Introducing Handel's Organ

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2018
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    Our Principal Artist John Butt introduces a spectacular bespoke chamber organ, built to recreate the sounds of Handel's era.
    Featuring extracts from Handel's Organ Concerto in G minor, Op.4, No.1
    It was built by British organ maker Robin Jennings jennings-organs.co.uk/.
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Комментарии • 276

  • @rareblues78daddy
    @rareblues78daddy 4 года назад +63

    Butt: "Handel's organ was a small unit."

  • @HakureiReimuOfficial
    @HakureiReimuOfficial 3 года назад +19

    This man's enthusiasm makes life worth it

  • @ivyssauro123
    @ivyssauro123 5 лет назад +201

    "This is very close to what Handel himself would have"...Handled! *Badum tss*

  • @mrJohnDesiderio
    @mrJohnDesiderio 5 лет назад +77

    He really Handels that organ.

  • @notabit
    @notabit 5 лет назад +10

    John Butt is one of my all-time heros.

  • @McOuroborosBurger
    @McOuroborosBurger 4 года назад +123

    The child labor was the best part of the organ.

  • @sfbirdclub
    @sfbirdclub 4 года назад +21

    For several years I played a small Woodbury organ in Sudbury MA which, though it has had an electric blower since early on (1910-25?), still also had its original pumping handle. It was great, BUT let me remind you. I learned after the first time (a wedding--they were so hap[py to have no electricity at all in their wedding, and the grooms 12-year old brother pumped the organ) that ONLY another organist would do for any music of even the lightest complexity past a hymn. The pumper needs to know the music well enough to know when stops were going to be added or a change of manual or volume was required. Otherwise--since chest regulators were not...um, as good as they are now shall we say--you could play your new volume huge chord on the combined great and the nearly deflated chests would wheeze and even pitches fail, or if over-pumped create ciphers; my 12 year old was SO enthusiastic he kept needing to be reminded that over pumping could burst a gut valve or send the organ pipes into screeching if playing softly was required and constant pumping continued.

    • @gehirndoper
      @gehirndoper 3 года назад +3

      That's quite the story, and a perspective on joint creation of music that I can hardly envision when being so used (as everyone else is) to the organ just playing forever after I turn it on.

    • @alexanderbacklund9835
      @alexanderbacklund9835 2 года назад +2

      There are stories about famous organists like J. S. Bach improvising on the organ, sometimes in friendly competition with a fellow organist, and one wonders how it was done in practice, especially given what you are writing - but also, did they have a couple of boys that could be summoned at any time?
      In a churchyard, I saw a tombstone (from the 19th century, if I remember correctly) where the title of the person was given in Swedish as "orgeltrampare" (literally "organ blower"), which I thought was unusual.

    • @ethanlamoureux5306
      @ethanlamoureux5306 10 месяцев назад +1

      I remember hearing the story of an organist who announced to an audience, “I will now play the organ.” But upon striking what was to have been a grand chord, and no sound being heard, a voice came from the back of the organ which said “We! We will now play the organ.” Bear in mind, the calcant or organ blower did not work for free. And as you state, pumping an organ is not an unskilled job.

  • @WesWaagenaar
    @WesWaagenaar 5 лет назад +68

    Beautiful organ. I really enjoy how it sounds.

  • @hewie2u
    @hewie2u 5 лет назад +221

    I would like to handle the handles that Haendel had handled

    • @scottklein4844
      @scottklein4844 5 лет назад +27

      I couldn't handle handling Handel's handles.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 5 лет назад +20

      Bach off!

    • @faaqcee7896
      @faaqcee7896 5 лет назад +5

      Mark Hewitt you can't handle the Toots

    • @hewie2u
      @hewie2u 5 лет назад +2

      or the tweets

    • @danielj9042
      @danielj9042 3 года назад +4

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @hamzahaytham3940
    @hamzahaytham3940 4 года назад +10

    he _Handled_ it very well

  • @Thilindel
    @Thilindel 4 года назад +121

    "Our Principal Artist John Butt introduces. . . Handel's Organ"
    That just seems like the title of a whole different adult movie right there.

