Organ, epistle case

HOW TO READ THE SPECIFICATIONS

This organ has four divisions: three
manual divisions played by the hands,
and the pedal division played by the
feet.
Each part of the specification
refers to the stops played on those keyboards respectively.

The name on the stop refers mainly to function or musical color. Some organ stops are nonimitative and produce foundational organ tone, e.g. Diapason, Principal, Octave. Others resemble wind or string instruments, e.g., Chimney Flute, Harmonic Flute, Gamba, Trumpet, Oboe, Trombone.

The numbers following the stop names refer to pitch as a function of the length of the longest pipe in the stop. Eight foot pitch is unison pitch. It agrees with the pitches of the corresponding keys on the piano, for instance. The science of acoustics works on the simple principle that halving or doubling the length of a vibrating body changes its pitch by an octave. Therefore, the shorter and longer designations after stops indicate the pitch at which they sound. The combination of these with unison stops produces the complex ensemble sound of the instrument.

Stops with a Roman numeral following the name, or mixtures, correspond to the upper harmonics of the overtone series and have multiple pipes per note tuned to these overtones.

The second number after the stop name, in the rightmost column, refers to the number of pipes in the entire compass of the stop, or the rank. Ordinarily, a complete manual stop would have 61 pipes, corresponding to the 61 keys of a manual keyboard. Where fewer are indicated, the stop may be an extension of another stop at another pitch (extensions often have 12 pipes to finish a bottom or top octave), or it may be incomplete for some particular reason. Occasionally, stops will play in more than one location in the instrument and these are indicated by the name of the home division in the final column.

 

 

Létourneau Opus 68
Specifications

Great
Choir
Double Open Diapason

16

Lieblich Gedeckt

16

Lieblich Gedeckt

16

Metal Gedeckt

8

Open Diapason

8

Gamba

8

Second Diapason

8

Flute Celeste II

8

Harmonic Flute

8

Principal

4

Stopped Diapason

8

Spindle Flute

4

Principal

4

Octave

2

Open Flute

4

Larigot

11/3

Fifteenth

2

Sharp Mixture III-IV

1

Cornet III (TC)
 22/3
Cremona

8

Mixture V
 11/3
Callaway Tuba

8

Trumpet

8

Tremulant

 

Tuba

Choir 16'

 

Tremulant

 

Unison Off

 

Great 16'
 
Choir 4'
 
Unison Off
 
Swell
Pedal
Diapason

8

  Contra Bourdon

32

Gedeckt

  Open Wood

16

Salicional

  Double Open Diapason

16

Salicional Celeste (CG)

  Bourdon

16

Principal

  Lieblich Gedeckt

16

Chimney Flute

  Major Octave

8

Nazard

 22/3

  Metal Principal

8

Spitz Flute

  Bourdon

8

Tierce

 13/5

  Lieblich Gedeckt

8

Full Mixture V

  Choral Bass

4

Double Trumpet

16 

  Mixture IV

2 2/3

Trumpet

  Contra Trombone

32

Oboe

  Trombone

16

Clarion

  Double Trumpet

16

Tremulant

 

  Trumpet

8

Swell 16'

 

  Clarion

4

Unison Off

 

Tuba

8

Swell 4'

 


Summary Table

Division

Stops

Ranks

Extensions

Borrows

Electronics

Pipes

Great

13

16

1

2

-

940

Swell

14

16

2

-

-

993

Choir

11

14

1

-

-

826

Pedal

17

9

4

6

1

336

Total

55

55

8

8

1

3098

 

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