Difference between revisions of "Reed Organ" - New World Encyclopedia

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ENTIRE ARTICLE WILL STILL BE SHORTENED, especially sections on Prince, Mason & Hamlin and Estey (it's ca. 7200 words right now)
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[[Image:Reed Organ.jpg|thumb|250px|A reed orgoan, known as a Kleines Harmonium]]
IMAGES TO BE ADDED SOON
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The '''reed organ''' is a keyboard instrument that operates via bellows that blow wind past free-floating reeds. A free floating reed doesn’t change pitch by increasing or decreasing the wind pressure and is, therefore, ideal to express dynamics by the pumping/pedaling action of the feet. The faster a player pumps, the louder the reed organ gets, and vice versa. It is also known by the names of [[harmonium]], pump organ, parlor organ, [[melodeon]], seraphine, lap organ, psalmenpomp, Physharmonica, Zungenorgel, Cottage Organ, House Organ, Æoline, Æelodicon, Aérophone, Mélophone, Mélodion, Organino, and others.
 
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{{toc}}
 
 
==Introduction==
 
 
 
The reed organ or harmonium is a keyboard instrument that operates by bellows that blow wind past free-floating reeds. Also known by the names of reed organ, pump organ, parlor organ, melodeon, seraphine, lap organ, psalmenpomp, Physharmonica, Zungenorgel, Cottage Organ, House Organ, Æoline, Æelodicon, Aérophone, Mélophone, Mélodion, Organino, et. al.
 
  
 
==Technical details==
 
==Technical details==
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Most pressure wind type reed organs were built in [[Europe]], although the American builder Aeolian made many Vocalion models with two manuals and an independent pedal with its own keyboard.
 +
Suction type organs were mainly built in the [[United States]], but European makers later followed as well. Since they were less expensive to build, lighter than pianos, and didn’t need tuning, many found their way well outside [[Europe]] and North America. They were also popular in homes and businesses since these were instruments that reminded people of church organs or keyboard instruments in popular singing groups.
  
The Harmonium is a reed organ. Air is forced over a set of free floating reeds by means of a bellows, operated by human force. Its free-floating reeds which are placed in slits in a windchest, whose valves are commonly directly activated by the keys from a traditional organ-like keyboard via a set of pushrods and/or pull rods. The typical harmonium will have one keyboard, but larger models with two or even three keyboards were also built.  
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Reed organs, or American organs, as they are called in the [[United States]], became very popular, and many factories sprung up in the second half of the nineteenth century when these instruments were mass-produced.
  
While many of the larger European harmoniums had two manuals, the addition of an independent pedal division with a full pedal keyboard were more common in American and British models of such size. Its bellows were operated at first by a single foot lever, but io larger models by two foot treadles (similar to those of a sewing machine) in front of the bottom of the instrument, which had to be pumped by the player’s feet. The larger organs were typically meant for churches and its much larger bellows needed to be pumped via a lever on the side by a helper. Variations in tone are produced by stops that control different sets of reeds or vary the manner in which the air acts upon them. Couplers add the upper or lower octave of each tone played.  
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==Original invention by Kratzenstein for scientific research==
 +
The free floating reed was developed in 1778, by [[Christian-Gottlieb Kratzenstein]] (1723-1795) as part of a plan to construct a human speech machine that could mimic the vowels of human speech for scientific research. Kratzenstein, thus, sent a small two-octave reed instrument to the Academy of Science in St. Petersburg. He may have worked together with organ builder [[Franz Kirschnick]] and his assistant, [[Georg Christoffer Rackwitz]]. Kirschnick then decided independently to use these kinds of reeds in his instruments, such as the pianoforte/organ combinations (called claviorganum), and possibly in an instrument called the "orchestrion," an automatic player or barrel type organ, around 1781. This was the first time that free floating reeds were employed as a new kind of organ stop. As far as is known, it was not applied to any classic pipe or church organ. Soon, builders in St. Petersburg, like [[Johann Gabrahn]], started to make "claviorganums." The news of this new type of instrument quickly spread to [[Germany]], where, possibly among others, Strohmann and [[Abbe Vogler]] further developed these types of instruments.
  
Harmoniums are of two different operating types; at first wind pressure was used to sound the reeds, but later, and made popular worldwide by American reed organ makers, was the so-called wind suction system. While the wind pressured organs were louder and thus better suited for small churches, chapels, salons, and concert halls, the suction systems were easier to build, produced a softer tone and were more suitable for use in homes.  
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==Early developments==
 +
The tremendous dynamic range of the reeds with windpressure, from very soft and nearly inaudible (a feature not possible with classic pipe organ reeds) to quite loud, mimicked the dynamic range of the then still new pianoforte as an organ. This type of dynamic was exactly what performers and composers were looking for, and the music of [[Beethoven]] and [[Berlioz]] testify to the new kind of massive dynamic range approaches that were becoming very popular.  
  
Most pressure wind type reed organs were built in Europe, although the American builder Aeolian made many Vocalion models with two manuals and an in independent pedal with its own keyboard. made many as well. Suction type organs were mainly built in the United States, but European makers later followed suit as well. Since they were cheaper to build, lighter than pianos, and didn’t need tuning either, many found their way well outside Europe and North America. Many found they therefore also their way into the homes, and it being an instrument that reminded people of the organ in the church, better suited for Christian education and the singing of hymns and psalms in home 
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In 1810, [[Gabriel Joseph Grenié]] of [[Paris]] applied for a patent for his “orgue expressif” and was thus the first to introduce the reed organ in his country. Apparently, he had seen an instrument built by Kratzenstein 30 years earlier at a friend’s house, around 1770, which led to his own application of the operating principle. This may have been the one Kratzenstein sent to the Academy in St. Petersburg, which was consequently sent to someone in France. Another countryman, Sébastian Érard, also experimented with free reeds. In 1814, Eschenbach of Königshoven in Bavaria invented a keyboard with vibrators, called the "Oragno-Violine." In 1816, Schlimbach of Ohrdurf improved it and called it the "[[AEoline]]." A continuous wind instrument was made by Voit of Schweinfurt in 1817, and he named it the "AEolodicon." In 1818, Anton Häckel of Vienna, built a diminutive AEoline used co-jointly with a pianoforte, and called it the "Physharmonica," which apparently caused quite a stir. Professor Payer took this bellows-harmonica with him to Paris in 1823, and several imitations of it were made, such as the "Aerophone" by Christian Dietz, in 1829. In 1836, Fourneaux may have made a 16 foot or octave deep register, and in 1837, an instrument was created which was called a "Melophone." Many builders started to make similar instruments, adding their own improvements and inventions to them, and called them by a large variety of names, such as Aeolidon (which had bent tongues), Adelphone, Adiaphonon, Harmonikon, Harmonine, Melodium, Aeolian, Panorgue, Poikolorgue, Seraphine (in the UK, it was called a keyboard harmonica, but not a [[harmonium]], as it didn’t have channels for the tongues/reeds).
  
A free floating reed doesn’t change pitch by increasing or decreasing the wind pressure and is therefore ideal to express dynamics by the sheer on troll of the pumping/pedaling action of the feet. The faster you pump, the louder the reed organ gets, and vice versa.  
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In 1832, [[Aristide Cavaille-Coll]], who later became a world famous pipe organ builder, decided to live for awhile in Toulouse to study mathematics. When [[Rossini]] came to this city to present the opera "Robert le Diable," Aristide got an extraordinary chance to demonstrate and explain his recent invention to this famous musician. This instrument, named "Poikilorgue" (varying organ), was a variation of the [[harmonium]] which produced an effect of "expression" (crescendo, decrescendo, and so on) with a single set of free floating reeds and a single set of bellows driven by a foot pedal. It had another foot pedal which did not drive the bellows but compressed and regulated the reservoir of air which was connected to them. Surprised with the intelligence and imagination of the young Aristide, Rossini suggested strongly that he go to Paris, the capital of [[France]] and a stronghold for new music. Rossini was kind enough to write some letters of introduction to the eminent persons in the capital, and Aristide got started for Paris in 1833, with his elder brother Vincent and his father Dominique. Without the help of Rossini, Aristide Cavaille-Coll may not have become as famous as he eventually did.  
  
The suction type instruments developed in the United States does not have the same dynamic range as a pressure type harmonium. It is harder to affect the wind pressure with this approach. Their sound characteristic is also quite different and sound less like a real organ as does the Débain type.  
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Around 1837, in [[England]], Kirkman & White of London started to build small pressure-winded predecessors of the [[harmonium]], and called it a Seraphine. One surviving sample has a single set of reeds within a mahogany case. One of its two pedals supplies the air pressure while the second operates a muting device. Its reeds generate sounds rather slowly and its wind system is difficult to operate smoothly.
  
Reed organs, or American organs, as they are called din the United States, became very popular, and many factories sprung up in the 2nd half of the 19th century, that mass produced these instruments.  
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Alexandre, who would also become a major builder in [[France]], invented a major improvement in the dynamic range of the instrument, called the "expression."
  
==Original Invention by Kratzenstein for Scientific Research==
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Builders all over [[Europe]] invented many types of methods to make improvements to his basic concept of the [[harmonium]].
  
The free floating reed was developed in 1778 by Christian-Gottlieb Kratzenstein (1723-1795) as part of a plan to construct a human speech machine that could mimic the vowels of human speech for scientific research. He may have worked together with organbuilder Franz Kirschnick and his assistant Georg Christoffer Rackwitz. At any rate, a small 2-octave reed instrument was sent to the Academy of Science in St. Petersburg, Kirschnick then decided independently to use these kinds of reeds in his instruments, such as pianoforte/organ combinations (called claviorganum), and possibly in an instrument called the orchestrion, an automatic player or barrel type organ, around 1781. This year can thus be seen as the first time free floating reeds were employed as a new kind of organ stop. As far as is known, it was not applied to any classic pipe or church organ at that time. Rackwitz , Johann Gabrahn, also working in St. Petersburg, also started to make claviorganums. The news of this new type of instrument quickly spread to Germany, where, possibly among others, Strohmann and Abbe Vogler further developed these types of instruments.
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In the [[United States]] around this time saw the beginnings of reed organs, as several builders in the New England region started to make small lap organs with free-floating reeds, which operated on wind pressure as well.
  
