Dear Forum,
I am sorry I haven't been in the forum for a while. Between the concerts and the exams, I have had little time. But regardless:
I recently had an idea concerning reed organs. I had played on a cheap instrument in a mall somewhere, and the melodia stop struck me as sounding very fluty and warm. And so I figure that an organ of pleasing proportions could be concocted from numerous ranks of free reeds. And due to the fact that reeds are not overly expensive, a simply massive instrument could be put together for for the price of a less tonally effective pipe organ. Naturally, however, the reeds are still very limited in their tonal range; no room for massive reed effects of thunderous basses. This could be changed by utilizing different materials for the free reeds in certain stops, for instance, lead for the deep sounds, bamboo for lighter flues, iron for chorus reeds, et cetera.
I have a feeling that there might be already such a free reed organ in the world, but since I am not aware of it, I wonder, would this be a practical method for emulating a pipe organ at a lower cost. Besides the advantages of cost, the pitch of the free reeds does not depend on the wind pressure, so altering the amount of wind in the chests for expressive purposes would be fine. This could greatly expand the dynamic range of a single registration, especially if the division were to be enclosed in a swell box. Also, the instrument would not take nearly as much space, and stops that, in a pipe organ, would require pipes too large to fit in the chamber, could easily fit the most meager chambers.
I am no organ builder, and I would be limited to experiments my little tool shed could accommodate, so I invite others with larger tool sheds (and more full wallets) to experiment. This may just work.
Thanks
Comment