Sorry about the catch-all title. I'm really talking about a very recent experience in Norway, accompanying a choir. It was a lovely instrument, both in appearance and in its werk-prinzip design. It had two manuals (corresponding to our Great and Swell) plus a straight pedalboard. It had suspended mechanical key action, very sensitively regulated so that a sneeze would depress a key. A bit scary. The thing that puzzled me was that whilst it was fine for playing music by the Baroque masters, there was minimal registration for accompanying a choir...which is what I was doing. The enclosed division was over-generously supplied with mutations, but nothing quiet enough on the Great to accompany them with.
It was in a church, so do I conclude that choral music is not a priority?
I think the new monster at Buckfast Abbey has similar problems; strange, since accompanying the rather few brothers in their daily offices must surely be one of its purposes.
The console had stop knobs, but not angled like on a typical British organ. The combinations were worked electrically, but only moved the stop-knobs in and out by a minimal distance, so at a glance it was quite tricky to work out which stops were sounding. I dare say one would fall in love with this instrument given familiarity, but 20 mins before the (English) choir turned up amounted to living dangerously. Such is the organist's lot.
It was in a church, so do I conclude that choral music is not a priority?
I think the new monster at Buckfast Abbey has similar problems; strange, since accompanying the rather few brothers in their daily offices must surely be one of its purposes.
The console had stop knobs, but not angled like on a typical British organ. The combinations were worked electrically, but only moved the stop-knobs in and out by a minimal distance, so at a glance it was quite tricky to work out which stops were sounding. I dare say one would fall in love with this instrument given familiarity, but 20 mins before the (English) choir turned up amounted to living dangerously. Such is the organist's lot.
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