.
Un saludo desde Barcelona (España).
V. Lecha.
Wonderfully informative documentary excerpt. How grand it would be if they could have a statewide yearly telethon to raise the funds to totally restore this magnificent instrument. Perhaps the casinos could donate much needed monies. Surely there are musical non-profit organizations that could help as well.
does it have all the elements a theater organ haven like tremulants ???
What is the background music
what a masterpiece. and lets just hope no penny-pinching chair pusher gets the idea to silent that. and replace it with a, cheaper to maintain, electronic tin can.
Audioi
⁷
dear Mr Goddman, what you say is fascinating - spoilt by the malapropism of the word "enormity" which doesn't mean "big" - it means "an horrific crime". What was accomplished was an engineering marvel. Regards
Dose it have festival trumpets?
more adjectives . please, more
That's not just an organ... That's a whole BODY!
A very complex ORGANISM even ;-)
Anyone know what song is playing when the guy talks about how many pipe cheers there are with the animated auditorium?
Which piece is being played in the background?
being a child of course, the fist thing i wanna do is pull that 64' stop and play the lowest note, the LOUDEST as possible.....o.0 lol
The 64' stop isn't even close to the loudest note. Here's exactly what you do if you want to play the loudest notes:
1. Open the panel on the wall to the left of the console. Press the green buttons under "Generator", "Low Great", and "Compressor" in that order.
2. To the right of the keyboards, locate a group of stop tabs called "Grand Great". Press "Grand Great on" and "Ophicleide".
3. Play whatever you want on the second keyboard from the bottom.
Some could say that is the quintenssence, but for me such "grandiosity" is not necessary: once upon a time I dreamed of a very smaller instrument on that one could play all the literature. Now I tell that I found an even smaller that pleased me enough: the Paul Fritts & Co. instrument at the Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, WA. I have recording of some J. S. Bach's organ works (BWV 572, 541, 544, 546, 548 and 769) played by Joan Lippincott (Gothic CD G 49202).
which one is bigger, this one or the one at the Wanamaker
this one is bigger in terms of manuals and stops however it's not playable and will never be so; the Wanamaker one in Philly is the world's largest playable musical instrument/organ.
The restoration's going full steam ahead, it's gone from 25-33% playable to 50% playable in about three years and should be complete by 2023. It WILL be fully playable unless money runs out, which is unlikely as more and more people learn about it as more and more of the organ comes online.
codmaster4488 this
musicman8942 ... "Will never be so"!? Do you know something we don't.
What would happen if you pulled out ALL of the stops...?
frispo73
speak english. jeez...
fireburst102 the organ wouldn't explode but the convention hall might shake violently ASSUMING that the blowers could supply enough wind for all of those pipes at the intended pressures
but i guess that most of the shaking might come from the 16,32,and 64 foot pipes and everything else just might damage your eardrums
a very big sound
Isn't English spelled with a capital E? Hmmm, Jake?
Any updated links? ACCHOS is defunct, and boardwalkpipes has been hijacked by a gaming company?
HORC is the organization you're looking for. ACCHOS was just for raising awareness and money, HORC is actually doing the restoration and now has the organ 50% playable. www.boardwalkorgans.org/, instagram.com/boardwalkorgans/, facebook.com/BoardwalkOrgans
so freaking cool.
It would be a dream to climb in this I have built many large organs but nothing like this!
...and the second thing you should do is to add the appropriate 42 2/3' stop, which would emulate an acoustic 128' (!) one...
:-)
Vic, Audio level is low. How do you monitor the output level?
I always thought the Wannamaker was considered the world's Largest (?). I guess organs are like rollercoasters! Anyways, I would sooooooooo love to hear this organ in person (with an accomplished organist, of course!). Since I live in Indianapolis, I suppose my chances of this are few.
Thanks for the post..........interesting stuff, for sure!
peace
me too that is my goal in this mammoth to see,hear,and also to played
is still working???
My destiny (as decided many years ago) since i heard this organ
The main problem with an actual demo of that organ is the fact, that it had to be restored at the time the documentary was made.. A few years back during renovation of the building, a workman cut the consoles main cable rendering the organ largely inoperative. The documentary was partly intended to raise funds for the organ's restauration.
