Welcome,
sophisticated viewers,
to today’s edition of
Enlightening Entertainment,
where we will learn
about an instrument with
an extraordinary history
and fascinating qualities:
the organ.
The organ is a relatively
old musical instrument
in the Western
musical tradition.
It is believed that
the Greek inventor and
mathematician Ctesibius
of Alexandria, who lived
from 285-222 BC,
invented the hydraulis,
a water organ considered
to be the precursor
of the modern pipe organ.
By around the 8th century,
it has become closely
associated with
Catholic Church services.
Later, it became
a well-enjoyed secular
recital instrument.
The organ impresses
most people because of
its diverse repertoire and
stirring range of sounds.
In the first part
of the program,
Dr. James Welch,
music lecturer at
Santa Clara University
in California, USA
and an organist
at Saint Mark’s Episcopal
Church in Palo Alto,
will guide us in exploring
one of the largest organs
in the western United States.
We are now
in the basement directly
below the chancel.
This is the blower room
where the wind pressure
comes from.
It takes
a tremendous amount of
air to power 4,568 pipes,
some of which are
16 feet high.
This is a large blower
and it makes a lot of noise,
so it’s downstairs here
in the basement
in an insulated room.
This is one of the many
sets of reservoirs
between the blower
and the organ itself.
We are now
in the choir chamber.
This is one of
the side chambers
above the chancel.
And you can see
a number of ranks of pipes.
What you are seeing now
are the positive pipes,
which are exposed.
And the choir chamber
is behind them.
This is the 8-foot Spitz
principle on the choir.
These pipes are tuned
by moving a sleeve
on top of the pipe,
and as you move it up
the pipe becomes longer
and the pitch goes lower.
This is an example of
one of the mitered pipes
that they had to turn
so it would fit
in this smaller space.
The access to the great,
swell and pedal divisions,
the largest
of these chambers,
is accessed through
this door on the outside
of the church.
At the back wall of the organ,
on the either side,
are the longest pipes.
These belong to the pedal.
These are
the long reed pipes.
They’re 16-feet long
at the longest.
These pipes are tuned,
interestingly, by pushing
a little wire up and down
that changes a vibrating
metal tongue that’s inside
the boot of pipe.
The pipes way up the top
of the chamber
are the great pipes.
We are now high in the
great organ chamber,
and what you are seeing
are the pipes that are
used typically for
playing loud music
and for playing hymns.
These are the principal pipes,
running from 16-feet long
down to just a fraction
of an inch.
In some concerts
and services
you’ll hear a bell device,
a rotating bell device.
And hear it is.
When I turn on a switch
or a stop at the organ
it makes that rotate.
This is the longest
principal pipe in the organ.
You can see
it’s huge in scale.
The 16-foot open principal.
This is the 32-foot
reed rank in the pedal.
This is entirely a pipe organ,
with one exception;
the bottom 12 notes
of the 32-foot rank,
the flue rank in the pedal,
is electronic.
And the sound comes out
of this woofer.
There is a tremendous
amount of electrical wiring
in this organ.
To get into the swell
chamber itself you have
to remove this trapdoor,
and crawl through on
your hands and knees.
Inside the swell chamber
there are pipes again
the range from 16-feet
long down to just
a fraction of an inch.
On the right
are some of the oboe
and trumpet pipes.
On the left
are the vox humana,
the human voice pipes,
with a little tuning wire.
This is another
16-foot reed pipe.
It was too long for this,
the tight space
in this chamber, and so
they’ve curled it around
itself like a trombone.
Now we’re in the old
narthex underneath
the gallery.
This part of the organ
needs its own blower,
and it’s located
in this closet here.
This is the console
in the gallery. It’s only
a one-manual organ,
and it can only play
the organ up here.
The main organ,
in the chancel, can play
both the front organ
and the gallery organ.
The pipes in this gallery
division are unusual.
There are only some soft
flutes for accompanying
a choir, and some
very loud reeds
for leading the melody
in a hymn for instance.
Now you have seen
one of the largest and
finest organs anywhere
in the country.
We’re very fortunate
to have such a fine organ
here at Saint Mark’s.
Mr. Raymond Ruckle
is an organist and
Sunday school instructor
at the Seventh Day
Adventist Church
in the San Francisco/
San Jose Bay Area,
California, USA.
He shared his abundant
knowledge of the history
of organs with us.
If you go way back
actually before the time
of Christ, there was some
experimentation going on
with the Greeks
and they had what
was called a hydraulis.
And what they would do
is they would have water
rush into this tank.
So they would pour it
at a certain rate and then
they had some pipes that
they had already begun
experimenting with.
