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Pipe Organ Restoration Ethics
By Bruce Clark

I've mentioned this subject before, but wanted to update you all on our
local historical society.  They restored a 1856 Hook tracker pipe organ
with a very strange 14-pedal arrangement of design I have never
encountered:  Low C is placed about where one would find A on an AGO
pedalboard.

The cost of the restoration was in the thousands of dollars.  Everything
was kept original (ethical).  Oh yes, nothing was to be updated --
except that an electric blower was attached.  Why did they not keep
the old hand pumped bellows and hire boys to pump it?  Not ethical!

Because the pedals are not a standard layout, an organist with any
degree of training cannot play the pedals.  (Think of touch typing, and
then someone wants you to type on a keyboard with keys in a different
position.)  To add insult, the restorer tuned the organ to Werkmeister
temperament.  The only person who will play the organ is a "Mrs.
Miller" type who bangs on it like she is playing a piano, and has no
idea what the pedals are for, and claims that the swell pedal is a good
foot rest!

We have a beautifully restored organ that no one can play, but the
restoration was "ethical"!

Bruce Clark



(Message sent Thu, 27 Sep 2001 06:40:59 -0400 , from time zone -0400.)

Key Words in Subject:  Ethics, Organ, Pipe, Restoration