I don't think the cable to the main console has ever been cut, has it? One of the relay rooms was cut out and disassembled, and the cable to the portable five-manual console was cut decades ago. As far as I know, the main seven-manual console has never been disconnected, and the Right Stage Chamber, restored in the 90s and damaged during the building restoration, has been restored again.
The left stage chamber's relay (which also runs the left forward) was removed as part of the 1998-2001 renovation of the hall, as it was located under the old balcony seating and its entire room was being removed in the renovation. The left stage chamber has since received a modern solid-state electronic relay, this will eventually be installed throughout the organ but the old relays will be kept connected for historical purposes. The secondary console's cable was cut a while ago, but the main console has always been operational. The plan is to restore the secondary console to play the organ wirelessly through only the new relay.
Definitely - but with the news regarding the Sandy devastation and all the human tragedy respectively, did this historic organ even survive :(??
Only in America saying that though i would love to here beast live ,, 13 grand piano,s WoW.
Can i have a go Mr ,,,,,
I wonder what it sounds likes?
The Senator's Masterpiece. Here are links to the six chapters from the full-length documentary The Senator's Masterpiece. The story of the Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ (aka Boardwalk Hall Organ).
Chapter 1 - Prologue
ruclips.net/video/Krm7k3Q-3vc/видео.html
Chapter 2 - The Municipal Organ
ruclips.net/video/UhdJE7M2954/видео.html
Chapter 3 - The Visionaries
ruclips.net/video/h24SS_0DtEc/видео.html
Chapter 4 - Holding on to the Dream
ruclips.net/video/nV4gUpeo-Fw/видео.html
Chapter 5 - Casualty of Civic War
ruclips.net/video/h6LBjWH2uWo/видео.html
Chapter 6 - A Window into Time
ruclips.net/video/mFw5C3tHGe0/видео.html
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@john1801rambo same as playing two, three, four, five and 6......
But does it djent?
Bottom manuals have 7 octaves?
A lot of the pedal ranks are extended upward to 7 octaves. These extended ranks are in the Grand Great and Grand Choir divisions, the extended manuals allow the entire ranks to be played from them rather than the bottom two octaves only being playable on the pedals. The loudest organ stop, the Grand Ophicleide, is one of these. You'll find a 16 foot stop for it in Pedal Right and an 8 foot stop for it in Grand Great, but you can still play the 16 foot octave on the Great manual since it's extended.
@lopezrawelf why not? looks like a big hangar so why not a helicopter.
2:10 Do all John Goodmans in the world look the same?!
I want to hear Tocotta and Fugue played on it!
and is there a video anywhere? (I want to see it! :D)
***** what about this one?
*****
As did Felix Hell. I have a recording of that, but it uses only the Right Stage stops, with no 64' or 100".
Jonas Clark i thought it was a 128 pipe (or something like that)
*****
What about "128 pipe"? The exact number of pipes in this organ is not known, due to some odd arrangements with many of the ranks. However, the exact number is somewhere between 29,092 and 33,893. Even at the lowest possible number, it is the largest organ in the world by number of pipes.
There has been reference made to a 128-foot organ stop. It can be done as a resultant pitch by putting two conflicting pitches of adjacent ranks together, the way a 16-foot stop and a 10 2/3-foot stop can create a resultant 32-foot, and a 32-foot and 21 1/3-foot can create a resultant 64' (the latter commonly labeled Gravissima). No actual 128' stop exists in any organ, nor is there a stopped (half-length) 128' stop.
you must be a mad man to play that!!!
I remember reading about this organ a few years ago. Sadly, I think I read that it needed tremendous repair work done on it. So as far as I know, it just sits. :(
It definitely does not just sit. A little over one third of the organ is in working condition, with fundraising campaigns and planning sessions in continuous swing. The organ is played often, but normally only over lunch, because it is too disruptive to the folks in the offices during the rest of the work day...
Jared Shrader now the whole organ is playable they brought the left stage chamber Beck on in late August and tuning is expected to be completed sometime in mid 2017