The majestic pipe organ was one of largest, most complex machines in
existence with hundreds of metal and wooden pipes arranged in dozens of
ranks. It was played from several keyboards and a pedalboard. It achieved
a level of tonal beauty, construction, and appearance hardly equaled today.
Organs
were built to support worship and, with other instruments, to participate
in the chief music of the service, the cantata. Many other instruments,
especially strings, were developed to new levels of perfection.
In many regards, the 18th Century organs were marvelous instruments.
Christoph Wolff states: "We must keep in mind that the organ represented
one of the most complicated - and in the case of the Dutch and north German
instrument types, also the largest - 'machines' in existence from the
16th through the centuries. The sound-producing miracle behind an ornamental
and symmetrical facade of glistening metal pipes embodied the science
of mechanical engineering, physics (acoustics), chemistry (metallurgy),
and mathematics as well as architecture and the handicraft of carpentry
and plumbing. It comprised a myriad of individual parts using all sorts
of metal, wood, leather, ivory, cloth, and other materials. Its combination
of wind chests, bellows, ranks of pipes, and keyboards was capable of
producing colorful sonorities of different dynamic ranges, whose spectrum
and volume depended on the size of the instrument." [Wolff, Johann
Sebastian Bach, the Learned Musician, p.142].
A typical large late Baroque organ had as many as four keyboards and
a pedalboard operating as many as five divisions of pipes at very low
wind pressure. The keys activated the pipes by means of mechanical rods
or trackers. Wind was supplied with human power by means of bellows. Pipe
length ranged from less than one inch to 32 feet. Families of pipes included
principals, flutes, and reeds and were capped by multiple pitch stops
called mixtures.
Pipe tone was incisive, yet gentle, virile, or pungent. It was capable
of blending in ensembles, yet often had solo potential. Organs were custom
designed for each installation in a resonant room that served to enhance
and project the tone.
The organs that Bach played are representative of instruments in north
Germany. They reflected the economic prosperity of the region and the
desire of church, civic, and commercial interests to erect utilitarian,
artistic, and impressive monuments of appropriate size and great beauty.
The Leipzig organ at St. Paul's was Bach's favorite. It was the one he
was engaged to officially inspect when it was built, and the instrument
he apparently chose for his own performances in Leipzig.
City
Builder
Date
Size
Arnstadt
Wender
1703
21 stops, 2 manuals, pedals
Coethen
Mueller
1708
28 stops, 2 manuals, pedals
Muehlhausen
Wender (rebuilt)
1691
32 stops, 2 manuals, pedals
Wender
1708
added several stops and third manual
Weimar
Weishaupt
1720
24 stops, 2 manuals, pedals
Leipzig, St.Paul's
Scheibe
1717
53 stops, 3 manuals, pedals
The organs were built to support the practice of music in worship. Builders
worked in conjunction with organists and designed instruments where the
developing repertoire of the organists, who usually were composers and
improvisers, could be played.
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