==Further Early Development==
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==Application in pipe organs==
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[[Image:Kaleva Church altar and organs.jpg|thumb|200px|left|Kavela Church reed organ in Kaleva, Tampere, [[Finland]].]]
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Although the application of these type of reeds were guaranteed in the manufacture of the American reed organs, both of wind pressure and wind suction types, they were also employed by church organ builders in [[Germany]], especially in the period from 1860-1890. Examples of European builders were Walker, Ladegast en Steinmeier who employed them, Mutin and Merklin after Cavaille-Coll in [[France]], Swiss builders like Rinckenbach, Stiehr and Callinet in the Elzas (their 16 foot pedal stops, called "Ophicleide" instead of "Posaune"), Belge builders such as Schijven and Loret who made the reed organ so popular in [[Belgium]], and the Van Dam firm, F.C. Smits, Van Oekelen, and Kam in the [[Netherlands]]. These instruments fell into disfavor at the Advent of the Organ Reform Movement and the Neo-Baroque movement that followed it, but have become popular again since the late twentieth century. In all these cases, the construction was like the typical organ reed: A shallot, a resonator box, and a resonator shallot.
  
The tremendous dynamic range of the reeds with windpressure, from very soft and nearly inaudible (a feature not possible with classic pipe organ reeds) to quite loud mimicked the dynamic range of the then still new pianoforte as an organ. This type of dynamics was exactly what performers and composers were looking for, and the music of Beethoven and Berlioz testify to the new kind of massive dynamic range approaches that were becoming very popular.  
+
Some organs (known examples exist in [[Germany]], [[Holland]] and [[Switzerland]]) also have [[harmonium]] stops whereby the construction is just as in a harmonium and work with wind pressure. They have no resonator boxes nor shallots.
  
==Early Developments==
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==Other applications==
 +
Early free floating reed instruments did not always have a keyboard, but buttons to activate certain pitches. They were small, and this consequently led to the invention of a portable instrument with multiple fold bellows and reeds which would enable the development of sounds when the air was rushing in or out. This led to the development of the modern accordion which also became extremely popular worldwide and still flourishes today. Accordions have either keyboards or pushbuttons, and are still constructed today around the world as a form of light entertainment and in classical performance. The accordion is most often associated with the polka, but there are many more musical forms that are popular.
  
In 1810, Gabriel Joseph Grenié of Paris applied for a patent for his “orgue expressif” and was thus the first to introduce the reed organ in his country. Apparently, he had seen an instrument built by Kratzenstein 30 years earlier at a friend’s house, around 1770, which led to his own application of the operating principle. This may have been the one Kratzenstein sent to the Academy in St. Petersburg, which was consequently sent to someone in France. Another countryman, Sébastian Érard, also experimented with free reeds. In ca. 1814, Eschenbach of Königshoven in Bavaria invented a keyboard with vibrators, called the Oragno-Violine. In 1816 Schlimbach of Ohrdurf improved it and called it the AEoline. A continuous wind instrument was made by Voit of Schweinfurt, ca. 1817 and he it the AEolodicon. In 1818 Anton Häckel of Vienna, built a diminutive AEoline used co-jointly with a pianoforte, and called it the Physharmonica, which apparently caused quite a stir. Professor Payer took this bellows-harmonica with him to Paris in 1823, and several imitations of it were made, such as the Aerophone by Christian Dietz ca. 1829. In 1836, Fourneaux may have made a 16’ foot or octave deep register, and in 1837, someone made what was called a Melophone. Many people started to make similar instruments, added their own improvements and inventions to it and called by a large variety of names, such as Aeolidon (which had bent tongues), Adelphone, Adiaphonon, Harmonikon, Harmonine, Melodium, Aeolian, Panorgue, Poikolorgue, Seraphine (England, keyboard harmonica, but not a harmonium, as it didn’t have channels for the tongues/reeds).
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== Free reeds ==
 
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The following illustrations depict the type of reed typical of [[harmonica]]s, [[accordion]]s and reed organs as it goes through a cycle of vibration. One side of the reed frame is omitted from the images for clarity; in actuality, the frame surrounds the reed on four sides.
In 1832 Aristide Cavaille-Coll, who later became a world famous pipe organ builder went to stay in Toulouse to study mathematics. When Rossini came in this city to present the opera "Robert le Diable", Aristide got an extraordinary chance to demonstrate and explain about his recent invention to this famous musician. This instrument named "Poikilorgue (varying organ)" was a variation of the harmonium which produced an effect of "expression (crescendo, decrescendo etc.)" with a single set of free floating reeds and a single set of bellows driven by a foot pedal. It had another foot pedal which does not drive the bellows but compress and regulate the air of reservoir connected to them. Surprised with the intelligence and imagination of the young Aristide, Rossini suggested him strongly to go up to Paris, the capital of France. Thanks to him who was kind enough to write some letters of introduction for the eminent persons in the capital, he got started for Paris in 1833 with his elder brother Vincent and his father Dominique. Without the help of Rossini, Cavaille-Coll may not have become as famous as he eventually did.  
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{|
 
+
|-
Around 1837, in England, Kirkman & White of London started to build small pressure-winded predecessors of the harmonium, and called it a Seraphine. One surviving sample has a single set of reeds within a mahogany case. One of its two pedals supplies the air pressure while the second operates a muting device. Its reeds speak rather slow and its wind system is difficult to operate smoothly.
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|[[Image:Palheta repouso.png|thumb]]
 
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|A reed is fixed by one end in a close-fitting frame.
Alexandre, who would also become a major builder in France, invented a major improvement in the dynamic range of the instrument, called the expression.
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|-
 
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|[[Image:Palheta vibra1.png|thumb]]
Builder all over Europe invented all kinds of methods to make improvements to his basic concept of the harmonium.  
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|Air pressure is applied; the reed prevents air flow, except for a small, high [[velocity]] flow at the tip.
 
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|-
In the United States around this time, we also see the beginnings of reed organs, as several builders in the New England region started to make small lap organs with free-floating reeds, which operated on wind pressure as well.  
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|[[Image:Palheta vibra2.png|thumb]]
 
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|The reed is drawn through the opening, allowing the air to pass.
 
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|-
==Débain’s Patent==
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|[[Image:Palheta vibra3.png|thumb]]
 
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|The elasticity of the reed forces it back through the frame.
An Organino, made by the Parisian François-Alexandre Débain (1809-1877) had two notes an octave apart on each key (like 8’ and 4’ pipe organ stop pitches), and when Debain put 4 stops on one keyboard he called it a harmonium. The various sized tone channels produced different tone qualities. This was a totally new approach that would revolutionize the reed organ industry that would blossom for more than a hundred years. He got a patent on his invention as well as on the name “harmonium” on August 9, 1840.  
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|}
His instrument had free-floating reeds, and two foot treads with which to control the wind pressure.  
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Each time the reed passes through the frame, it interrupts air flow. These rapid, [[periodicity|periodic]] interruptions of the air flow initiate the audible vibrations perceived by the listener.
Other Parisian builders immediately recognized the importance of his innovations and copied both his trademark and improvements. Debain spent much of his time unsuccessfully trying to assert his right of ownership. Possessing a velvety, dark timbre very much to Romantic tastes, his instruments are historically significant.
 
 
 
In this way, Debain, in a way, put the reed organ officially on the musical world’s map, and gave it a name that was consequently used throughout Europe and Japan.
 
 
 
The suction system, which ultimately became extremely popular in the United States and whose approach was then consequently copied by European and Japanese builders, was apparently invented by a workman in the Débain shop around 1835.
 
 
 
==Application in Pipe Organs==
 
 
 
Although the application of this type of reed was guaranteed in the manufacture of harmoniums, melodeons and the American reed organs, both of wind pressure and wind suction types, they were also employed by church organ builders in Germany (especially in the period from 1860-1890: Walker, Ladegast en Steinmeier employed them), France (after Cavaille-Coll, by Mutin and Merklin), Swiss builders like Rinckenbach, Stiehr and Callinet in the Elzas (their 16’ pedal stops called Ophicleide instead of Posaune), in Belgium made popular by such builders as Schijven and Loret, and in the Netherlands they were made by the Van Dam firm, F.C. Smits, Van Oekelen and Kam. They fell in disfavor at the Advent of the Organ Reform Movement and the Neo-Baroque movement that followed it, but have become popular again since the late 20th century. In all these cases, the construction was like the typical organ reed: a shallot, a resonator box and a resonator shallot.
 
 
 
However, in some organs (known examples exist in Germany, Holland and Switzerland)  also have harmonium stops whereby the construction is just as in a harmonium and work with wind pressure; they have no resonator boxes nor shallots.  
 
 
 
==Other Applications==
 
  
Early free floating reed instruments did not always have a keyboard, but buttons to activate certain pitches, they were small, and this consequently led to the invention of a portable instrument with multiple fold bellows and reeds that would speak when the air was going in or out. This led to the development of the modern accordion which also became extremely popular worldwide and still flourishes today. Accordions have either keyboards or pushbuttons, and are sill being made today around the world, as form of light entertainment, such as during dances. The accordion is most often associated with the polka, but there are many more musical forms that are popular.
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In a free-reed instrument, it is the physical characteristics of the reed itself, such as mass, length, cross-sectional area and stiffness, that primarily determine the pitch ([[frequency]]) of the musical note produced. Of secondary importance to the pitch are the physical dimensions of the chamber in which the reed is fitted, and of the air flow.
  
 
==Why reed organs became very popular==
 
==Why reed organs became very popular==
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Towards the end of the eighteenth century, with the advent of the pianoforte (the name of this piano already expresses its dynamic range, from soft to loud), as well as the symphonies written in the Rococo and Classical Period, the need for instant dynamic range in an instrument grew tremendously. This created one of the reasons why the harpsichord soon fell into disfavor. Never before had an organ in the home been affordable, let alone one with a dynamic range. Thus there existed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, many small pipe organs in many affluent homes. Yet, even to the affluent, these were expensive, heavy, not maintenance-free, and they took up a lot of space.
  
