Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • How does the organ work, and what are the different parts ...
      • A stop is firstly defined by its length, Anna explains. “The standard length is eight-foot. If I pull out an eight-foot stop, middle C sounds like middle C. And if I keep my finger held down, push that stop back in and pull out a four-foot, it jumps up the octave. The shorter the pipe, the higher the note.
      www.classicfm.com › discover-music › instruments
  1. Jan 18, 2010 · Once you are familiar with your organ's stop action, it's time to pull out the stop list you compiled in Before We Begin: Acquiring the Essentials. You'll notice that in addition to the names of the stops, two different kinds of numbers are also present. Almost every stop has a number such as 16, 8, or 2 2/3.

    • Breathing

      I dabbled on the organ for a number of years after that, but...

    • Sunday Song

      I dabbled on the organ for a number of years after that, but...

    • Acquiring The Essentials

      I totally disagree! My cousin, Mary, my ex-wife and new girl...

    • Lesson 3

      Using The Encyclopedia of Organ Stops and/or The New LDS...

    • Review

      Lesson 3: Demystifying the Organ Stops, Part 2; Sunday Song:...

    • April

      After the skill of “soloing out” is mastered on the manuals,...

    • July

      With 33 stops, it seemed to cover just the very basics of...

    • March

      March - Lesson 2: Demystifying the Organ Stops, Part 1 -...

    • August

      The sound was not the same, however I was still able to work...

    • May

      May - Lesson 2: Demystifying the Organ Stops, Part 1 -...

  2. People also ask

    • How Does A Pipe Organ Make A sound?
    • What Are The Keyboards (or Manuals)?
    • How Do The Stops Work on An Organ?
    • What Do The Buttons Do on An Organ?
    • What’s The History of The Pipe Organ?

    “On a piano, you press a key down, a hammer hits some strings and that’s how sound is created,” Lapwood says. “But on an organ, it’s all about wind.” Inside the organ, you’ll find several rows of pipes sitting on top of a wind chest, and a set of bellows will push air into that wind chest. And to control which pipes sound when, Anna says, “we have ...

    The organ is played from an area known as the console. The console contains anywhere between two and five keyboards, also known as manuals, which control which pipes are used, and to what effect. On the organ at St John’s Smith Square, you’ll find three manuals – the Great, the Swell and the Rückpositiv. The Great The main keyboard, the second manu...

    A stop is firstly defined by its length, Anna explains. “The standard length is eight-foot. If I pull out an eight-foot stop, middle C sounds like middle C. And if I keep my finger held down, push that stop back in and pull out a four-foot, it jumps up the octave. The shorter the pipe, the higher the note. “And then you get some fun mutations where...

    There are also buttons, or pistons, positioned below the manual keyboards, which can be used by organists to change registrations. “Organs are a little bit like computers,” Anna explains. “You can turn up and preset certain things, and programme your computer to bring out the sounds that you want when you want them.”

    The organ can be traced back to the 3rd century BC in Ancient Greece, when the earliest water organs came about. Organs started to appear in churches and Benedictine abbeys in the 10th century, when the world’s first giant pipe organ was installed in Winchester Cathedral. By the 19th century, the organ was “the most complex manmade machine, until t...

  3. Understanding Organ Stops by Dr Steven Nisbet. This video provides a description of the families of organ sounds (principals, flutes, strings, reeds) and an explanation of organ stop...

    • 12 min
    • 8.5K
    • Stevenson Nisbet
  4. The phrase "pull out all the stops,” which once only meant to engage all of the voices on the organ, has entered general usage, for deploying all available means to pursue a goal.

  5. It is necessary to combine mutation stops with an 8’ stop to bring out their tonal “colors.” You can create a clarinet sound for example, by pulling a Flute 8’ stop and combining it with the 2 2/3’. Some solo stops combine octave and mutation sounds for you. If your organ has a stop called the Cornet (pronounced Kor-nay) it combines ...

  6. Getting to know the stops on an organ is time-consuming, but it is well worth the time. I encourage you all to spend time at the console pulling out the stops and listening to the sounds they make.

  7. Think of them like members of an orchestra: when the organist pulls a stop, all the pipes in that group work together to mimic the sound of a certain instrument, such as a flute or violin. Ever heard of the phrase “pulling out all the stops”?

  1. People also search for