  • @praestant8
    @praestant8 5 лет назад +68

    Even Handel was aware of larger instruments, as plenty existed. The fascination, however, was with smaller instruments that could be used with orchestra.

    • @pbrower2a1
      @pbrower2a1 5 лет назад +8

      As I see it from the organ concertos, the idea was to make the organist primus inter pares.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 7 месяцев назад +1

      Or in the home as well

  • @vincenta_2
    @vincenta_2 3 года назад +3

    Thank you, John *Butt*

  • @ExAnimoPortugal
    @ExAnimoPortugal 4 года назад +14

    I want one of these in my living room

  • @lcarliner
    @lcarliner 5 лет назад +6

    There is an organ in Paddington that Handel actually performed on. E. Biggs has product fed an album with him performing the Handel organ concertos. The booklet provided with the album contains interesting material concerning the organ. It as a Columbia Masterworks product.

  • @silverrush2508
    @silverrush2508 5 лет назад +30

    I can’t handle the jokes already, enough is enough!

  • @zeniktorres4320
    @zeniktorres4320 5 лет назад +35

    Nicely demonstrated. Beautiful sound.

  • @TheTalemaster
    @TheTalemaster 3 года назад +7

    The amusing thing is that the organ's speech is more precise than John's own.

  • @BCSchmerker
    @BCSchmerker 5 лет назад +13

    +OrchestraEnlighten *Thanks for the overview.* The Robin Jennings I/6 (built 2000 for Sir John Eliot Gardiner) uses 8' ranks for the bases of principal (8.4.2.1-1/3) and flute (8.4.1) chori, consistently with the _Rückpositiv_ of many of the mightier builds of Schnitger, Silbermann, and their contemporaries.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад +1

      Thank you for finding the disposition, much appreciated. It does seem more North German than more of the chamber organs in Handel's time, but it is a very nice instrument.

  • @pixelatedmushroom
    @pixelatedmushroom 5 лет назад +3

    Great video, and an excellent tour, thank you

  • @johnp.sullivan6773
    @johnp.sullivan6773 5 лет назад +7

    Magnificent and valuable video thank you !!!

  • @shashablacksamuraimovement6705
    @shashablacksamuraimovement6705 5 лет назад +7

    Really beautiful organ, I wish I could own the organ like that one day In my life ;) love it !!

  • @marcelobrunorodrigues7630
    @marcelobrunorodrigues7630 Год назад +2

    Very didactic your considerations.
    In his notes to the concertos 1-12, Oliver Daniel wrote for Vox recording with Walter Kraft and the Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra from Stuttgart (circa 1951) that the following disposition was quite enough for the adequate performance:
    Open Diapason 8'
    Stopped Diapason 8'
    Octave 4'
    Flute 4'
    Twelfth 2 ⅔'
    Fifteenth 2'
    Seventeenth 1 ⅗'

  • @misssarahashplant31
    @misssarahashplant31 5 лет назад +2

    A very informative and enjoyable video. Thank you for the upload.

  • @rosejuliette9180
    @rosejuliette9180 3 года назад +2

    Wow... you really pulled out all the stops for this one.

  • @climbthatmountain
    @climbthatmountain 5 лет назад +7

    Beautiful playing! God's own instrument...and my favorite in the "instruments" OAE series.

    • @kishascape
      @kishascape 7 месяцев назад

      I also love more practical forms of pipe organ like this. It doesn't need to take up a whole church building to make great music. My favorites are the medieval kind with the pipes sitting on top like an upright piano.

  • @jamesc3753
    @jamesc3753 5 лет назад +4

    Fantastic video.

  • @robertoa.m.3984
    @robertoa.m.3984 4 года назад +1

    Marvelous video! Thank you
    So much!

  • @billyd10
    @billyd10 4 года назад

    I really love this series.

  • @Lurker1979
    @Lurker1979 5 лет назад +3

    That is a neat little organ.

  • @begumtosun135
    @begumtosun135 5 лет назад +3

    this is an amazing video. thank you!