Towards the end of the 18th century, with the advent of the pianoforte (the name of this piano already expresses its dynamic range, from soft to loud), as well as the symphonies written in the Rococo and Classical Period, the need for instant dynamic range in one instrument grew tremendously, and was one of the reasons the harpsichord soon fell into disfavor. However, never before had an organ in the home been affordable, let alone one with a dynamic range! Although in the 18th and 19th centuries there existed in many affluent homes a real small pipe organ, these were expensive, heavy, needed maintenance and tuning and took up a lot of space.
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The reed organ also was a favorite over a [[piano]] for small churches which could not afford a pipe organ. In the nineteenth century in the [[United States]], many small churches were built and the reed organ was favored, especially with congregational singing.
 
 
The reed organ also was a favorite (over a piano) for small churches that could not afford a pipe organ, and since in the United States many small churches were built in the 19th century, the reed organ came as gift from heaven to help out with congregational singing.
 
 
 
In addition, it was favored for home music-making alongside the piano and in much later times even in the cinema as a means of musical illustration in the era before sound films.
 
 
 
==Development in the United States==
 
 
 
==Melodeon==
 
 
 
As indicated above, very small pressure type reed organs (many of them were lap organs) were built in the United States from around 1840, mainly by builders in New England.
 
 
 
The melodeon is the forerunner of the more familiar pump organ reminiscent of an upright piano case, and was built from about the mid 1840's to the early 1870's. Many of the larger ones looked like the small and typical early horizontally arranged square pianos; some were actually advertised to be in a piano style case. These are wind instruments with brass reeds to make the sound. One characteristic of this type instrument is that it only has one pedal to power the bellows system. The other pedal exists to control the dynamic sound volume.
 
 
 
The name "melodeon" was apparently originated by Jeramiah Carhart of Poughkeepsie, New York, in 1835. Being dissatisfied with the bold tone of the wind pressured reed organ that was beginning to become popular, he invented a system whereby the wind could be sucked through the reeds, whereby its sounds would project inward into the instrument, rather than outwards. As indicated above, such system was also invented by a workman in the Debain shop, around 1835.
 
 
 
In 1846, Carhart sold his patent rights and other secrets to several manufacturers, among them George A. Prince of Buffalo, New York. By the 1860s, Prince had become the largest builder in the world of these types of small suction type reed organs, offering an astounding 40 different models, ranging from simple instruments with a single set of reeds and just 49 keys, to double manual organs with a larger compass. Between 1847 and 1866, some 40,000 melodeons had been made. They were sold in all parts of the United States and exported to many foreign countries. The city of Buffalo had become "The Melodeon Capital of the World."
 
 
 
The "improved melodeon," which eventually brought tonal, harmonious musical pleasure to millions, was invented in Buffalo. Two Yankee artisans, Jeremiah Carhart of Poughkeepsie and Elias Parkman Needham of Delhi, joined the swelling populace of Buffalo around 1835. They immediately found work in cabinet making and carpentry shops in the Washington, Swan and Seneca street area.
 
 
 
The patent of this suction principle was secured by Jeremiah Carhart on Dec. 28, 1846 (U.S. Patent Office No. 4912). After years of experiment and tinkering, this innovative and historic invention finally materialized while Carhart and Needham were in the employ of George A. Prince, owner and proprietor of the George A. Prince & Co. Music Store at 200 Main St.
 
 
 
Earlier 19th century reed organs had a raspy, snarling quality and excessive dissonant overtones. The very first improved melodeon was made in the upper floor over Prince's music store. Brisk sales immediately followed its introduction.
 
 
 
The Buffalo City Directory for 1847-48 lists George A. Prince & Co., Music Store, and also "Geo. A. Prince & Co., Manufacturers of Carhart's Improved Melodeons," both at the same Main Street address. Carhart, holder of the patent, had sold manufacturing rights to Prince while in his employ. Carhart and Needham, maintaining their own manufacturing rights, briefly operated a melodeon making shop at 269 Main St, then departed for New York City where, in 1849, they established a melodeon "manufactory" at 77 East 13th St, Manhattan.
 
 
 
They continued as a New York-based melodeon and reed organ manufacturer until 1868, under the trade name Carhart & Needham. Meanwhile, manufacturing activity hummed from 1846 onward in Buffalo as Prince and his associates, with bold enterprise, added machinery and skilled hands to meet the demand for the ever more popular, moderately priced improved melodeon.
 
 
 
In an interview published in the Buffalo Commercial-Advertiser on Oct. 11, 1886, half a century after his arrival, Prince recalled that the trip from Boston took him by rail to Providence, by sea to New York and riverboat to Albany, by rail to Utica, in 1836 the western limit of train service, then finally to Buffalo by stagecoach. Prince also recalled, "I had previously worked in the melodeon factory of a man named Abraham Prescott at Concord, New Hampshire" (some 100 miles from  Boston). There he had obtained from the crude ideas of his employer "the knowledge that later enabled me, in collaboration with Jeremiah Carhart, to construct the first satisfactory (improved) instrument of its kind."
 
 
 
The Carhart-Prince collaboration is now American musical history. Constant experimentation with reeds, bellows, swells and stops led to improved, often patented techniques in Prince's shops. His superintendent of tuning, Emmons Hamlin, developed in 1848-49 a voicing method that, by twisting the metal reeds, refined the tone markedly. Hamlin later became a founder of the firm of Mason & Hamlin, a large manufacturer of very fine cabinet reed organs and pianos.
 
 
 
==America Brings the Melodeon Home==
 
 
 
At a Washington patent hearing in 1860, Hamlin and Needham estimated that prior to 1846 fewer than 300 reed organs had been built in the United States. All were handmade to order in small cabinet shops by craftsmen who also built a variety of other instruments.  
 
  
By the 1850s, reed organs, especially the melodeon, had become a major source of musical entertainment in American homes. As the improved melodeon caught on nationally, the climate for an industry emerged. Newly developing mid-century factory production methods, a widening network of rail transportation to urban markets, relatively low prices, a manageable physical size, plus relative ease of performance, all led to new uses. It found its way into homes, social halls, schools, small churches and even foreign missions and ships at sea - anyplace where pipe organs were impractical.  
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In addition, it was preferred for home music-making alongside the [[piano]] and in much later times in the cinema and [[movie theater]]s as a means of musical interludes and interpretation prior to sound films.
  
Unlike the piano, the melodeon seldom needed maintenance or tuning, and it was virtually indestructible in normal use. Its fame spread through sales, news journals and trade periodical advertising, as well as in demonstrations both in the home and in wholesale depots, dealer's stores and showrooms. A melodeon in the parlor provided ready musical entertainment, drawing family and friends together for song and fellowship.  
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==The Estey story==
 +
The Estey firm was founded in 1846, by Jacob Estey in Brattleboro, Vermont. This firm made reed organs from 1850 till 1955, and was the company that outlasted all other American companies and made more organs than anyone else. Their factory grew to a large complex of more than 8 buildings. Around 500,000 reed organs were produced in total. The instruments ranged from small portable field organs which were popular with chaplains in wars (used until the [[Korean War]]) to large 2-manual and pedal reed organs, which had to be pumped by an assistant, for use in small churches, chapels and larger homes. Estey's reed organs were of sound musical and construction quality and many can still be found worldwide.  
  
Soon hundreds of thousands of Americans were acquiring melodeons - a phenomenon not unlike the spread of home television sets during the 1950s. By 1852, George A. Prince & Co. had wholesale depots in New York, Chicago, Cincinnati and Boston; also a growing network of agent - dealers in St Louis, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Toronto and other major cities. The market expanded each year.  
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While continuing to build reed organs, they also engaged the Roosevelt-trained Philadelphia [[pipe organ]] builder, William E. Haskell (1865-1927), to open a pipe organ department in 1901. During the next fifty-nine years, the company built and rebuilt 3261 pipe organs, and with one exception, all of the Estey instruments had tubular-pneumatic or electro-pneumatic action. Many of these organs found their way into large estate homes.  
  
==A Place in Musical History==
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==Official instrument for the new Japanese elementary public schools==
 +
According to the Reed Organ Club Japan, founded in August 1996, the history of the reed organ in Japan goes back to the 1860s, when reed organs were being introduced by Christian missionaries for use in church services. The Yamaha [[piano]] builder was one of the pioneers in Japan to build reed organs. The elementary school education system in Japan was started in 1872. Later, the government of modern Japan chose the reed organ as the official instrument to accompany singing during the obligatory music classes. Other builders followed after Yamaha, such as Nishikawa and Kawai.
  
The Prince Co.'s importance as America's pioneer melodeon and reed organ manufacturer is recognized today.  
+
The reed organ also became the leading spirit of Japanese modern music called "Shoka" and prepared for music education in elementary schools. Both pupils and teachers had to become familiar with western music, whose tonal and harmonic structures were not earlier known. The American protestant church hymn service (unison singing accompanied by a reed organ) is believed to have been the model for Japanese modern music. A series of hymn melodies were chosen and given new Japanese texts (that is, to praise the Emperor, admire the splendor of nature, and so on). A new generation of Japanese composers like Rentaro Taki, Kousaku Yamada, and others seemed strongly influenced by Shoka and used the reed organ to compose and enrich the repertoire of "Shoka." Japanese language also met a turning point in style. Leading poets eagerly wrote the texts for the "Shoka" melodies. In this way, "Shoka" became one of the highest points of Japanese music repertoire in the first half of the twentieth century.  
  
American musical instrument historian Robert F Gellerman, in his 1973 volume The American Reed Organ, notes, "The George A. Prince Co. was the leading manufacturer of reed organs in the United States from the 1850s until the 1870s, and many of the pioneers in the reed organ industry worked for Prince in the early days."
+
After enjoying a golden age for more than 50 years, the reed organ’s popularity started to decline. Radio, television, and music recordings, which seldom used the reed organ, became the new way of becoming familiar with music. "Shoka" was soon considered out-of-date. Economical development created the market for both pianos and electronic organs, produced by the same manufactures who made the reed organs. Since Japanese homes were usually small in size, the reed organ was taken out to make way for the [[piano]], which did become the new status symbol. Reed organs soon disappeared from the schools as well. Yamaha, the last manufacture of this instrument in Japan, stopped production in 2001.  
  
