Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Category:National Pipe Organ Register ID not in Wikidata (802) Category:National Pipe Organ Register ID different from Wikidata (0) Category:National Pipe Organ Register ID same as Wikidata (3) Category:National Pipe Organ Register template with no id set (exists in template, not created)
This user is a member of WikiProject Pipe organ, a WikiProject aiming to develop and expand Wikipedia's content relating to the pipe organ and its associated repertoire, organists, and other articles.
George Donald Harrison (G. Donald Harrison) (April 21, 1889 – June 14, 1956) was responsible for the design of some of the finest and largest pipe organs in the United States. Born in Huddersfield, England, he first worked as a patent attorney in 1914 but after military service he began to pursue an interest in pipe organ building, working ...
The First German Lutheran Church in Manitowoc was made in 1919. The 105-year-old pipe organ needed an updated electrical system, a few new pipes, and console and facade repairs and overall ...
Bedient Pipe Organ Company, Lincoln, Nebraska [128] Bigelow & Company, American Fork, Utah [129] Buzard Pipe Organ Builders, LLC Champaign, IL (1985–) [130] GM Buck Pipe Organs, [131] Grand Rapids, Michigan; John Brombaugh & Associates, Eugene, Oregon; Dobson Pipe Organ Builders, Lake City, Iowa; E. and G. G. Hook & Hastings, Boston ...
The Hazel Wright Organ is an American pipe organ located in Christ Cathedral in Garden Grove, California. It is one of the world's largest pipe organs. It is one of the world's largest pipe organs. As of 2019, it has 293 ranks and 17,106 pipes, fully playable from two 5-manual consoles.
The world's second largest church organ is at the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, California. Like Passau Cathedral (five organs, one console), it consists of multiple organs playing from twin consoles. Now known as "The Great Organs at First Church," the instruments were installed over a period of approximately 70 years.
Organ pipes are so sensitive to temperature that the body heat of the organ tuner can affect the tuning. If one holds a small metal flue pipe briefly in one's hand and then returns it to the chest ( windchest ), its pitch (relative to a tuning reference) can be heard to change as the pipe returns to room temperature.