  • @zachlafleur6651
    @zachlafleur6651 3 года назад +3

    Nice little positif organ that sounds really great, even with only one manual and it looks like no pedals. It could even be a portative in a limited sense if there were heavy duty casters under it to be able to roll it from one room to another.

  • @Modeltnick
    @Modeltnick 4 года назад +1

    Very nice demonstration of this small instrument!

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

    A very fine demo of a fantastic instrument, thank you. It must cost a fortune to build.

  • @sambulls
    @sambulls 4 года назад +1

    this guy is talented, not everyone can make it sound so pretty!

  • @JaneDoe-ci3gj
    @JaneDoe-ci3gj 4 года назад

    Very interesting, thanks for proper subtitles😊👍

  • @comms9803
    @comms9803 4 года назад +29

    This organ is a bit small even for Handel's time.

    • @gehirndoper
      @gehirndoper 4 года назад +9

      This is a small movable organ that's used in conjunction with an orchestra or ensemble, mostly for playing basso continuo. Of course there were huge organs as well, mostly in bigger churches.

  • @mario9133
    @mario9133 4 года назад +5

    What a wonderful instrument. i am puzzled by people that refer to past cultures as being so much more advanced than ours, or that of our more recent antecedents. I would like to see the Egyptians to have built such an instrument, or to find a relic of a pipe organ amongst the ruins of ancient civilizations.
    And how well this Gentleman, Mr. Butt, plays it. How expertly he does it, and how dexterous he is while doing it.
    Indeed a short but most enjoyable video. Bravo Maestro! Blessed hands you have.

  • @capezyo
    @capezyo 4 года назад

    Amazing, thank you very much

  • @patrickdestain392
    @patrickdestain392 5 лет назад +20

    This channel is a keeper. Amazing, concise demonstration and explanations by enthusiastic and professional players. What else?? Oh yes, it is for all of us to enjoy. You can blame RUclips for capitalism flavors, but let's admit that knowledge has never been so easy to access.

    • @joyce_rx
      @joyce_rx 4 года назад

      and the jokes! oh, i just cant handel them.

    • @franznarf
      @franznarf 3 года назад

      it is a channel for ignorant and gullible people cos this is baroque not enlightrnment

    • @patrickdestain392
      @patrickdestain392 3 года назад +1

      Franz Narf enlightenment: 1715-1789 ( French Revolution). Baroque 1600-~1750. Haendel organ work :1740-1751. Never post when you are drunk. Or maybe you are simply an uneducated idiot?

  • @kolerichard2133
    @kolerichard2133 5 лет назад +1

    Thats some nice music Mr. Butt.

  • @thegoblinmovie9793
    @thegoblinmovie9793 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome!

  • @Sebastian-be8ez
    @Sebastian-be8ez 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent Organ!

  • @garfixit
    @garfixit 4 года назад

    I love the sound very nice

  • @ericalbany
    @ericalbany 3 года назад +2

    There were foot pumped chamber organs, though you couldn't go above 2 or 3 stops without wind issues on sustained notes.

    • @bendeguznemes9871
      @bendeguznemes9871 15 часов назад

      Those are reed organs... with broken bellows...
      This is a little pipe organ.

  • @rovemonteux
    @rovemonteux 5 лет назад +1

    Incredible instrument really.

  • @julianmisut533
    @julianmisut533 5 лет назад +4

    What are the stops on this organ, Love the video!

  • @Maltravers2011
    @Maltravers2011 5 лет назад

    The organ in St Mary's Wotton-under-Edge, Gloucs. UK came from St Martin-in-the-Fields, London and was almost certainly played by Handel.

  • @SomeoneCommenting
    @SomeoneCommenting 5 лет назад +24

    Imagine if Handel could have put his hands on an organ like the one in the Mormon Tabernacle in Utah...

    • @praestant8
      @praestant8 3 года назад +3

      He would have shrieked and left in a hurry at how hideously large it is.

  • @TheCimbrianBull
    @TheCimbrianBull 5 лет назад

    What an absolute organ grinder!