Reed organ historian Horton Presley stated in a 1985 book Antique Reed Organs, "The fact remains that Carhart's efforts, and those of George A. Prince, began the big swing to reed organs throughout America."
+
==The United States==
 +
===The Centennial Organ===
 +
In 1876, America celebrated the first Centennial of the Declaration of Independence on July 4. To celebrate this momentous occasion, a grand international fair called the Centennial Exposition, was held at Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. Americans were able to display their new industrial might and technological achievements. Ten million visitors saw the telephone, typewriter, air brake, reaper, and internal combustion engine for the first time. Included in this exhibition was the highly popular American reed organ.  
  
The expanded Prince firm numbered in excess of 200 mostly skilled workers (including some 75 to 100 of the best cabinetmakers in the country). Prince's 1860 Illustrated Catalogue states "We are the pioneers and leading manufacturers of Melodeons in the world," a fact confirmed by the Express, and that "24,000 Prince melodeons had been delivered to the public since the firm's 1846 founding" (that meant around 6 to 7 organs per day on average!). Competitor Carhart & Needham & Co. of 97 East 23rd St, New York employed 80 workers in its peak years and had produced a total of 15,000 instruments when the firm closed in 1868.  
+
A part of this technological expansion was the Prince firm, which already had been in existence for 30 years. George A. Prince & Co. of Buffalo exhibited its latest model, the "New Centennial Style Organ," conceived and designed especially for introduction to the nation at the Centennial Exposition.  
  
The lore and legends of America's flourishing 19th century reed organ and melodeon industry live on today in museums, public and private collections, and a legion of reed organ enthusiasts.  
+
The Centennial Organ weighed a hefty 365 pounds and featured "eleven stops, with Ivory Plates and Ivory Fronts to Keys," including "full organ knee stop and orchestra swell." It was housed in a 5-foot-2-inch "elegant walnut case in extra oil finish," with ornaments tipped and striped in gold bronze, its overall design characterized by flat rectangular and triangular panels with marquetry, inlay, and shallow carving.  
  
Surely Carhart and Prince developed the pioneering design together and built the first prototype side by side in the same workshop. The rest has become musical history.
+
Claiming that the new organ was "vastly superior to any reed organ ever made," the catalog said the instrument "permitted close imitation of an entire orchestra. Sounds that could be simulated were of the clarinet, flute, saxophone, cornet, violin, bassoon, violoncello, etc., either singly in solo or in ensemble to produce the 'orchestra' effect."  
Chase Viele has published many articles on historical subjects, at both the local and national levels. He is a great-great-grandnephew of George A. Prince, founder of the Buffalo melodeon company bearing his name.
 
 
 
==The Centennial Organ==
 
 
 
The year 1876 was an auspicious one for George A. Prince & Co. It was the 30th anniversary of the firm's inception as a reed organ manufacturer. The year also was the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776.
 
To celebrate, a great world's fair, the Centennial Exposition, was held at Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. The immense display of arts, "manufactures" and agricultural products from 49 nations and 26 of the states revealed America's new industrial might and technological achievements. Ten million visitors saw the telephone, typewriter, air brake, reaper and internal combustion engine for the first time.
 
 
 
Cultural achievements of the nation's first century embraced all manner of new, innovative and distinctly American devices. Included was the highly popular American reed organ. George A. Prince & Co. of Buffalo exhibited its latest model, the "New Centennial Style Organ," conceived and designed specially for introduction to the nation at the Centennial Exposition.
 
 
 
The instrument was a far cry from the simple rosewood-veneered, four-octave, box-shaped spindle-legged Prince melodeon of 1847 (scale extending from key of C to key of C), pumped by a single pedal hung from a leather strap, featuring a single stop and having a total shipping weight of 60 pounds.
 
 
 
The Centennial Organ weighed a hefty 365 pounds and featured "eleven stops, with Ivory Plates and Ivory Fronts to Keys," including "full organ knee stop and orchestra swell." It was housed in a 5-foot-2-inch "elegant walnut case in extra oil finish," with ornaments tipped and striped in gold bronze, its overall design characterized by flat rectangular and triangular panels with marquetry, inlay and shallow carving.
 
 
 
Claiming that the new organ was "vastly superior to any reed organ ever made," the catalog said the instrument "permitted close imitation of an entire orchestra. Sounds could be simulated of the clarinet, flute, saxophone, cornet, violin, bassoon, violoncello, etc., either singly in solo or in ensemble to produce the `orchestra' effect."  
 
 
    
 
    
In effect, Prince had introduced the larger reed organ that became popular not only in the United States, but which eventually till the advent of the first World War also swept Europe and Japan. Many factories sprang up all over the United States, Europe and Japan, making large suction type reed organs. Two major companies in the United States, Estey and Mason & Hamlin also became dominant players in the field.
+
In retrospect, Prince had introduced the larger reed organ that became popular not only in the United States, but also swept Europe and Japan until the first World War. Many factories sprang up all over the United States, Europe and Japan, making large suction type reed organs. Two major companies in the United States, Estey and Mason & Hamlin, also became dominant players in the field.
  
==The Mason & Hamlin Story==
+
==Canada==
 +
The American organ was built in [[Canada]] as early as 1865, by R.S. Williams and soon afterwards by W. Bell, D.W. Karn, and many other companies. It had enlarged, vertical bellows and was encased in a solid desk-style cabinet with drawstops over the keyboard. Until the 1870s, it remained fairly simple in design and was less than four feet in height.
  
In 1854, Henry Mason and Emmons Hamlin founded the Mason & Hamlin Company in Boston, Massachusetts. Henry Mason came from a musical family. His father was the famous composer and educator Lowell Mason, a visionary who was the first to bring music into the public schools of America. As a publisher of hymns, he became known as the “father of American church music.” Emmons Hamlin was not a musician, but a brilliant mechanic and inventor. While working at the melodeon factory of George A. Price and Company in Buffalo, Hamlin invented a way to voice organ reeds, so that they could imitate the sound of a clarinet, violin or other musical instruments.
+
By the late 1870s, however, demand had grown and competition among manufacturers was increasingly sharp. In Ontario, companies such as Dominion (Bowmanville), Doherty (Clinton), and Thomas (Woodstock) entered into the production and assembling of reed organs. As a result, factories grew in size and number, though many were merely parts and assembly shops. While most were located in Ontario and in southern Quebec, a few could be found in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and in Victoria, British Columbia.
  
Thus, having developed his discovery to perfection, he and Henry Mason formed their own company for the purpose of manufacturing a new musical instrument they called the “organ harmonium.
+
Equipment became more sophisticated and later instruments were built with more complex actions and elaborate case designs. Gradually the methods of voicing the reeds became less individual. Many such instruments resembled High Victorian furniture rather than organ consoles.
  
The beginning combination of limited production and capital but great attention to detail paid off, and the first instruments proved to be very successful and the partners were well on their way to success. According to Arthur Loesser in Men,Women and Pianos, A Social History, the firms “soon became and remained the foremost in the field.
+
Less expensive, lighter, and requiring less maintenance than pianos, reed organs were at their most popular in the years 1870-1910, and public demand was increased by highly exaggerated newspaper advertisements. Most models were intended for home use, though some were found in auditoriums. As early as the 1870s, larger companies manufactured some two-manual models for church and orchestra use. In most instances these lacked foot pedals and required two operators - a player and someone to pump the handle located on one side of the instrument. Like single-manual reed organs, these had less individuality of sound than [[pianos]] or [[pipe organs]].
  
From the organ harmonium, the company graduated to the American Cabinet Organ, a product that would earn Mason & Hamlin 1st prize at the Paris Exhibition of 1867. The fact that a small American company won the top prize over its much larger, more established European competitors astounded the music world. The fact that they continued to win year after year was even more astounding. It wasn’t long before Mason & Hamlin had established a worldwide reputation for excellence.  
+
During the height of their popularity, thousands of reed organs were produced each year. Several manufacturers also built [[pianos]] and in this period reed organs and pianos often looked very much alike. Some of the larger companies established factories and agencies in England and Australia. The advent of other forms of music-making and entertainment (the player piano after 1901 and, later, the gramophone and radio) led to a decline in popularity, and by the 1930s even the larger builders had sold their businesses or switched to dealing exclusively in pianos and/or gramophones. Only Sherlock-Manning continued to build Doherty reed organs until the 1950s.
  
==The Estey Story==
+
Fortunately, many individual instruments have survived and may be found in private homes and in museums such as Black Creek Pioneer Village, Toronto; the Brome County Historical Society, Knowlton, Quebec; the Bruce County Historical Museum, Southampton, Ontario; the Fort Malden National Historic Park Museum, Amherstburg, Ontario; the Ontario Pioneer Community Foundation, Kitchener, Ontario; the Organery, a collection assembled by Jan van der Leest of Truro, NS; the Trent River Museum, Trent River, Ontario; the Western Development museums in Yorkton and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan; and the Glenbow-Alberta Institute, Calgary.
  
The Estey firm was founded in 1846 by Jacob Estey in Brattleboro, Vermont, and made reed organs from 1850 till 1955, and was the company that outlasted all the other American companied and made more organs than anyone else as well, as their factory grew to a large complex of more than 8 buildings. Around 500,000 reed organs were produced in total. Their reed organs were of good musical quality and many can still be found worldwide.
+
Among experts on reed organs in Canada in the 1980s, were William L. Keizer of Ottawa, Tim Classey of Toronto, and Jan van der Leest of Truro, NS.
  
While continuing to build reed organs, they also engaged the Roosevelt-trained Philadelphia pipe organ builder, William E. Haskell (1865-1927), to open a pipe organ department in 1901. During the next fifty-nine years, the company built and rebuilt 3261 pipe organs, and with one exception, all of the Estey instruments had tubular-pneumatic or electro-pneumatic action.  
+
==The United Kingdom==
 +
A flourishing industry of reed organ builders which were very similar to the above Canadian builders, sprang up in the [[United Kingdom]], and were exported to other commomwealth nations.  
  
