The Influence of the Organ in History
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Buck Dudley. The Influence of the Organ in History
SECTION I
SECTION II
SECTION III
CATALOGUE B
LIST OF BOOKS ON MUSIC
ÆSTHETICS, CRITICISMS, ESSAYS
BOOKS ABOUT MUSICIANS AND THEIR WORKS. I. – COLLECTED
BOOKS ABOUT MUSICIANS AND THEIR WORKS. II. – INDIVIDUAL
HISTORY OF MUSIC, AND OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
ORCHESTRAL
ORGAN
THE TEMPLE EDITION OF ORGAN OVERTURES. (3 Staves)
PIANO SOLO OVERTURES
PIANOFORTE
TECHNICAL AND THEORETICAL
VIOLIN AND STRINGED INSTRUMENTS
VOCAL
THE MUSIC STORY SERIES
WILLIAM REEVES
Bookseller Ltd. SPECIALISTS IN MUSIC AND BOOKS ON MUSIC
MISCELLANEOUS
TUTORS AND EXERCISE BOOKS
Отрывок из книги
The organ nomenclature has, as is the way of the world, changed somewhat from age to age. In accounts of the old English organ, we frequently find this and that church being referred to as possessing a "payre of organs." This has been variously interpreted, some supposing it to refer to organs of two manuals, which explanation seems natural enough; but the best authorities explain it as meaning an organ which possesses more than one rank of pipes, or more than one stop. Rimbault, who takes this view, says the expression is to be regarded as a phrase of nearly obsolete English, and to be taken in the same sense as we still sometimes say "a pair of stairs," instead of a "flight of stairs." One proof of this interpretation that he cites is interesting. During the great Cromwellian rebellion, and the rule of the Roundheads in England, a great many organs were destroyed by the soldiery, who considered them a relic of Popery. At this time, a certain Mr. Pepys, whose diary is still extant, travelled about considerably and interested himself in the organ, as well as some other matters, as will be seen from the following extract from the aforesaid diary. The point to us (although by no means the only one to him) lies in the fact that he uses the words "the organ" and the "pair of organs" as evidently, synonymous. He writes as follows: —
Mr. Pepys' heart was evidently in the right place, and the thought of having the church provide a fund for the proper tuning and repair of the organ, not only sensible, but, to quote his own words, "a mighty pretty" idea.
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While the improvement of the organ, as respects both tone, mechanism and general capabilities, continued, and still continues at the present day, it is noteworthy that from the time of Bach, of all others, the influence of the organ upon music at large began to diminish. From this point we have to consider the decline of this influence, showing that music began to emancipate itself, each instrument claiming and receiving its own especial rights and treatment, long before a similar dawn of liberty began in the political world. Two reasons conduced to this change.
First, the requirements of music, which found no prototype in the organ of that day. As the instruments were then built, they possessed but little variety of tone, the swelling or diminishing of which was an impossibility; nor had the organist any mechanical assistance whatever to enable him to vary the combinations of stops.
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