  • @zebra3stripes
    @zebra3stripes 5 лет назад +1

    Funny, right before this I was watching another video featuring Butt on organ. I don't think it could be shown on RUclips.

  • @Crimsonphilosophy
    @Crimsonphilosophy 5 лет назад

    This channel rocks

  • @VegasCyclingFreak
    @VegasCyclingFreak 5 лет назад +1

    Wonderful instrument. Interesting that the key colors are opposite of today

  • @moresalesoryourmoneyback
    @moresalesoryourmoneyback 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you for sharing

  • @ignatiosaraber1993
    @ignatiosaraber1993 4 года назад +2

    What book is that, I like the organ solo's!

  • @1Ipodtouchfan
    @1Ipodtouchfan 5 лет назад

    Whats the name of the piece he plays at 3 minitues 54 seconds?

  • @meefabioo99
    @meefabioo99 5 лет назад +6

    I play on a organ, built in 1755 / 1756.

  • @edwinnickolas805
    @edwinnickolas805 4 года назад

    Very nice organ,.

  • @Voe198
    @Voe198 5 лет назад

    Is the organ he demonstrates most the examples on just or tempered?

  • @oliviermoser9788
    @oliviermoser9788 5 лет назад

    Hello, what a lovely Organ, is that not possible to blown it manual ? Wich temperament did you choose for this organ ?

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      It would not take a whole lot of wind. You could have a couple of bellows to feed it with weights on them and it would not take much effort to lift one when they started getting to the end of the stroke.

  • @enriqueandres1998
    @enriqueandres1998 5 лет назад +9

    is there some kind of blueprints? cause I want to build it!

    • @WinrichNaujoks
      @WinrichNaujoks 5 лет назад +6

      That's like asking Coca Cola for their recipe because you want to make your own.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад +5

      There are many good books on pipe organ design. I have occasionally seen some online.

  • @croatililliouspartridge5822
    @croatililliouspartridge5822 5 лет назад

    Hey, say it don't spray it, John's Butt! Just jokin' lovely organ y'all got. ;)

  • @user-lh3uz1cp7y
    @user-lh3uz1cp7y 3 месяца назад

    I would love to have a foot pumped version of something like this but I know I would have to build it myself.

  • @deaganjones4666
    @deaganjones4666 5 лет назад

    does it have a pedalboard? I'm assuming not, but still wondering

  • @Ianthe22
    @Ianthe22 5 лет назад +3

    Why is my version of handel concerto in G not like the one he plays?? Hmm.. have to check the score again. Havent played it for ages. Maybe i remember it incorrectly.

    • @joyce_rx
      @joyce_rx 4 года назад

      different iterations and ideas. soloists are famous because they play solos differently than what was 100% intended
      for example, look at all the slower/faster performances of Clair de lune all over youtube

  • @carpetwalker5914
    @carpetwalker5914 5 лет назад +1

    You should do one on the baroque guitar

  • @dcllaw677
    @dcllaw677 4 года назад +2

    What do you do when the person at the pump got tired?

    • @joyce_rx
      @joyce_rx 4 года назад

      execute them and get a new one
      or just have others at the ready

  • @anotherhumanbeingblyat8935
    @anotherhumanbeingblyat8935 3 года назад

    Is there a pedalboard on this organ?

  • @WarrenPostma
    @WarrenPostma 5 лет назад +1

    Lovely sounding beastie. Suitabler perhaps for one's own Chambers (home). Yet we see these dudes with 8 rank pipe organs in their houses. One wonders if they're all batty. But what a glorious thing.

  • @Seregium
    @Seregium 4 года назад

    I know that when Handel was very old composer there was first compact pianolas (reed organs) in Warshaw and st.Petersburg...