 +
==Reed Organ Builders in Canada and the United Kingdom==
 +
Acadia Organ Co, Bridgetown, NS, fl 1878-82
  
==Development in Europe==
+
C.W. & F.M. Andrus (Andrews?), Picton, Ont, fl 1857
  
Based on the success of the Mason & Hamlin “organ harmonium” at the Parisian Exhibition, many European builders or reed organs, as well as totally new ones appearing on the scene, now also started to build the American type of suction reed organ, as it had become THE competitor to the wind pressurized harmonium. The Europeans did not adopt the American name “reed organ” but kept the simple name of “harmonium,” although in popular language some simple called the instrument an “organ.” 
+
Andrus Bros, London, Ont, ca 1859-74
  
 +
Annapolis Organs, Annapolis, NS, fl 1880
  
==The Netherlands==
+
John Bagnall &Co, Victoria, BC, 1863-85 (harmoniums by 1882)
  
In the Netherlands, where the singing of the Genevan Psalter had been ingrained into Protestant church culture since the 16th century, the instrument was widely embraced in the homes, and soon received the nickname” Psalmenpomp” or “Psalm Pump”, as the bellows of all harmoniums have to be operated by the pumping action of the feet. For this reason these organs were also called “trap orgels” the word “trap” meaning “step” or “tread”.
+
Bell Organ and Piano Co (name changes), Guelph, Ont, 1864-1928
  
One the great promoters of the harmonium in Holland was Johannes de Heer (1866-1961), who became a publisher of harmonium music and a dealer of the instruments (many imported from the United States). In a 1920 advertisement the firm promoted the Harmonium as a way for families to keep together and prevent youth from seeking worldly pleasures in the outside world. A home organ promotes Calvinism, Christian education and Christian family unity. It told people that was their earnest duty to acquire the means to apply the means available to them.
+
Daniel Bell Organ Co, Toronto, 1881-6
  
In the first half of the 20th century, thousands of harmoniums found their way into Dutch homes, chapels, Sunday school and catechisms school classrooms. Johannes de Heer published an English hymnal with Dutch texts, which became very popular next to the Genevan Psalter. The melodies were harmonized by Johannes Worp, organist of the Martinikerk of Groningen, who became extremely popular ion Calvinist circles for his harmonizations of Psalms and Hymns. Many sheet music books were published, both of arranged secular and religious music.
+
Berlin Organ Co, Berlin (Kitchener), Ont, fl 1880
  
Holland did have its own harmonium builders: Steinmann & Vierdaags in Enschede, and J. Van der Tak of Rotterdam. The latter firm revealed to the public in 1896 that they finished their 10,000th harmonium. This firm was started in 1859, and thus had been producing organs at a rate of around 1 per day. In 1884, they started to make American type suction organs under the name of American Organ Co.
+
G. Blatchford Organ Co, Galt, Ont, fl 1895; Elora, Ont, fl 1896
  
 +
Abner Brown, Montreal, fl 1848-74
  
NOTE: THESE SECTIONS ARE STILL TO BE WRITTEN! ! !
+
Canada Organ Co, London, Ont, ca 1865-?
  
 +
Canada Organ Co, Toronto, 1875
  
==France==
+
Chute, Hall & Co, Yarmouth, NS, 1883-94
  
==Germany==
+
Compensating Pipe Organ Co, Toronto, fl 1900-10
  
 +
Cornwall, Huntingdon, Que, before 1889-95 (see Pratte)
  
==England==
+
Cowley (or Conley?) Church Organ Co, Madoc, Ont, fl 1890
  
 +
Dales & Dalton, Newmarket, Ont, fl 1870
  
==Official Instrument for Japanese Elementary Schools==
+
R.H. Dalton, Toronto, 1869-82?
  
According to the Reed Organ Club Japan, founded in August 1996, the history of the reed organ in Japan goes back to the 1860s when some reed organs were being introduced by Christian missionaries for use in services. The Yamaha piano builder was one of the pioneers in Japan to build reed organs. The Elementary school education system in Japan was started in 1872. The government of modern Japan chose the reed organ as the official instrument to accompany singing during the obligatory music classes. Other builders followed after Yamaha, such as Nishikawa and Kawai.
+
Darley and Robinson (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)
  
The reed organ also became the leading spirit of Japanese modern music called Shoka (Japanese <Lied>) prepared for music education in elementary schools. Both pupils and teachers had to become familiar with western music, whose harmonic structures were not known before. The American protestant church hymn service (unison singing accompanied by a reed organ) is believed to have been the model of Japanese modern music. A series of hymn melodies were chosen and given new Japanese texts (to praise the Emperor, admire the splendor of nature, etc.).  A new generation of Japanese composers like Rentaro Taki, Kousaku Yamada, and other seemed strongly influenced by Shoka and used the reed organ to compose and enrich the repertoire of Shoka. Japanese language also met a turning point in style. Leading poets eagerly wrote the texts for the Shoka melodies. In this way, Shoka became one of the highest points of Japanese music repertoire in the first half of the 20th century.
+
W. Doherty & Co, Clinton, Ont, 1875-1920 (later owned by Sherlock-Manning Co)
  
After enjoying a golden age for more than 50 years, the reed organ’s popularity started to decline. Radio, television and music records became the new way of becoming familiar with music. Shoka was soon considered as out-of-date.  Economical development created the market for pianos and electronic organs both, produced by the same manufactures who made the reed organs. As Japanese homes were small, the reed organ was taken out to make way for the piano, which did become the new status symbol. It soon disappeared from the schools as well. Yamaha, the last manufacture of this instrument in Japan, stopped production in 2001.
+
Dominion Organ and Piano Co, Bowmanville, Ont, 1873-ca 1935
  
==Harmonium Teaching Methods==
+
Eben-Ezer Organ Co, Clifford, Ont, 1935
Builders and educators worked together in the development of teaching methods. Many fundamental reed organ stops, such as Melodia and Diapason, found on American type organ were given numbers on their stop labels, and these numbers appeared in musical compositions, so that beginner players knew what the composer or arranger (lots of orchestral and oratorio music was actually arranged for the reed organ) had in mind.
 
  
==Many Composers took the Harmonium seriously==
+
Gates Organ and Piano Co, ca 1872-82 Malvern Square, NS; 1882-after 1885 Truro, NS
  
Although lots of music was arranged for the reed organ, such as transcriptions of organ works, oratorios, popular music, etc., several composers wrote serious music for the harmonium/reed organ, which is till being played on pipe organs by organist today.
+
Goderich Organ Co, Goderich, Ont, fl 1890-1910
  
He follows an short list of the most pot important composers who have written for the harmonium, either in solo usage or in combination with other instruments (*): orchestras: directly Among them are: Jehan Alain, Cesar Franck, Sigfrid Karg-Elert (see below), *Gustav Mahler, *Antonin Dvorak, Alexandre Guilmant, Theodore Dubois, Léon Boëllman, Franz Liszt, *Max Reger, Charles-Marie Widor, *Camille Saint-Saens, *Gioacchino Rossini, Johannes Worp, Louis Vierne, *Richard Strauss, *Arnold Schonberg, *Dmitri Shostakovich, Percy Grainger, *Georges Bizet, Alexandre Dumont, Cor Kee, Louis J. A. Lefébure-Wely, Nicolas-Jacques Lemmens, Alphonse Mailly, *Johann Strauss, and Samuel Wesley.
+
A.S. Hardy & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1874
  
==Sigfrid Karg-Elert
+
John Jackson and Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1872-3, 1880-3?
  
Although a prolific composer for the pipe organ, the German organist-composer, Sigfrid Karg-Elert (1877-1933), is probably the most prolific writer for the reed organ, and wrote twenty-seven known opus works. Karg-Elert also compiled instructional manuals and registration rules for the harmonium, such as Das Harmonium und die Hausmusik (1906), and Die Kunst des Registrierens fur Harmonium (1911-14), on how to use the stops.
+
D.W. Karn Co, Woodstock, Ont, ca 1867-1924
 
Karg-Elert was a great proponent of the so-called and popular Kunstharmonium (Art-Harmonium) developed by the French company Mustel in the last decades of the 19th century, and this insutrment had better musiucal capabilities than its American counterpart. Karg-Elert admired this instrument so much, since its complexity of manufacture offered him a highly variable tone-color palette with considerable means of mechanical expression. At the start of the 20th century, he therefore wrote many compositions for the instrument from short to full-scale Sonatas. His publisher, Simon of Berlin, who possessed a Kunstharmonium encouraged him in this effort. To help promote the Mustel Kunstharmonium, Karg-Elert was often invited to give concert tours, both at home and abroad. His music became popular in England, the United States (where he gave concerts), and Australia. While largely forgotten after is death in 1933, at the end of the 19th and start of the 20th century, his music is enjoying renewed interest.
 
  
 +
J. & R. Kilgour, Hamilton, Ont, ca 1872-88 as dealers, 1888-99 as piano and organ company
  
==The Indian Harmonium==
+
McLeod, Wood & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1869-72; later R. McLeod & Co, London, Ont, fl 1874-5
  
The first Indian harmonium was apparently built by Dwarkin, who established a workshop in 1875.
+
Malhoit & Co, Simcoe, Ont, fl 1875
The most widely-known and used free-reed aerophone in India is the harmonium and have been imported from the West. No foreign instrument, however, has caused such a commotion as the harmonium and none is used so extensively, be it in classical, light, film or folk music. It is probably the most commonly used instrument in northern India.
 
The harmonium was brought to India either by Western traders or by religious missionaries and musicians in the late nineteenth century. Most probably it was first introduced to Indian music in Calcutta, and from there it spread all over the country. In India today, the harmonium finds a place in music of all kinds, whether it is folk, light, semi-classical or even highly-reputed classical music.
 
  
The Indian harmonium is not the heavy and big pedal instrument of Europe, but has been reduced to a small portable box, which is approximately two feet by one foot and about nine to ten inches high, the back of which opens to act as the bellows. On the top is a keyboard like that of a piano, but with a much smaller range, usually of about three octaves. This is played by one hand, while the other works the bellows. It consists of a set of free reeds, whose length determines their pitch, activated by a wind supply from hand-operated compression bellows and controlled by a keyboard. The reed is responsible for the tone and pitch, whereas the air bellows, with all its attached valvular mechanisms, produce and control the passing air, and are responsible for the volume of the instrument. The reeds, one for each note, are fixed at one end and are kept free at the other. When the bellows are compressed, the air passes under the reed vibrating it, thus producing the desired pitch. However, the whole process is controlled by a keyboard that makes it a very simple and hassle-free instrument.
+
Charles Mee, Kingston, Ont, fl 1870
  
The harmonium is a keyboard instrument on which twelve semitones of the tempered scale are fixed once and for all in all the three octaves: mandra, madhya and tara. On keyboard instruments only straight notes can be played, grace notes and quarter-tones not being possible. There is no possibility of a slur, meend, or gamaka being played on the harmonium, which are the main essence of Hindustani music, and are essential to keep up the spirit of Hindustani ragadari system. However, it is possible to maintain the continuity of the music to some extent by a skilful handling of the bellows and finger pressure on the keys, but it cannot compete with the continuity of the human voice or the sarangi's sound.
+
John M. Miller (later Miller & Karn and D.W. Karn), Woodstock, Ont, fl 1867
  
Although roughly the Indian scale of music of twelve semitones is nearly the same as that in Western music, there are certain vital and perceptible differences between the two. The Indian concept of swara does not relate it to a specific pitch point, but to a pitch-range with variegated possibilities of shades and nuances. No keyboard instrument can respond to this concept of swara.
+
Mudge & Yarwood Manufacturing Co, Whitby, Ont, 1873-?
  
