A question which came up yesterday after a discussion about playing music in Irish folk style on wind instruments - for example whistles.
How fast can an organ articulate rapid notes? Is there a significant delay between the onset of a note and cutting it off? This might depend on whether the notes are different, and sounded on different pipes, but originally we were thinking of rapid articulation on a single pipe.
In some folk music - played on whistles - the player does not interrupt the air stream, but uses fingering to insert 'cuts' and 'taps' - also 'rolls', which may serve the purpose of tongued articulation. In the case of penny whistles, tongued articulation is, of course, still possible. Similar fingering techniques - which may sound like ornaments - are also used for bagpipes, in which tongued articulation is not, AFAIK, possible.
So what we were wondering was whether similar considerations applied to organs, and also if these issues might have had an impact on organ music, ornaments and articulation generally for those instruments.
How fast can an organ articulate rapid notes? Is there a significant delay between the onset of a note and cutting it off? This might depend on whether the notes are different, and sounded on different pipes, but originally we were thinking of rapid articulation on a single pipe.
In some folk music - played on whistles - the player does not interrupt the air stream, but uses fingering to insert 'cuts' and 'taps' - also 'rolls', which may serve the purpose of tongued articulation. In the case of penny whistles, tongued articulation is, of course, still possible. Similar fingering techniques - which may sound like ornaments - are also used for bagpipes, in which tongued articulation is not, AFAIK, possible.
So what we were wondering was whether similar considerations applied to organs, and also if these issues might have had an impact on organ music, ornaments and articulation generally for those instruments.
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