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The 35th London Handel Festival

Started by KB7DQH, March 21, 2012, 01:53:58 PM

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KB7DQH

http://www.camdennewjournal.com/feature-35th-london-handel-festival-runs-march-15-april-24


Quote

Published: 15 March, 2012
by SEBASTIAN TAYLOR

St George's, Handel's church in Mayfair, is getting a glorious new organ. Made in the US at a cost of £1million, it is the first American organ to cross the pond.

Weighing 10 tons, it has 2,968 pipes, nearly all made of lead and 50 covered in gold leaf to go at the front of the organ case. The 174 hand-carved keys are made from cow shinbones.

Installation will take as long as six months as each pipe must be voiced and tuned to perfection.

St George's organist and music director Simon Williams said: "Once installed in the autumn, the organ will not only provide the church with an instrument that meets the need of the liturgy, but London will also have a versatile instrument of the highest quality.

"We've been hosting the London Handel Festival for 30 years and this year's five-week festival is getting under way this month.

"With the new organ, it will be possible to create a major new organ concert series and we'll also be able to offer London's many fine chamber choirs, professional and amateur, a first-class venue with excellent acoustics and a fine organ to accompany them."

St George's, in Hanover Square, is regarded by many as the quintessential 18th-century English church.

Designed by John James, a pupil of Sir Christopher Wren, it was completed in 1724.

Handel  took up residence in Brook Street, Mayfair, in the same year, in time to provide advice on the church's new organ and compose a piece to test the skills of candidates for the position of organist.

The composer worshipped regularly at the church until his death in 1759.

The first organ was installed in 1725 by Gerard Smith at a cost of £500.

Since then, the organ has been renovated or rebuilt eight times, most recently in 1970.

Leading organ consultant Ian Bell – who has worked on restorations of numerous organs, including those at St Paul's and the Royal Albert Hall – was called in to advise, and was later appointed project manager.

"Ian Bell and I took the view that the 1970 organ had not lasted well, suffering grievously from the ferocious heating system," says Williams, manoeuvring past pipes scattered around the church. "Rather than pour good money into doing it up, we decided to start again with a new organ, while preserving the wooden façade dating back to 1725.

"We still have world-class organ builders in this country, as there are in Europe, and we considered whether to go with one of them. But the instrument we were looking for was an organ with an 18th-century character able to meet the needs of the 21st century, an organ with flexibility and a wider palette of sounds, and we decided to see whether our requirements could be met by an American organ builder."

In 2008, Williams and others from the church went on a whirlwind US tour to meet organ-builders and play their organs in New York City, New Jersey, Tennessee, Missouri and other states Finally, in 2010, the contract was awarded to Richards, Fowkes & Co, organ master-builders based in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

The firm was founded in 1988 to specialise in organs in the style of late-17th and 18th- century organs in Europe, organs that inspire people to sing, to play and to listen.

Nearly 12,000 individual parts have been painstakingly made by hand for St George, with virtually every construction method being based on traditional European techniques.

To date, nearly £1.75million has been raised, mostly to fund the church restoration works, leaving £0.75m still to be found to pay for the organ in full.

• The 35th London Handel Festival runs from March 15-April 24. Full details of concerts at www.handel.cswebsites.org

Eric
KB7DQH
The objective is to reach human immortality—that is, to create things which are necessary to mankind, necessary to the purpose of the existence of mankind, and which have become the fruit that drives the creation of a higher state of mankind than ever existed before."

revtonynewnham

Hi

Typical newspaper hype - it's far from being "the first American organ to cross the pond" - what about the couple of hundred or so Wurlitzers!  Not to mention at least one Estey.  It may possibly be the first church organ - although even that could be questionable - did Aeoline actually build over here or just import?

And, of course, if you include reed organs and electronics there are hundreds of them!

Should be an interesting instrument though.

Every Blessing

Tony

AnOrganCornucopia

There were quite a number of Aeolian Orchestrelles and other such house organs imported - some quite recently. There is a large 3m/65ss Aeolian in Christ Church, Northampton - though it was moved there by Walker from a house. I recall that it was featured on a CD reviewed in Organists' Review a good many years ago - it was said to sound very lush and American. It's totally enclosed, other than a few pedal ranks. If anyone can help me find this CD I'd be most grateful.

There's also a Morton theatre organ somewhere Solihull way - motorbike museum, if I recall correctly! - but it's been rebuilt and enlarged with Wurlitzer bits and, I think, a Wurlitzer console. There was also of course Reg Foort's 5/28 Moller touring organ.

As for St George's, it's interesting to note that quite a bit of it has been made in Mander's works in Bethnal Green by Bruce Fowkes - apparently the cost and time involved in importing some parts and John Mander's generosity made it more economical to produce the parts in London. I'm rather glad also that the Blomfield-designed case extensions were retained - I rather like them and they obviously gave the organbuilders rather more space to play with inside the case. It also means it doesn't just look like any old London church 3-tower case, of which there are still many.

I shall try to get to the opening recital, whenever that might be, and I will be most disappointed, given where Richards & Fowkes are based, if we don't get Chattanooga Choo Choo as an encore!  ;D