For these reasons, the harmonium was banned in music broadcasts over the National network from 1 March 1940. Some purists like Ameer Khan, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Begum Akhtar, etc., went on to even favor the harmonium as an accompaniment as against the sarangi, because they found its notes were unsagging and constant. Its uncanny popularity, therefore, led AIR to seriously review the question of its use in broadcasts of classical and light music, and ultimately in October 1970, after an exile of over three decades, AIR had to issue a directive partially removing the ban on the harmonium in the broadcasts of classical and light classical music on the national network. Though the harmonium is not in vogue in the Carnatic music system today, its current version is capable of providing a whole range of tonal excellence very rare in other instruments. A top quality harmonium has two, three and even four sets of reeds. The instrument covers three to four octaves, encompassing sub-bass, bass, medium and female. The instrument is larger and has built-in gadgets to filter the air through two compartments. The merit of this arrangement is that when the air is blown into it, it does not strike the reeds aggressively. From the airtight compartments the wind emerges softly through the reeds when a key is pressed. In the olden days the instrument was equipped with only a single piece reed board. This made the sound it produced strident and harsh. Present-day harmoniums have three reed boards joined together with the provision for air-release in a zigzag fashion, ensuring softness of tone and melody.
+
New Dominion Organ Co, Saint John, NB, fl 1875
  
==Waning of popularity==
+
William Norris, North York, Ont, fl 1867
  
Although the harmonium was a popular instrument in the late-nineteenth and early twentieth century, changes in musical taste led to its gradual decline early in the 1900's, and a more rapid decline after World War II.
+
Ontario Organ Co, Toronto, 1884
  
According to Alfred Berner in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, this decline “was due to a change in musical taste. Music in the home as well as musical education in general turned increasingly away from the musical style of the 19th century.” The Organ Reform Movement, which affected the way pipe organs in churches were built and which heralded a return to the classical building techniques and stylistic approaches, mainly focused on the Baroque era (and therefore called the Neo-baroque style) undoubtedly contributed to the demise of high romantic music in favor of earlier and more polyphonic. Berne explains: “The harmonium and everything connected with it fell under the heading of 'kitsch.' Even in light music it was ousted by its more wieldy cousin, the accordion.” Also, the advent of the first electronic organs, which were easier to play (no pumping involved) as well the piano in more affluent homes, replaced the harmonium. Only in conservative religious circles was it able to survive somewhat into the 1970s.
+
Oshawa Organ and Melodeon Manufacturing Co, 1871-3 (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)
  
Ironically, just when the harmonium had reached its peak technically and musically, it suddenly found itself obsolete due to changing tastes and new competing electronic technologies
+
Pratte, Montreal, 1889-1926 (harmoniums built ca 1912)
  
By the 1950s, reed organ manufacture had stopped in Europe and the United States (but continued in Japan until 2001), also due to improvements in people’s economic fortunes, and changing tastes, the reeds organs were replaced by electronic organs, as well as by the more expensive pianos among the more affluent.
+
Rappe & Co, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1887
  
==Current Revival==
+
J. Reyner, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1885
  
Many harmoniums were destroyed, or lay rotting in garages, sheds, warehouses and attics. Yet, many have survived, including the larger ones with 2 manuals and pedal keyboard. Around the turn of the 20th century there has been a sudden revival of interest. People came to realize that only were these marvelous pieces of furniture (which remains its saving grace in many homes where they are placed as a conversation piece, but not played upon), and that their musical features warranted further attention. The fanatic Organ Reform Movement, following by a flourishing Early Music Movement, which unjustly beguiled romantic music, in the late 1900s had been replaced by a more inclusive and embracing way of thinking, also because the vast heritage of 19th century church organs now begged for preservation, restoration and musical attention, which has given rise to a growing interest in romantic music, which in turn helped people turn back to the harmonium as well.
+
Sherlock-Manning Organ Co, London, Ont, later Clinton, Ont, 1902-78 (reed organs built 1902-1950s)
  
Not only have many harmonium museums been established in Europe and the United States, but e.g. in the Netherlands, and other European nations, harmonium concerts are becoming more and more common and professional restaurateurs make a living in bringing dilapidated instruments back to life.
+
J. Slown, Owen Sound, Ont, fl 1871-89
  
A growing number of composers have written new music for the instrument, and even pop music bands include them in their concerts. Radio and TV broadcasts are not uncommon. CDs are being produced. The rise of harmonium clubs around the world (Europe, USA, and Japan) is on the rise.
+
David W. & Cornelius D. Smith, Brome, Que, 1875-?
  
In this way the reed organ gets the attention it deserves: an instrument with its own character and music.
+
Smith & Scribner, Chatham, Ont, fl 1864-5
  
 +
Frank Stevenson, North York, Ont, fl 1867
  
==Reed organ Clubs==
+
Edward G. Thomas Organ Co, Woodstock, Ont, 1875-?
  
TO BE WRITTEN (will be quite short)
+
James Thornton & Co, Hamilton, Ont, fl 1871-89
  
 +
Toronto Organ Co, Toronto, 1880
  
==Bibibliogarphy==
+
William Townsend, Toronto, fl late 1840s, Hamilton 1853-5
  
Christian Ahrens, Das Harmonium, 1996.
+
Uxbridge Organ Co, Uxbridge, Ont, fl 1872-1909
  
R.F. Gellermann, The American Reed Organ and the Harmonium, 1997.
+
S.R. Warren and Son, Toronto, fl 1878-ca 1910
  
R.F. Gellermann, The International Reed Organ Atlas, 1998.
+
Elijah West, West Farnham, Que, fl 1860-75
  
Christian Ahrens en Jonas Braasch, “Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein: de uitvinder van de orgelregisters met doorslaande tongen.” Het ORGEL 99 (2003), nr. 4, pp. 32-37.
+
Thomas W. White & Co, Hamilton, Ont, 1863-after 1869
  
 +
R.S. Williams &Sons, Toronto, ca1854-ca 1952 (reed organs built in 19th century only)
  
 +
Wilson & Co, Sherbrooke, Que
  
==Websites==
+
Wood, Powell & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1883-4
  
http://www.karg-elert-archive.org.uk/
+
Woodstock Organ Factory, Woodstock, Ont, fl 1876 (see D.W. Karn)
  
http://www.harmoniumvereniging.nl/
+
Author Tim Classey, Helmut Kallmann
  
http://www.harmonium-museum.nl/
+
==References==
 +
*Ahrens, Christian. ''Das Harmonium.'' Frankfurt: E. Bochinsky, 1996. ISBN 3-923-63905-8.
 +
*Ahrens, Christian, and Jonas Braasch. ''Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein: de uitvinder van de orgelregisters met doorslaande tongen.'' München: Katzbichler, 2003. ISBN 3-873-97582-3.
 +
*Gellermann, R.F. ''The American Reed Organ and the Harmonium.'' 1997.
 +
*Gellermann, R.F. ''The International Reed Organ Atlas.'' 1998.
  
http://www.d1.dion.ne.jp/%7Eorgan/
+
==External links==
 +
All links retrieved December 7, 2022.
  
http://gdo.de/harmonium/
+
*[http://www.harmoniumvereniging.nl/ Harmoniumvereniging Nederland]
 +
*[http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/main.html The Classical Free-Reed, Inc.]
  
http://home.epix.net/%7Ecshannon/
 
  
http://www.india-instruments.de/pages/glossar/g-harmonium.html#anfang
+
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
+
[[category:music]]
http://wnyheritagepress.org/features/melodeon.html
+
[[Category:musical instruments]]
 
 
http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/reviews/aboutr.html
 
 
 
http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/reviews.html
 
 
 
http://www.ksanti.net/free-reed/main.html
 
 
 
Back to Western New York Heritage Press Home
 
 
 
http://www.reedorganclub.jp/roc/e/mainframe.e.htm
 
 
 
http://www5.ocn.ne.jp/~one-well/organ05.htm
 
  
http://chandrakantha.com/articles/indian_music/harmonium.html
 
  
http://www.bridgewater.edu/philo/philo96/knupp.html
+
{{credit2|Reed_organ|82399130|Free_reed|116171401}}
 
 
http://www.harmoniummuseum.ch/harmoniummuseum/harmoniummuseum1.htm
 
 
 
http://www.reedsoc.org/Publications/publications.htm
 
 
 
http://www.karg-elert-archive.org.uk/page2.html
 
 
 
http://pipedreams.publicradio.org/listings/0408/
 
 
 
[[User:Adri de Groot|Adri de Groot]] 01:32, 25 November 2005 (UTC)
 
 
 
 
 
[[Category:Art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 

Latest revision as of 03:00, 8 December 2022

A reed orgoan, known as a Kleines Harmonium

The reed organ is a keyboard instrument that operates via bellows that blow wind past free-floating reeds. A free floating reed doesn’t change pitch by increasing or decreasing the wind pressure and is, therefore, ideal to express dynamics by the pumping/pedaling action of the feet. The faster a player pumps, the louder the reed organ gets, and vice versa. It is also known by the names of harmonium, pump organ, parlor organ, melodeon, seraphine, lap organ, psalmenpomp, Physharmonica, Zungenorgel, Cottage Organ, House Organ, Æoline, Æelodicon, Aérophone, Mélophone, Mélodion, Organino, and others.

