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  1. Organ. (magazine) Organ is a British independent magazine covering music, art and underculture. Based in London, the magazine was founded in 1986 as a handmade fanzine and has evolved many times over the years. It has covered a variety of punk, alternative, rock, progressive, metal and experimental music as well as a wide range of contemporary ...

  2. 5 days ago · Orgelbüchlein. The court chapel at the Schloss in Weimar where Bach was court organist. The organ loft is visible at the top of the picture. The Orgelbüchlein ( Little Organ Book) BWV 599−644 is a set of 46 chorale preludes for organ — one of them is given in two versions — by Johann Sebastian Bach. All but three were written between ...

  3. Mar 15, 2024 · Salisbury’s organ, completed by Henry Willis in 1877, is an English romantic masterpiece, and ideally suited to this nineteenth- and twentieth-century music.

  4. 1 day ago · Owner at ePianos. David has been involved with music retail for over 30 years and has watched his business grow from strength to strength, once running a hugely successful general music store to now operating one of the UK's leading specialists for digital pianos, keyboards, and used organs. sales@epianos.co.uk.

  5. 5 days ago · The instrument name recorder derives from the Latin recordārī (to call to mind, remember, recollect), by way of Middle French recorder (before 1349; to remember, to learn by heart, repeat, relate, recite, play music) and its derivative recordeur (c. 1395; one who retells, a minstrel).

  6. 5 days ago · Who Is the Most Famous Organist? Select a tab Ranking. Ranking. 1. 65. votes. Elias Gottlob Haussmann · Public domain. Johann Sebastian Bach - considered by many to be the greatest composer and organist of all time, Bach wrote numerous works for the organ and is known for his virtuosic playing. Johann Sebastian Bach in other rankings.

  7. 2 days ago · The introduction of new instruments, such as the organ and the panpipes, enriched the musical landscape. Christian liturgical music, emerging in the early centuries of the Roman Empire, incorporated elements of Jewish music and Greek and Roman secular traditions, laying the groundwork for the development of Western ecclesiastical music.

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