They could play on all
those notes and of course
they had probably wider,
wider keys than
what we have today.
There’s a possibility
that in the sanctuary,
in Jerusalem, that
they may have actually
had some form
of a pipe organ.
Because they had
their festivals,
and they had trumpets
and you know, all the
singers and it’s possible
they might have had
something like that.
But around the 4th century,
and I believe it was,
where they began to get
really serious about
refining what they had
already accomplished.
And it was too much
bother to have water
being poured in.
So they wanted to come up
with another way.
And somebody must have
noticed that when
you’re doing this
with something to help
some coals get brighter,
push some air on them.
They came up with a way
of putting weights
on those, sealing it off.
And as it would go down,
it would have a valve in there,
as it would go down
it would have
a constant pressure.
When it got down
to a certain point there
would be another one
that would be on its way
down and somebody
would lift it back up.
There was a place called
Halberstadt Cathedral,
and there were pictures
of guys pushing
on these bellows.
The organ, a musical
instrument built through
human intelligence
and creativity,
has evolved differently
in various countries.
However,
as human’s innate quest
for beauty and art
is the same throughout
space and time,
the elevating organ music
has never failed
to accompany people
on many occasions.
So we have everything
from real high pitches like…
…may not hear that,
I’m going probably
out of hearing range…
to this 32 foot.
And I’m going to add
with it the 16 foot
because it kind of adds
a little more gravity to it.
I’m going to go down
from the middle pedal,
and these are arranged
just like what you play
with your hands.
This is like a keyboard
on a piano except
that it’s only 5 octaves.
Some of the ones
who want to copy
German organs,
they stop short 3 notes,
and they stop 2 notes
short on the pedal board.
Some pedal boards
are flat and straight.
This one copies
something that was
invented over in England.
In the organs of France,
they had quite
an interesting system,
everything came down
to the bottom manual.
Germans, they had a
different way of doing it.
This manual came up
to here, this was
the main manual,
then the others
came down to here,
so they were up one.
The organ is
an intricately designed
musical instrument.
Mastering its mechanical
details serves as the base
for creating elevating music.
One thing that
the viewers may wonder
about is all these buttons,
what does that all have to do?
We talked about
these buttons up here,
they’re tilting tablets.
But these help us
to be able to play
a bunch of these
at one time to
make changes suddenly,
because in the old days
they didn’t have that.
They had to have
somebody sitting
on each side of
the organist and
they had to draw knobs,
and at certain points they
would have written down
what was supposed
to go off
or what was to go on.
Then, a little bit later,
they came up with
a ventil system which
they would push a button
in the pedals.
And what it would do is
they pushed
that particular button,
it would flood
a chest with air, so they
could keep all the reeds,
the trumpets and
all that kind of sound.
They could have all stops
drawn but there’s no air.
So when they’re ready
for them they would
push that and on
would come the reeds.
That’s about as far
as they had gotten.
Then somebody came up
with the idea of
combination pistons, and
that’s what we have here.
So you notice as I push
this one, that all comes on,
that comes on.
See how it changes with
the lighting of the stops.
Exactly the same button
is duplicated
for the pedals.
So that if your hands are
busy, you push this one,
same lighting
would happen, and
so these are quiet ones.
In North America,
South America, Europe,
Australia
and New Zealand,
the organ is a part
of Christian and some
Jewish religious services.
The introduction
of church organs is
traditionally attributed
to Pope Vitalian
in the 7th century.
In the last part of the program,
Mr. Ruckle will play us
some beautiful
organ music.
We have one percussions
stop and that’s the chimes.
So if I play softly
in the service…
A lot of times right after
a prayer I will play softly.
And it rings just like a bell.
Because this is
a fairly large organ,
we have different
celeste stops,
like flute celeste,
as a soft kind of a hybrid.
And then we have
this one, like cellos.
So when we combine
all of those together,
we get sounds like this.
With the vox humana
wiggling its way,
we can get
this kind of a sound.
And then some
streaming sounds.
And to lead a hymn,
you have the principles
pulled together.
Sometimes you set up stops
so that you have a tuba,
but you have to
accompany that in a way
that’s appropriate.
So if we do like
“Come Ye Thankful
People, Come”…
Our appreciation,
Mr. Ruckle and
Mr. Welch
for introducing us
to the complex
and delightful world
of the organ.
May its deeply resonating
melodies uplift our hearts
for many more centuries
to come.
Thank you,
blessed viewers,
for your company on
Enlightening Entertainment.
Now, please join us for
Words of Wisdom, right
after Noteworthy News,
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May your days be full of
beauty and love.