Technical details

Most pressure wind type reed organs were built in Europe, although the American builder Aeolian made many Vocalion models with two manuals and an independent pedal with its own keyboard. Suction type organs were mainly built in the United States, but European makers later followed as well. Since they were less expensive to build, lighter than pianos, and didn’t need tuning, many found their way well outside Europe and North America. They were also popular in homes and businesses since these were instruments that reminded people of church organs or keyboard instruments in popular singing groups.

Reed organs, or American organs, as they are called in the United States, became very popular, and many factories sprung up in the second half of the nineteenth century when these instruments were mass-produced.

Original invention by Kratzenstein for scientific research

The free floating reed was developed in 1778, by Christian-Gottlieb Kratzenstein (1723-1795) as part of a plan to construct a human speech machine that could mimic the vowels of human speech for scientific research. Kratzenstein, thus, sent a small two-octave reed instrument to the Academy of Science in St. Petersburg. He may have worked together with organ builder Franz Kirschnick and his assistant, Georg Christoffer Rackwitz. Kirschnick then decided independently to use these kinds of reeds in his instruments, such as the pianoforte/organ combinations (called claviorganum), and possibly in an instrument called the "orchestrion," an automatic player or barrel type organ, around 1781. This was the first time that free floating reeds were employed as a new kind of organ stop. As far as is known, it was not applied to any classic pipe or church organ. Soon, builders in St. Petersburg, like Johann Gabrahn, started to make "claviorganums." The news of this new type of instrument quickly spread to Germany, where, possibly among others, Strohmann and Abbe Vogler further developed these types of instruments.

Early developments

The tremendous dynamic range of the reeds with windpressure, from very soft and nearly inaudible (a feature not possible with classic pipe organ reeds) to quite loud, mimicked the dynamic range of the then still new pianoforte as an organ. This type of dynamic was exactly what performers and composers were looking for, and the music of Beethoven and Berlioz testify to the new kind of massive dynamic range approaches that were becoming very popular.

In 1810, Gabriel Joseph Grenié of Paris applied for a patent for his “orgue expressif” and was thus the first to introduce the reed organ in his country. Apparently, he had seen an instrument built by Kratzenstein 30 years earlier at a friend’s house, around 1770, which led to his own application of the operating principle. This may have been the one Kratzenstein sent to the Academy in St. Petersburg, which was consequently sent to someone in France. Another countryman, Sébastian Érard, also experimented with free reeds. In 1814, Eschenbach of Königshoven in Bavaria invented a keyboard with vibrators, called the "Oragno-Violine." In 1816, Schlimbach of Ohrdurf improved it and called it the "AEoline." A continuous wind instrument was made by Voit of Schweinfurt in 1817, and he named it the "AEolodicon." In 1818, Anton Häckel of Vienna, built a diminutive AEoline used co-jointly with a pianoforte, and called it the "Physharmonica," which apparently caused quite a stir. Professor Payer took this bellows-harmonica with him to Paris in 1823, and several imitations of it were made, such as the "Aerophone" by Christian Dietz, in 1829. In 1836, Fourneaux may have made a 16 foot or octave deep register, and in 1837, an instrument was created which was called a "Melophone." Many builders started to make similar instruments, adding their own improvements and inventions to them, and called them by a large variety of names, such as Aeolidon (which had bent tongues), Adelphone, Adiaphonon, Harmonikon, Harmonine, Melodium, Aeolian, Panorgue, Poikolorgue, Seraphine (in the UK, it was called a keyboard harmonica, but not a harmonium, as it didn’t have channels for the tongues/reeds).

In 1832, Aristide Cavaille-Coll, who later became a world famous pipe organ builder, decided to live for awhile in Toulouse to study mathematics. When Rossini came to this city to present the opera "Robert le Diable," Aristide got an extraordinary chance to demonstrate and explain his recent invention to this famous musician. This instrument, named "Poikilorgue" (varying organ), was a variation of the harmonium which produced an effect of "expression" (crescendo, decrescendo, and so on) with a single set of free floating reeds and a single set of bellows driven by a foot pedal. It had another foot pedal which did not drive the bellows but compressed and regulated the reservoir of air which was connected to them. Surprised with the intelligence and imagination of the young Aristide, Rossini suggested strongly that he go to Paris, the capital of France and a stronghold for new music. Rossini was kind enough to write some letters of introduction to the eminent persons in the capital, and Aristide got started for Paris in 1833, with his elder brother Vincent and his father Dominique. Without the help of Rossini, Aristide Cavaille-Coll may not have become as famous as he eventually did.

Around 1837, in England, Kirkman & White of London started to build small pressure-winded predecessors of the harmonium, and called it a Seraphine. One surviving sample has a single set of reeds within a mahogany case. One of its two pedals supplies the air pressure while the second operates a muting device. Its reeds generate sounds rather slowly and its wind system is difficult to operate smoothly.

Alexandre, who would also become a major builder in France, invented a major improvement in the dynamic range of the instrument, called the "expression."

Builders all over Europe invented many types of methods to make improvements to his basic concept of the harmonium.

In the United States around this time saw the beginnings of reed organs, as several builders in the New England region started to make small lap organs with free-floating reeds, which operated on wind pressure as well.

Application in pipe organs

Kavela Church reed organ in Kaleva, Tampere, Finland.

Although the application of these type of reeds were guaranteed in the manufacture of the American reed organs, both of wind pressure and wind suction types, they were also employed by church organ builders in Germany, especially in the period from 1860-1890. Examples of European builders were Walker, Ladegast en Steinmeier who employed them, Mutin and Merklin after Cavaille-Coll in France, Swiss builders like Rinckenbach, Stiehr and Callinet in the Elzas (their 16 foot pedal stops, called "Ophicleide" instead of "Posaune"), Belge builders such as Schijven and Loret who made the reed organ so popular in Belgium, and the Van Dam firm, F.C. Smits, Van Oekelen, and Kam in the Netherlands. These instruments fell into disfavor at the Advent of the Organ Reform Movement and the Neo-Baroque movement that followed it, but have become popular again since the late twentieth century. In all these cases, the construction was like the typical organ reed: A shallot, a resonator box, and a resonator shallot.

Some organs (known examples exist in Germany, Holland and Switzerland) also have harmonium stops whereby the construction is just as in a harmonium and work with wind pressure. They have no resonator boxes nor shallots.

Other applications

Early free floating reed instruments did not always have a keyboard, but buttons to activate certain pitches. They were small, and this consequently led to the invention of a portable instrument with multiple fold bellows and reeds which would enable the development of sounds when the air was rushing in or out. This led to the development of the modern accordion which also became extremely popular worldwide and still flourishes today. Accordions have either keyboards or pushbuttons, and are still constructed today around the world as a form of light entertainment and in classical performance. The accordion is most often associated with the polka, but there are many more musical forms that are popular.

Free reeds

The following illustrations depict the type of reed typical of harmonicas, accordions and reed organs as it goes through a cycle of vibration. One side of the reed frame is omitted from the images for clarity; in actuality, the frame surrounds the reed on four sides.

Palheta repouso.png
A reed is fixed by one end in a close-fitting frame.
Palheta vibra1.png
Air pressure is applied; the reed prevents air flow, except for a small, high velocity flow at the tip.
Palheta vibra2.png
The reed is drawn through the opening, allowing the air to pass.
Palheta vibra3.png
The elasticity of the reed forces it back through the frame.

Each time the reed passes through the frame, it interrupts air flow. These rapid, periodic interruptions of the air flow initiate the audible vibrations perceived by the listener.

In a free-reed instrument, it is the physical characteristics of the reed itself, such as mass, length, cross-sectional area and stiffness, that primarily determine the pitch (frequency) of the musical note produced. Of secondary importance to the pitch are the physical dimensions of the chamber in which the reed is fitted, and of the air flow.

Why reed organs became very popular

Towards the end of the eighteenth century, with the advent of the pianoforte (the name of this piano already expresses its dynamic range, from soft to loud), as well as the symphonies written in the Rococo and Classical Period, the need for instant dynamic range in an instrument grew tremendously. This created one of the reasons why the harpsichord soon fell into disfavor. Never before had an organ in the home been affordable, let alone one with a dynamic range. Thus there existed in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, many small pipe organs in many affluent homes. Yet, even to the affluent, these were expensive, heavy, not maintenance-free, and they took up a lot of space.

The reed organ also was a favorite over a piano for small churches which could not afford a pipe organ. In the nineteenth century in the United States, many small churches were built and the reed organ was favored, especially with congregational singing.

In addition, it was preferred for home music-making alongside the piano and in much later times in the cinema and movie theaters as a means of musical interludes and interpretation prior to sound films.

The Estey story

The Estey firm was founded in 1846, by Jacob Estey in Brattleboro, Vermont. This firm made reed organs from 1850 till 1955, and was the company that outlasted all other American companies and made more organs than anyone else. Their factory grew to a large complex of more than 8 buildings. Around 500,000 reed organs were produced in total. The instruments ranged from small portable field organs which were popular with chaplains in wars (used until the Korean War) to large 2-manual and pedal reed organs, which had to be pumped by an assistant, for use in small churches, chapels and larger homes. Estey's reed organs were of sound musical and construction quality and many can still be found worldwide.

While continuing to build reed organs, they also engaged the Roosevelt-trained Philadelphia pipe organ builder, William E. Haskell (1865-1927), to open a pipe organ department in 1901. During the next fifty-nine years, the company built and rebuilt 3261 pipe organs, and with one exception, all of the Estey instruments had tubular-pneumatic or electro-pneumatic action. Many of these organs found their way into large estate homes.

Official instrument for the new Japanese elementary public schools

According to the Reed Organ Club Japan, founded in August 1996, the history of the reed organ in Japan goes back to the 1860s, when reed organs were being introduced by Christian missionaries for use in church services. The Yamaha piano builder was one of the pioneers in Japan to build reed organs. The elementary school education system in Japan was started in 1872. Later, the government of modern Japan chose the reed organ as the official instrument to accompany singing during the obligatory music classes. Other builders followed after Yamaha, such as Nishikawa and Kawai.

