Management has finished the second part in this series and a delight awaits all you techie types – but if you think some of the photos are upside down, I don’t want to know!
Management has finished the second part in this series and a delight awaits all you techie types – but if you think some of the photos are upside down, I don’t want to know!
You can find the final part of this article here.
When your small but hand crafted blog turns into a blank white screen at the click of the mouse, it’s tempting to pull out any hair you may have left. After a long trawl through forums and help files, we are getting back to where we were, more or less. And to celebrate, we are delighted to have our first guest article.
You can read here all about an enigmatic pressure instrument in Canada. Special thanks to the author, Dean Eckmann, for describing this fascinating instrument.
The world has been celebrating John Lennon’s 70th birthday this month. The Beatles used the harmonium on many of their tracks and some years ago a Mustel harmonium played by John Lennon at Abbey Road studios was restored in our workshop. It was built in 1881. A new temporary set of bellows were made to improve the winding and the old bellows retained to be re-installed at a later date.
New bellows
New bellows
Double expression mechanism
Double expression mechanism
Valve board
Percussion dismantled
Tuning
Ralph Downes CBE KSG (1904 – 1993), the organist, organ designer, teacher and musical director, greatly appreciated the Mustel harmonium. The extract below is from his book Baroque Tricks published by Positif Press, Oxford. The Mustel mentioned, which Ralph Downes subsequently owned, has now been fully restored.
“The next event was the purchase, by the Oratory, of a superb Mustel organ, on my recommendation, to replace a small accompanimental organ by the Positive Organ Company (Casson) used for certain services sung by the clergy alone around the Feast of Corpus Christi. The Positive was no longer satisfactory: the Mustel was put on castors so as to be mobile and could be wheeled into the Sanctuary as needed. It will be remembered from the Derby cinema-theatre days that the Mustel had quite remarkable power, and was thus adequate in such a large church; also that I was an expert performer on this complicated instrument. This was a fine vintage model, with two manuals, so that most foundation stops ran right through the compass; the broad-toned ones [Bourdon-Clarinette 16, Cor anglais-Flute 8, Voix celeste 8 on the front soundboard controlled by the lower manual; the ‘fierce’-toned reeds (Baryton 32, Basson 16, Hautbois 8, Clairon-Fifre 4, Harpe Aeolienne 8 played by the upper manual; there was a coupler, two sets of swell-louvres for the ‘back’ reeds, and of course the all-important ‘Expression’ stop — whereby one blows with the feet directly into the reeds without using the reservoir, thus commanding a dynamic range from ppp to fff — in addition to the Mustel ‘Double-expression’ which enabled solo stops to be used without fear of being drowned by the accompaniment from the other reeds. This was all remarkable enough, but as heard in the Oratory acoustics, in such works as the 24 Pieces ‘en style libre’ by Louis Vierne, the French aura was quite overwhelmingly beautiful to the ears of one accustomed to play these pieces on typical English stops: this again was a great break-through of ‘the authentic voice’.”