  • @andreacosta74
    @andreacosta74 3 года назад

    “Claviorgans” were used in Rome since the birth of the “roman Oratorio”, in S.M. in Vallicella (Chiesa Nuova) (XVI century)

  • @peteacher52
    @peteacher52 4 года назад

    Say, what a noble clutch of humorous chappies we have commenting here! That's the first time we've heard those funny jokes ... TODAY.
    And yes, before the industrial revolution gained full steam ahead, the organ was indeed the most complex mechanism man had created, as exemplified by the Dutch masterpieces and the not-so-great but superb looking monster in Weingarten Abbey with its detached console and trackers many meters long, some having to turn corners, especially to reach the crown positive perched way up in the gods of the organ. That Gabler couldn't finish his own work and that other more competent builders had to be brought in to do so, is another story. He had bitten off le grande bite and couldn't chew it.

    • @joyce_rx
      @joyce_rx 4 года назад

      I just imagined some dude wearing a $10000 tuxedo with a very heavy, old british accent speaking in my head while reading this

  • @nickreid5613
    @nickreid5613 3 года назад

    Where can I buy one ?!

  • @WillemVanTwillertOrganist
    @WillemVanTwillertOrganist 5 лет назад +1

    nice

  • @FM60260
    @FM60260 5 лет назад

    Are there any German organs left in the uk?

  • @5610winston
    @5610winston 4 года назад +2

    E. Power Biggs commented that he had "...handled the handles than Handel had handled..."

  • @wilhelmorangenbaum163
    @wilhelmorangenbaum163 5 лет назад +6

    Did the composers use to write in the scores of their compositions in which parts it should be triggered certain organ stops? Or did they leave this to the interpreter's choice?

    • @bartschepens1307
      @bartschepens1307 5 лет назад +6

      In German Baroque (Bach, Buxtehude, Pachelbel) it is quite uncommon, but in French Baroque (for example François Couperin) organ music almost every piece has a title that makes clear what kind of registration is needed (for example Récit de Tierce or Plein Jeu).

    • @wilhelmorangenbaum163
      @wilhelmorangenbaum163 5 лет назад +3

      @@bartschepens1307 Thank you very much for the info. And these titles were placed above the staff of the part where a change of register was necessary?

    • @Offshoreorganbuilder
      @Offshoreorganbuilder 5 лет назад +3

      @@wilhelmorangenbaum163 Yes.

    • @wilhelmorangenbaum163
      @wilhelmorangenbaum163 5 лет назад +1

      @@Offshoreorganbuilder Thanks!

  • @organist660
    @organist660 5 лет назад +1

    this is such a beautifull organ. I wish I could learn to play it. since I am trained on the lowrey organ.

    • @Offshoreorganbuilder
      @Offshoreorganbuilder 5 лет назад +3

      You have my sympathies.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      A tracker organ is better to practice on because it makes you aware of when the valve opens, so your articulation gains. Electric keyboards tend to not disclose to the fingers when they are sounding due to unevenness in the switches or contacts although you might have haptic feedback but that adds complexity and more adjustments. The tracker has lots of top resistance to the keys until you break the valve opens and then little resistance. It feels like breaking egg shells with your fingers.

    • @Offshoreorganbuilder
      @Offshoreorganbuilder 5 лет назад

      @@christopherstube9473 But the point, surely, is that the Lowrey is (how shall I put it) like all of its kind ... crap.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      @@Offshoreorganbuilder The lowry for all its poverty is still a suitable practice instrument for older electric actions though you will not develop into a fine organist as you would if you play the finest instruments. But if it is a matter of not playing or having some music in life, one should make music as he can until he can have better means. I am not defending Lowry, but i am sympathetic to those who create music, because those who talk about it are merely music critics.

    • @Offshoreorganbuilder
      @Offshoreorganbuilder 5 лет назад

      @@christopherstube9473 Very true. If that's all you can manage, then it's a second best. (But, dear me ... what a second!)

  • @YuutaShinjou113
    @YuutaShinjou113 4 года назад

    I want one.

  • @andreacosta74
    @andreacosta74 3 года назад

    This instrument is used by Monteverdi Choir

  • @Gilmaris
    @Gilmaris 5 лет назад +17

    It's smaller than I expected.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад +6

      It is a single division organ, which means that you end up changing stops when the dynamics change. Also the English tended to use a GG to G compass on the keyboard so they tended not to have pedal boards or organs. But it was lots of fun as a continuo instrument or for accompanying singers.

