STANDING OVATION TO MY DEAR FRIEND AND CLASSMATE MAESTRA MARIA ZENGION
@C.Golobish27Ай бұрын
The episcopal cathedral in Wilkes barre has a gorgeous organ aswell
@Piping_UpАй бұрын
Are you referring to St. Stephen's Episcopal?
@C.Golobish27Ай бұрын
@@Piping_Up yes!! Not sure if it's a cathedral but yes your correct
@Piping_UpАй бұрын
@C.Golobish27 I don't believe it's a cathedral. I could be wrong. As far as I'm aware it's just St Stephen's Episcopal church. That will be next week's video. Stay tuned for that. That one will be a huge highlight.
@robertmiller8336Ай бұрын
@@Piping_Up Re; St Stephen's is designated as a pro Cathedral - " A church named by a diocesan bishop to serve as a cathedral but which remains under the governance of the vestry and dean" The Episcopal Diocese of Bethlehem is sprawling, , from the Lehigh Valley up to the NY state line. Some times events happen @ St Stephen's because it is more centraly located. I don't know if the diocese still has a satellite office there or not. (and now you might have guessed which church I was hinting at...)
@Piping_UpАй бұрын
Oh yes! They are spread out. I forgot Mark mentioned that. And yes, that video is next week! You won't want to miss that!
@robertmiller8336Ай бұрын
Interesting for you to see how trends in organ building change in the course of 59 years from the 1920 Casavant from last week to this instrument. I am secretly hoping there is one particular organ in Wilkes Barre you might be stoping by for a visit...
@Piping_UpАй бұрын
It's definitely amazing how an organ can be specific to a church or Cathedral. Give me your thoughts on this organ you think I filmed. Perhaps I did.
@robertmiller8336Ай бұрын
@@Piping_Up There is a saying that "more pipe organs are worn out by fashion than playing ever will" The two Casavants you have visited are good examples of how organ design can change with the winds of popular taste. The 1920" instrument was a product of the day, lush orchestral sounds heavier voicing, solo voices big scaled pipes. In the time between this instrument and the second Casavant from this week a number of things happened. American organists, with the advent of easier travel to Europe and organists in WW2 discovered organs over there that were nothing like what the played back home, .like the 20's and 30's Skinners, Austins, Mollers. In Europe, they discovered lighter sounding cleaner voicing, spacious acoustics and music of composers like Bach played in a completely different way than what they knew. These organists came home and wanted those sounds. So, the Organ Reform movement burst forth. Organs like the old Skinners, Austins, etc. were deemed old and ugly, organ builders began building these "baroque" organs and the old organs fell out of favor and were thrown away. Things swung so far the other directing that builders were building "copies" of these European instruments so organists could play the fashionable music they discovered in Europe.with "authentic performance practice" Now things have swung the other way, while not all of the organ reform organs have been gotten rid of in favor of a more romantic sound.Organists began rediscovering those romantic/symphonic organs which were saved from destruction, frequently simply because of benign neglect or just plain not having the money to replace things with the latest fashion. Both organs you have visited so far have been in situations where the room, the best stop on the organ, has been favorable. Out of this century long period, builders have brought the best of both worlds into today's instruments. (oh, just reading down the comments, you have already given away next week, I hope you had a good conversation with Mark L)
@Piping_UpАй бұрын
@robertmiller8336 all this is definitely what I have heard in snippets and pieces from other organists as we've traveled. So many times we've run into different organs that just don't seem to please the organist that's playing it. But yet others are extremely happy with what they have. Overall I'd say it's nice to have a mix of both because it still shows the history of organs as well some organs can have both while also having some of the newest things available. It has certainly been a journey to capture all the sounds of different organs. I don't think any microphone no matter how good it is will ever capture the full tone and range of organs. It's something that we could admire on the screen but to really understand and know the organ, you have to be there.