Page:A Dictionary of Music and Musicians vol 2.djvu/607

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ORGAN.
595

genious arrangement by which the lower portion of a stop, or even the stop entire, could be made to act on two different manuals 'by communication' as it was termed. He introduced this device for the first time in his organ at the Temple, and afterwards in those at St. Andrew's Holborn, St. Andrew Undershaft, St. John's Chapel, Bedford Row, etc.; but the account of the last-mentioned instrument is here selected for illustration, as it presented some other noticeable peculiarities. This organ had a 'Sesquialtera Bass' of reeds, consisting of 17th, 19th, and 22nd, up to middle B, planted on a small separate soundboard; each rank being made to draw separately. (See nos. 13, 14, and 15, below.) It was however nearly always out of order, and produced at best but an indifferent effect. The four ranks of the Cornet in the Echo (12th, 15th, Tierce, and Larigot) were made to draw separately; an arrangement evidently adopted rather for ostentation, as these sets of little pipes could scarcely have been required separately for any useful purpose.

Great organ. 15 stops.
Pipes
1. Open Diapason 52
2. Stopped Diapason 52
3. Principal 52
4. Flute 52
5. Twelfth 52
6. Fifteenth 52
7. Tierce 52
8. Larigot 52
9. Sesquialtera, 5 ranks 260
10. Cornet to mid. C♯, 5 ranks 130
11. Trumpet 52
12. Clarion 52
In Reeds.
13. Tierce 25
14. Larigot 25
15. Twenty-second 25
685
Choir organ. 2 real stops; 4 borrowed.
a. Open Diapason. Borrowed by
communication
from the Great Organ.
b. Stopped Diapason
c. Principal
d. Flute
16. Bassoon 52
17. Cremona 52
789
Echo. 10 stops.
18. Open Diapason 27
19. Stopped Diapason 27
20. Principal 27
21. Twelfth 27
22. Fifteenth 27
23. Tierce 27
24. Larigot 27
25. Trumpet 27
26. Hautboy 27
27. Vox Humana 27
1059
Compass, Grt. and Chr. GG, short octaves, to D in alt, 52 notes.
Echo, Middle C to D in alt. 27 notes.

The above organ was standing, a few years ago, in a church at Blackheath.


1703. St. Saviour's, Southwark.

Abraham Jordan, Sen.

Double Diapason and Large Choir.

This organ is said to have been built by 'one Jordan, a distiller, who,' as Sir John Hawkins tells us in his History of Music, 'had never been instructed in the business, but had a mechanical turn, and was an ingenious man, and who, about the year 1700, betook himself to the making of organs, and succeeded beyond expectation.' He certainly built several excellent and substantial instruments. The one under notice had a 16-ft. octave of metal pipes acting on the Great Organ keys from tenor C down to CC. These large pipes originally stood in the front of the case, where they made a very imposing appearance, as their full length was presented to view, without nearly a yard of the upper part being hidden behind the case, as at St. Paul's. They however were dismounted many years ago, and put out of sight, and the instrument was enclosed in a case of inferior dimensions. This organ doubtless had an Echo; but no account of it has been preserved.

Great organ. 13 stops.
Pipes
1. Double Open Diapason, CCC to CC, no CCC♯ 12
2. Open Diapason 54
3. Open Diapason 54
4. Stopped Diapason 54
5. Principal 54
6. Flute 54
7. Twelfth 54
8. Fifteenth 54
9. Sesquialtera, 4 ranks 216
10. Furniture, 3 ranks 162
11. Cornet, 5 ranks 145
12. Trumpet 54
13. Clarion 54
1021
Choir organ. 7 stops.
14. Open Diapason, wood 54
15. Stopped Diapason 54
16. Principal 54
17. Flute 54
18. Fifteenth 54
19. Mixture, 3 ranks 162
20. Vox Humana 54
1507
Compass, GG, short octaves, up to E in alt, 54 notes.


1710. Salisbury Cathedral. Renatus Harris.

Four manuals.

In the year 1710 Renatus Harris erected in Salisbury Cathedral, in place of the instrument put up by his father, an organ possessing four manuals (for the first time in England) and fifty stops, including 'eleven stops of Echos,' and on which 'may be more varietys express'd, than by all ye organs in England, were their several excellencies united.' Such was the glowing account given of the capabilities of this new organ, on the engraving of its 'East Front.' The instrument, however, presented little more than an amplification of the peculiarities exhibited in the St. John's Chapel organ already noticed. The extra department consisted of a complete borrowed organ of 13 stops derived from the Great organ. The Choir organ had its own real stops; and the '11 Stops of Echos' were to a great extent made up of the single ranks of the ordinary Cornet. There was a 'Drum Pedal, CC,' the 'roll' of which was caused by the addition of a second pipe sounding a semitone below the first pipe, with which it caused a rapid beat. Smith had previously put 'a Trimeloe' into his organ at St. Mary-at-Hill, and 'a Drum,' sounding D, into that at St. Nicholas, Deptford.

First Great organ. 16 real stops.
Pipes
1. Open Diapason 50
2. Open Diapason 50
3. Stopped Diapason 50
4. Principal 50
5. Flute 50
6. Twelfth 50
7. Fifteenth 50
8. Tierce 50
9. Larigot 50
10. Sesquialtera, 4 ranks 200
11. Cornet, 5 ranks 125
12. Trumpet 50
13. Clarion 50
14. Cromhorn 50
15. Vox Humana 50
742
Second Great Organ. 13 borrowed stops.
a. Open Diapason 00
b. Stopped Diapason 00
c. Principal 00
d. Flute 00
e. Twelfth 00
f. Fifteenth 00
g. Tierce 00
h. Larigot 00
i. Sesquialtera 00
j. Trumpet 00
k. Clarion 00
l. Cromhorn 00
m. Vox Humana 00
Choir organ. 7 stops.
16. Open Diapason, to Gamut 42
17. Stopped Diapason 50
18. Principal 50
19. Flute 50
20. Twelfth 50
21. Fifteenth 50
22. Bassoon 50
342
Echo. 11 stops.
23. Open Diapason 25
24. Stopped Diapason 25
25. Principal 25
26. Flute 25
27. Twelfth 25
28. Fifteenth 25
29. Tierce 25
30. Larigot 25
31. Trumpet 25
32. Vox Humana 25
33. Cromhorn 25
275
Compass, Gt. and Chr. GG, short 8ves, to C in alt, 50 notes.
Echo, middle C to C in alt, 25 notes.