    • @nickdryad
      @nickdryad 5 лет назад +8

      That’s what all the girls say. Now I want a video on Rasputin’s organ.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад +5

      @@nickdryad The Russians tended toward inorganic music. Although they do have a great oral tradition in singers.

    • @Gilmaris
      @Gilmaris 5 лет назад +6

      @@nickdryad They'd never allow _that_ on RUclips.

  • @wade43671
    @wade43671 4 года назад

    Handel must have had a rather large family...not too many stops on his organ (Wah, Wahhh!) All kidding aside it's a great introduction. For some reason I've always thought Handel played on a bigger "Bachian" type of instrument. Never realized they came in different sizes

  • @geffdek803
    @geffdek803 5 лет назад

    What's the name of the piece in the beginning and at many parts of the video?

    • @AML2000
      @AML2000 5 лет назад

      He's playing excerpts from Handel's Organ Concertos, written as intermission entertainment during his oratorio concerts. He wrote 12 of them. The small chamber organs like this one would not drown out the baroque orchestras of the day like the massive church organs of the time like Bach played.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      @@AML2000 It is all in what is required. I have found myself well accompanied by a gigantic church organ when singing oratorios by an organist who added just enough stop and harmonics to support the voice line. Just because you have lots of sound resources does not mean you always have to use all of them. There is such a thing as accompanying with a single flute stop or a mild string stop. And the beauty of different stops means that there are some incredibly beautiful effects to be had when you are just accompanying a chamber group.

    • @AML2000
      @AML2000 5 лет назад

      @@christopherstube9473 You're correct of course. What is true though is that Handel used what the German's call a "Truhenorgel" for his organ concertos, among other things because the venues where his oratorios were performed probably didn't have a large organ there.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      @@AML2000 I am in agreement with you. But in addition he was using very exotic instruments like the claviorganum which is half positif organ and half harpsichord, which is to say that he exploited the best resources to carry forward his compositions. They are difficult to keep in tune, because the strings and flues and reeds all react in different ways to changes in the weather, but they have lots of flexibility in them as musical resources.

    • @geoffroydescourtils9206
      @geoffroydescourtils9206 5 лет назад

      But do you know the op number?
      Thank you

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan 4 года назад

    It's well known how organ were pumped in Germany. For services they used mostly music students. For practice times, they used people off the street, and paid them with beer and wine.

  • @RizalBudiLeksono
    @RizalBudiLeksono 5 лет назад +2

    Fancy!

  • @shemmoirichards
    @shemmoirichards 4 года назад +3

    4:03 N O B I L I T Y

  • @declamatory
    @declamatory 5 лет назад +2

    I think it was Bach's organ that didn't have any stops on it. He had 21 children.

  • @MrPaevo
    @MrPaevo 11 месяцев назад

    Where's the keg of beer to sit on and the fowl hanging from the side?

  • @Moucheron1990
    @Moucheron1990 5 лет назад +3

    How much does it cost?

    • @davidfoust9767
      @davidfoust9767 5 лет назад +3

      J Mouch On the builder’s blog he posts about a larger organ he built for a church that was 200k GBP. This organ I would guess 100k.

    • @kacperuminski1547
      @kacperuminski1547 5 лет назад +6

      @@davidfoust9767 I'd place my bet on about £50k-£80k since the larger one probably has way more bass pipes which in theory should be more costly to make than the treble pipes. Just my guess.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад +2

      @@kacperuminski1547 When i did an apprenticeship in the 70's we tended to price them by stops like 10000 dollars per stop, but dollars have shrunken a lot since then. I would guess this has about 5 to 8 stops on it. It has a very nice principle on the facade at least three octaves of it. Mr. Jennings of Dorset apparently did a very good job of laying this instrument out as it has a little more space in it than some positifs that i have seem. He majors in building little chamber instruments and home instruments. It would be fun to have such an instrument on an upstairs balcony. It has a little chimney flute in it, but i was trying to find out if they put any reeds in it. In small instruments if they include beating reeds they tend to name them as Regals.