The reed organ also became the leading spirit of Japanese modern music called "Shoka" and prepared for music education in elementary schools. Both pupils and teachers had to become familiar with western music, whose tonal and harmonic structures were not earlier known. The American protestant church hymn service (unison singing accompanied by a reed organ) is believed to have been the model for Japanese modern music. A series of hymn melodies were chosen and given new Japanese texts (that is, to praise the Emperor, admire the splendor of nature, and so on). A new generation of Japanese composers like Rentaro Taki, Kousaku Yamada, and others seemed strongly influenced by Shoka and used the reed organ to compose and enrich the repertoire of "Shoka." Japanese language also met a turning point in style. Leading poets eagerly wrote the texts for the "Shoka" melodies. In this way, "Shoka" became one of the highest points of Japanese music repertoire in the first half of the twentieth century.

After enjoying a golden age for more than 50 years, the reed organ’s popularity started to decline. Radio, television, and music recordings, which seldom used the reed organ, became the new way of becoming familiar with music. "Shoka" was soon considered out-of-date. Economical development created the market for both pianos and electronic organs, produced by the same manufactures who made the reed organs. Since Japanese homes were usually small in size, the reed organ was taken out to make way for the piano, which did become the new status symbol. Reed organs soon disappeared from the schools as well. Yamaha, the last manufacture of this instrument in Japan, stopped production in 2001.

The United States

The Centennial Organ

In 1876, America celebrated the first Centennial of the Declaration of Independence on July 4. To celebrate this momentous occasion, a grand international fair called the Centennial Exposition, was held at Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. Americans were able to display their new industrial might and technological achievements. Ten million visitors saw the telephone, typewriter, air brake, reaper, and internal combustion engine for the first time. Included in this exhibition was the highly popular American reed organ.

A part of this technological expansion was the Prince firm, which already had been in existence for 30 years. George A. Prince & Co. of Buffalo exhibited its latest model, the "New Centennial Style Organ," conceived and designed especially for introduction to the nation at the Centennial Exposition.

The Centennial Organ weighed a hefty 365 pounds and featured "eleven stops, with Ivory Plates and Ivory Fronts to Keys," including "full organ knee stop and orchestra swell." It was housed in a 5-foot-2-inch "elegant walnut case in extra oil finish," with ornaments tipped and striped in gold bronze, its overall design characterized by flat rectangular and triangular panels with marquetry, inlay, and shallow carving.

Claiming that the new organ was "vastly superior to any reed organ ever made," the catalog said the instrument "permitted close imitation of an entire orchestra. Sounds that could be simulated were of the clarinet, flute, saxophone, cornet, violin, bassoon, violoncello, etc., either singly in solo or in ensemble to produce the 'orchestra' effect."

In retrospect, Prince had introduced the larger reed organ that became popular not only in the United States, but also swept Europe and Japan until the first World War. Many factories sprang up all over the United States, Europe and Japan, making large suction type reed organs. Two major companies in the United States, Estey and Mason & Hamlin, also became dominant players in the field.

Canada

The American organ was built in Canada as early as 1865, by R.S. Williams and soon afterwards by W. Bell, D.W. Karn, and many other companies. It had enlarged, vertical bellows and was encased in a solid desk-style cabinet with drawstops over the keyboard. Until the 1870s, it remained fairly simple in design and was less than four feet in height.

By the late 1870s, however, demand had grown and competition among manufacturers was increasingly sharp. In Ontario, companies such as Dominion (Bowmanville), Doherty (Clinton), and Thomas (Woodstock) entered into the production and assembling of reed organs. As a result, factories grew in size and number, though many were merely parts and assembly shops. While most were located in Ontario and in southern Quebec, a few could be found in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and in Victoria, British Columbia.

Equipment became more sophisticated and later instruments were built with more complex actions and elaborate case designs. Gradually the methods of voicing the reeds became less individual. Many such instruments resembled High Victorian furniture rather than organ consoles.

Less expensive, lighter, and requiring less maintenance than pianos, reed organs were at their most popular in the years 1870-1910, and public demand was increased by highly exaggerated newspaper advertisements. Most models were intended for home use, though some were found in auditoriums. As early as the 1870s, larger companies manufactured some two-manual models for church and orchestra use. In most instances these lacked foot pedals and required two operators - a player and someone to pump the handle located on one side of the instrument. Like single-manual reed organs, these had less individuality of sound than pianos or pipe organs.

During the height of their popularity, thousands of reed organs were produced each year. Several manufacturers also built pianos and in this period reed organs and pianos often looked very much alike. Some of the larger companies established factories and agencies in England and Australia. The advent of other forms of music-making and entertainment (the player piano after 1901 and, later, the gramophone and radio) led to a decline in popularity, and by the 1930s even the larger builders had sold their businesses or switched to dealing exclusively in pianos and/or gramophones. Only Sherlock-Manning continued to build Doherty reed organs until the 1950s.

Fortunately, many individual instruments have survived and may be found in private homes and in museums such as Black Creek Pioneer Village, Toronto; the Brome County Historical Society, Knowlton, Quebec; the Bruce County Historical Museum, Southampton, Ontario; the Fort Malden National Historic Park Museum, Amherstburg, Ontario; the Ontario Pioneer Community Foundation, Kitchener, Ontario; the Organery, a collection assembled by Jan van der Leest of Truro, NS; the Trent River Museum, Trent River, Ontario; the Western Development museums in Yorkton and Saskatoon, Saskatchewan; and the Glenbow-Alberta Institute, Calgary.

Among experts on reed organs in Canada in the 1980s, were William L. Keizer of Ottawa, Tim Classey of Toronto, and Jan van der Leest of Truro, NS.

The United Kingdom

A flourishing industry of reed organ builders which were very similar to the above Canadian builders, sprang up in the United Kingdom, and were exported to other commomwealth nations.

Reed Organ Builders in Canada and the United Kingdom

Acadia Organ Co, Bridgetown, NS, fl 1878-82

C.W. & F.M. Andrus (Andrews?), Picton, Ont, fl 1857

Andrus Bros, London, Ont, ca 1859-74

Annapolis Organs, Annapolis, NS, fl 1880

John Bagnall &Co, Victoria, BC, 1863-85 (harmoniums by 1882)

Bell Organ and Piano Co (name changes), Guelph, Ont, 1864-1928

Daniel Bell Organ Co, Toronto, 1881-6

Berlin Organ Co, Berlin (Kitchener), Ont, fl 1880

G. Blatchford Organ Co, Galt, Ont, fl 1895; Elora, Ont, fl 1896

Abner Brown, Montreal, fl 1848-74

Canada Organ Co, London, Ont, ca 1865-?

Canada Organ Co, Toronto, 1875

Chute, Hall & Co, Yarmouth, NS, 1883-94

Compensating Pipe Organ Co, Toronto, fl 1900-10

Cornwall, Huntingdon, Que, before 1889-95 (see Pratte)

Cowley (or Conley?) Church Organ Co, Madoc, Ont, fl 1890

Dales & Dalton, Newmarket, Ont, fl 1870

R.H. Dalton, Toronto, 1869-82?

Darley and Robinson (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)

W. Doherty & Co, Clinton, Ont, 1875-1920 (later owned by Sherlock-Manning Co)

Dominion Organ and Piano Co, Bowmanville, Ont, 1873-ca 1935

Eben-Ezer Organ Co, Clifford, Ont, 1935

Gates Organ and Piano Co, ca 1872-82 Malvern Square, NS; 1882-after 1885 Truro, NS

Goderich Organ Co, Goderich, Ont, fl 1890-1910

A.S. Hardy & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1874

John Jackson and Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1872-3, 1880-3?

D.W. Karn Co, Woodstock, Ont, ca 1867-1924

J. & R. Kilgour, Hamilton, Ont, ca 1872-88 as dealers, 1888-99 as piano and organ company

McLeod, Wood & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1869-72; later R. McLeod & Co, London, Ont, fl 1874-5

Malhoit & Co, Simcoe, Ont, fl 1875

Charles Mee, Kingston, Ont, fl 1870

John M. Miller (later Miller & Karn and D.W. Karn), Woodstock, Ont, fl 1867

Mudge & Yarwood Manufacturing Co, Whitby, Ont, 1873-?

New Dominion Organ Co, Saint John, NB, fl 1875

William Norris, North York, Ont, fl 1867

Ontario Organ Co, Toronto, 1884

Oshawa Organ and Melodeon Manufacturing Co, 1871-3 (see Dominion Organ and Piano Co)

Pratte, Montreal, 1889-1926 (harmoniums built ca 1912)

Rappe & Co, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1887

J. Reyner, Kingston, Ont, ca 1871-ca 1885

Sherlock-Manning Organ Co, London, Ont, later Clinton, Ont, 1902-78 (reed organs built 1902-1950s)

J. Slown, Owen Sound, Ont, fl 1871-89

David W. & Cornelius D. Smith, Brome, Que, 1875-?

Smith & Scribner, Chatham, Ont, fl 1864-5

Frank Stevenson, North York, Ont, fl 1867

Edward G. Thomas Organ Co, Woodstock, Ont, 1875-?

James Thornton & Co, Hamilton, Ont, fl 1871-89

Toronto Organ Co, Toronto, 1880

William Townsend, Toronto, fl late 1840s, Hamilton 1853-5

Uxbridge Organ Co, Uxbridge, Ont, fl 1872-1909

S.R. Warren and Son, Toronto, fl 1878-ca 1910

Elijah West, West Farnham, Que, fl 1860-75

Thomas W. White & Co, Hamilton, Ont, 1863-after 1869

R.S. Williams &Sons, Toronto, ca1854-ca 1952 (reed organs built in 19th century only)

Wilson & Co, Sherbrooke, Que

Wood, Powell & Co, Guelph, Ont, fl 1883-4

Woodstock Organ Factory, Woodstock, Ont, fl 1876 (see D.W. Karn)

Author Tim Classey, Helmut Kallmann

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ahrens, Christian. Das Harmonium. Frankfurt: E. Bochinsky, 1996. ISBN 3-923-63905-8.
  • Ahrens, Christian, and Jonas Braasch. Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein: de uitvinder van de orgelregisters met doorslaande tongen. München: Katzbichler, 2003. ISBN 3-873-97582-3.
  • Gellermann, R.F. The American Reed Organ and the Harmonium. 1997.
  • Gellermann, R.F. The International Reed Organ Atlas. 1998.

External links

All links retrieved December 7, 2022.


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