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Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sun Feb 18, 2018 6:09 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Wow. Just...... wow. If I ever grow up..........

Some notes on the original link:

You had remarked when you originally posted it that the Second Presbyterian organ was quite powerful, which of course it is. I especially like the organist's stop selection on the last two verses- never heard that before. Recently I discovered the Organ Historical Society site, which has a searchable database of all the pipe organs they know about. Second Presbyterian's stop list is included, and here it is- sorry about the messed up column arrangement, I did try to separate them:

Memphis, Tennessee
Second Presbyterian Church, Chapel

This was a rebuild by Wicks of Möller 2/8 Op. 9308 (1958)
_____________________________________________________________________

GREAT SWELL PEDAL
16' Bourdon 8' Cor de Nuit 32' Resultant
8' Diapason 8' Viole de Gambe 16' Bourdon
8' Gedeckt 8' Viole Celeste 16' Lieblich Gedeckt 12 GT
8' Viole de Gambe 4' Nachthorn 10 2/3' Quint
8' Viole Celeste 4' Gambe 8' Diapason GT
8' Dulciana tc 2 2/3' Nazard 8' Gedeckt GT
4' Octave 2' Nachthorn 8' Cor de Nuit SW
4' Gedeckt 1' Fife 4' Octave GT
4' Dulciana 16' Trompette 4' Gedeckt GT
2' Super Octave 8' Trompette 2' Octave GT
2' Blockflöte 4' Clairon II Mixture GT
II Mixture Tremolo 16' Trompette SW
8' Trompette Sub 8' Trompette SW
Tremolo Unison Off 4' Trompette SW
Super Super
Chimes

[Received online from Jeff Scofield August 3, 2012]

I would love to know how they got the organ to sound like that!

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Mon Feb 19, 2018 5:16 pm
by Three Valves
The organ at Longwood Gardens has its pipes behide a tapestry type material. I like to watch it breathe during the performance!!

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Mon Feb 19, 2018 8:59 pm
by Heavy_Metal
bloke wrote:There is a church in a northern suburb of Memphis – Bartlett – that houses the gigantic theater organ that was formally in the downtown Memphis (now demolished) Ellis Auditorium. That sanctuary is not gigantic at all (as this the sanctuary at Second Presbyterian). Nevertheless, it's an impressive organ. As the pipes were never configured for show, they are located in rooms above the front of the sanctuary hidden by something like speaker cloth.
That Kimball originally served two auditoriums. The church has the smaller of the two sections, from the South Hall:

https://pipeorgandatabase.org/OrganDeta ... anID=45674" target="_blank
Three Valves wrote:The organ at Longwood Gardens has its pipes behide a tapestry type material. I like to watch it breathe during the performance!!


Ahh yes, the monster Aeolian with some later Moller additions. I bet it could cause some brain damage at full song:

https://pipeorgandatabase.org/OrganDeta ... ganID=4609" target="_blank

The little Austin where we play has most of the pipes behind a screen as well- not uncommon in this area. Some of the (I believe) Great 8' Principal, 4' Octave and 2' fifteenth pipes are exposed.

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Fri Mar 09, 2018 8:22 pm
by Three Valves
bloke wrote:I linked this already above, but (yet at a third church) this choirmaster enjoys incorporating mainstream orchestral literature into the liturgy...

...and (except for bloke) this is a totally different combination of Memphis-based brass musicians.

Here is a (most every tuba player's favorite) passage from Verdi's Requiem incorporated into a Palm Sunday service:

You'll have to scroll to 42:50 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GgygxBtNv9w
At 1:20 the Presby’s are trying to out Catholic the Catholics!!

Nice service, excellent music.

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sun Apr 01, 2018 1:20 pm
by Heavy_Metal
We played the brass/organ/choral version of this as the first hymn for today's Easter service. Wow.

The service ended with Handel's "Hallelujah Chorus" (brass/organ/choral) and a shortened version of "The Trumpet Shall Sound" (just organ and tuba).

Thanks again, bloke. I doubt I would have discovered Rutter's arrangement if you hadn't posted it.

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 10:42 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Time to once again bump this fine performance!

:tuba: :tuba: :tuba:

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sat Apr 11, 2020 5:04 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Bump- since many or most of us won't be playing tomorrow, at least we have an excellent performance to listen to.

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sat Apr 11, 2020 6:14 pm
by bort
^ Was waiting for your yearly bump of this, Frank. Happy Easter!

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sat Apr 11, 2020 10:50 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Glad to help, Brett. Here's another rendition of this same basic arrangement, enhanced with handbells. You may recognize the church from Diane Bish's "The Joy of Music" series:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nrI2sBiIDxE" target="_blank

and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir doing this same arrangement- but only two verses?!? C'mon:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFjnlBn0K10" target="_blank

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 10:58 am
by Heavy_Metal
bloke wrote:That kind and wise-looking (correct on both counts) black minister in the video - sadly - died about a week ago. This current virus thing was credited.
Sorry to hear, Joe. Maybe once this mess is over, they can pull the orchestra together for the memorial service. That would be a fitting send-off.

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Sun Apr 12, 2020 9:11 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Excellent!

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Mon Apr 13, 2020 11:04 pm
by Heavy_Metal
Keep 'em coming!

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2020 12:48 pm
by MN_TimTuba
I just listened to Christ the Lord is Risen Today. Both beautiful and powerful.
Please, young people - listen to these services. There's no 'worship team' out there that can compare.
Thanks to all who continue to offer real music in worship services.
Tim

Re: Easter Hymn done extremely well

Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2020 6:40 pm
by Heavy_Metal
J.W. Pepper has this, in a choir/organ/brass arrangement if you're interested. This is the one we use. The fanfare is different (shorter) in this version, but it still works extremely well:

https://www.jwpepper.com/Christ-the-Lor ... em#/submit" target="_blank