    • @kacperuminski1547
      @kacperuminski1547 5 лет назад

      @@christopherstube9473 Nice to see someone with actual experience in the field. :) I did some simple calculations, adjusted for inflation etc. At 5 stops and about $10k/stop in 1975 which is about $47k in 2018 the value of the organ would be $235k. At 8 stops that goes up to $376k.

    • @christopherstube9473
      @christopherstube9473 5 лет назад

      @@kacperuminski1547 Ja, das stimmt. I just didn't have the guts to do the math because of the extreme future.

  • @jrzzrj
    @jrzzrj 8 месяцев назад

    👍

  • @millennial8441
    @millennial8441 3 года назад

    Flute sounds are seemed like those of the recorders.

  • @tedmounsteven621
    @tedmounsteven621 3 года назад

    When to the organ vocal breath was given, an angel heard, and straight appeared, mistaking earth for Heaven. - Dryden

  • @michaelnancyamsden7410
    @michaelnancyamsden7410 3 года назад

    ineresting... more music, please.

  • @gamer46653
    @gamer46653 5 лет назад +39

    so his organ was small eh

  • @Discrimination_is_not_a_right
    @Discrimination_is_not_a_right 5 лет назад +40

    You can tell the maturity level of the people who've watched this video by the fact that they've (mostly) refrained from making all the obvious jokes.

  • @hoilst
    @hoilst 5 лет назад

    Oh, right. His musical instrument.

  • @andreweden9405
    @andreweden9405 Год назад

    I'm not sure if it's correct to say that that represents the idea of an organ in Germany at that time! In England? Yes. Italy? Pretty much (although with different tonal characteristics, of course). But Germany??... Don't get me wrong... I have nothing at all against chamber organs like this. In fact, they're actually my favorite! But the Germans and French liked 'em BIG, with multiple manuals, and a pedal division! Simply look up some of the German organs that were played by Bach (Handel's exact contemporary) himself that still survive to get an idea of what I'm talking about.

  • @arrowfitzgibbon7775
    @arrowfitzgibbon7775 3 года назад

    i'll keep this in mind next time i do a "fugue or voluntary" for harpsichord or organ. all makes sense.

  • @benjaminslayton4335
    @benjaminslayton4335 5 лет назад

    Does that have an 8' Principal?

    • @jonathanr6121
      @jonathanr6121 5 лет назад

      I think it does have that stop. Although as already pointed out it doesn't have 8' pipes. However there is the possibility that the lower notes of this stop are either stopped pipes or wooden pipes which don't have to be completely straight and can go around corners.

    • @jonathanr6121
      @jonathanr6121 5 лет назад

      @@DouglasAmrine You're right about stopped wooden pipes. But there also exists the wooden diapason ("Holzprinzipal") organ stop which uses open wood pipes. There are stopped diapasons as well. Wooden pipes give you the opportunity to build the pipes in a L or U shape which is quite practical for smaller organs such as the one in the video. Anyway there has to be some sort of 8' Principal on this organ. It is presented at 3:54

    • @jonathanr6121
      @jonathanr6121 5 лет назад

      Here is the stoplist from the organ builders website:
      Principal 8
      Gedackt 8
      Oktave 4
      Ruhrflöte 4
      Superoktave 2
      Sifflöte 1/Quinte 1 ⅓

    • @DouglasAmrine
      @DouglasAmrine 5 лет назад

      Thanks for that! I'm not an expert on this topic at all, but the bass of this organ does sound rather weak, which I think is because of the 'stopped diapason'. This is an interesting video about 8' pitch and small organs, which you might want to check out. ruclips.net/video/Ctj2SKUXY6c/видео.html

    • @Offshoreorganbuilder
      @Offshoreorganbuilder 5 лет назад

      @@DouglasAmrine Wrong. Not every 8' stop has to have 8' pipes in the bottom octave.

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader3341 Год назад

    I’m such a sucker….I always believe the title.