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David Drinkell

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Posts posted by David Drinkell

  1. In the Stafford case, the Harrison was replaced in 1974 by a new Hill, Norman & Beard west-end organ (one of John Norman's clever instruments which save space by sharing basses) fronted by the old case (which had been bolted onto the Double Open Wood of the Harrison), but the Harrison was retained and used, although not restored.  Although a magnificent instrument - and in a style which is probably more appreciated today than in the 70s - it suffers from entombment and is not heard at its best in the nave, where the liturgical action happens.  I suppose that, after 43 years, the HNB organ must be due for an overhaul, too.....

  2. It may not count, as I don't think it was also an hotel, but the Plough at Great Munden, Hertfordshire, had a splendid Compton theatre organ, installed by the licensee, Gerald Carrington, who had worked for Comptons (he did the finishing at St. Olave, Hart Street, according to John Mee who was organist there).  Gerald made some improvements, including substituting a Wurlitzer wooden Tibia for the Compton metal one (sweeter sound) and adding a grand piano.  Alas, the pub is now a private house and the organ was taken into store.

  3. I'm not on Facebook - I would waste too much time on it if I were - but my wife is and there's a group called the Francis Jackson Appreciation Society and the pictures appeared there.  There are some more today, including a picture of a four manual birthday cake and Francis (looking a good deal less than 100) surrounded by his family.

  4. There were pictures of Francis on Facebook yesterday attending a special Evensong of his music at York, entering through a guard of honour of ex-choristers and looking  a good deal less than 100.  So many people, myself included, have been the recipients of his kindness and have been inspired by him.  I wish him a very happy birthday.

  5. I'm doing a "Phantom" accompaniment, too - on October 30th at St. Paul's United Church, Fredericton, New Brunswick.  This is a first for me, so it will be an interesting experience.

    I remember playing the old organ at St. Oswald's, Durham. Alarmingly, this must have been over 40 years ago!

  6. It looks like a typically ornate North American console from the first half of the twentieth century to me - no criticism intended by that, just an observation. I look forward to hearing opinions of the instruments when they are completed - with luck I might even hear or play them myself!

  7.  

    I've just had a look at the stop list of the Fredericton organ and found it most interesting (http://cccath.ca/tour/organspecs.html). For example, in the context of this thread there does not appear to be a 16 foot swell reed. Other interesting aspects include there not being a Solo organ but an Echo instead (thus no Tuba!). Of course, I might have missed something in my reading of it. And yes, I've often thought the full set of couplers is perhaps something which ought to be used more widely outside North America. The wealth of unison stops together with the couplers must offer an almost limitless variety of soft and mezzo-forte effects, many of which I bet are very beautiful especially in that spacious acoustic. Fairly makes my mouth water!

     

    Has it been recorded, e.g. on youtube?

     

    CEP

    The Fredericton Cathedral organ, my present steed, is an example of North American practice at the time when it was built (early twentieth century, new console in the fifties but no tonal changes). The absence of a 16' Swell reed is a severe piece of gormlessness, but that's the way they thought in those days. The Echo Organ was apparently originally meant to go at the west end, although the building isn't of a size to require antiphonal effects or a nave organ (if anyone knows Snettisham Church in Norfolk, ours is a copy, but with the chancel east of the crossing - Snettisham lost theirs after the Reformation). So the Echo is on the west wall of the Lady Chapel, almost above the player's head, and does virtually nothing that can't be achieved in the main organ, which fills the north transept. We really need a Tuba! I have been dropping heavy hints ever since I arrived.

     

    As I have mentioned before in this forum, I have preferred a full set of couplers operated by rocking tablets above the top manual ever since I was in charge of the Willis at Kirkwall Cathedral. Fredericton is an example, the norm with Casavant at the time, where the inter-departmental couplers are tabs above the top manual but the Octaves and Subs are by drawstop with their respective departments. I don't care for this, although it means that they can be operated by the capture system for their respective departments. Also, there are no Unison Off couplers, which I also miss. There is no doubt, in my experience, that a complete set of octaves, subs and unison offs gives a vastly increased palette, doubles included - which brings us by a somewhat roundabout route back to the original topic.

  8. I've always found that a 16' reed in the Swell is the best and most useful stop as a first double. There's a lot of repertoire which calls for it, it makes the best full swell effects and can be useful coupled to the Pedal. If it can be done (as it usually can in North America with a full set of couplers), the Swell principal chorus with 16' reed coupled to the Great at 4' pitch and to the Pedal at unison pitch is a very useful device.

     

     

    On the Great, a 16' Geigen is versatile. I've never cared for manual bourdons, quintatons, etc, although I know they are supposed to be right for certain things - the effect just doesn't appeal to me....

  9. More here: https://www.durhamcathedral.co.uk/news/james-lancelot-retirement

     

    I didn't realise that he had been there more than 30 years. Sounds like a well-earned retirement to me. If I was a betting man (which I am not) then I would lay a fiver on him becoming organist emeritus in recognition of his long service at Durham.

     

    Dave

    Yes, James has done a splendid job at Durham. They have already honoured him by making him a Canon, but Emeritus would be thoroughly deserved.

  10. My memories of the Colston Hall organ from when I was a student in the late seventies is that it was an immaculately voiced Harrison organ in traditional style. However, the Positive section was far too quiet to counter major choruses elsewhere. This matter of balance between departments is probably the principal "winner" at the RFH, regardless of what sort of tone it produces.

  11. A link on the church's website shows an article including the old Rothwell console with stop-tabs between the manuals. This was replaced in 1954 with the present console which has two rows of tabs over the top manual. The Rothwell connection would explain why Rushworths' were involved later as they took over the firm in the fifties. John Norman wrote an interesting article for BIOS a while ago positing that the case at St. mary Woolnoth in the city was the original Chair case to the main case at Piccadilly.

  12. Elspeth and I sang in a concert last night with the University of New Brunswick Chorale - they needed a few extra voices to pad them out a bit. One of the items was a setting of the Lord's Prayer by a composer who had come to live here in Fredericton after the last war, having been a refugee. At the top of the copies, it said "Text: Unknown".

     

    Slightly odd, if you think about it....

  13. I remember being at Durham when they were commemorating the Venerable Bede. There was a procession (including congregation) to the Galilee Chapel at the west end, singing "For all the saints" - and there didn't seem to be a problem

    in co-ordination, although there ought to have been!

  14. When one changes organs, as it were, the business of revising registrations can result in things hitherto unnoticed coming to light. Getting Howells's Saraband in modo elegiaco (from the Six Pieces) ready for performance in Fredericton Cathedral, I realised that I have always played the second beat in the right hand at bar 21 as C naturals, but there is no accidental to modify the C sharps earlier in the bar. Having played the piece for years, obviously the C naturals sound right to me now. Am I getting it wrong?

     

    Incidentally, we had three baptisms at the Cathedral yesterday, two at 10.00 and one at 11.45. At the 11.45 service, one of the godparents was in Calgary (about the same distance west from Fredericton as London, England is east) and was represented on Skype (he apparently had a better view than most of the rest of the congregation). This was a first for us - has anyone else experienced it?

  15. Yes, played from the Frobenius, which has (if memory serves) a number of pistons to bring in certain combinations on the Walker (the Steinmeyer at Trondhjem had similar facilities at the quire console). I was quite surprised at how appropriate the Frobenius sounded in such music and, indeed, how good it was as an accompanimental instrument. The Walker is certainly a mish-mash in some ways (there can't be many organs around with a 32' diaphone at one end, and a Sharp Mixture at the other) but I think it works exceedingly well.

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