Casavant Frères Ltée.
Opus 2302, 1955

Swedish Lutheran Church / First Lutheran Church (1901)

120 Chandler Street
Jamestown, NY, US

63 Ranks - 3,776 Pipes - 5 Physical Divisions
Instrument ID: 41269 ● Builder ID: 1116 ● Location ID: 13974
⬆️ These are database IDs that may change. Don't use as academic reference.EXPLORE IMAGESVIEW STOPLIST

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STOPLISTS

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CONSOLES

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Builder: Casavant Frères Ltée.
Position: Unknown
Design: Traditional With Roll Top
Pedalboard Type: Concave Radiating (Meeting AGO Standards)
Features:
4 Manuals (61 Notes)32 Note Pedal5 Divisions52 Stops69 RegistersElectrical Key ActionElectrical Stop Action✓ Crescendo✓ Combination Thumb Piston(s)✓ Combination Toe Piston(s)✓ Coupler Thumb Piston(s)✓ Coupler Toe Piston(s)✓ Sforzando Thumb Piston(s)✓ Sforzando Toe Piston(s)

Stop Layout: Drawknobs in Vertical Rows on Angled Jambs
Expression Type: Balanced Expression Shoes/Pedals (Meeting AGO Standards)
Combination Action: Adjustable Combination Pistons
Control System: Unknown or N/A

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DETAILS

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This instrument is: Extant and Playable in this location

Scot Huntington on April 8th, 2021:
This organ is far too large for the chambers which contain it, with divisions buried deep within the chamber and some speaking into walls, the largest pedal pipes blocking the chamber openings, and a generally inefficient layout in chambers whose dimensions exceed the limited tonal openings by a fair degree, trapping most of the sound inside the chambers. The original H & H wooden pedal Trombone had been revoiced on higher pressure by Casavant as the Solo Tuba/Pedal reed unit- the best reed in the organ and of great nobility (in the chamber at least...). At some point in the 1980s, Organ Supply Industries replaced this reed with a loud and blatty rank of pipes voiced more in the french style of a Bombarde and took the lovely Hook pipes in trade. While this rank added more volume and power to this entombed organ, it was not a tonal improvement over the grand tone of the former Tuba. The volume in the chambers is devastating, but what ekes out into the room is muffled and underwhelming. The beauty and color of the softer character stops can't escape the chamber, in spite of the organ's pipework being pushed as hard as possible. The organ would have surely been more effective if it had been 1/3 smaller. A great deal of the Hook pipework was recycled by Casavant in this otherwise intact monumental organ from the end of the Smoot era. No doubt a simple reordering of the chamber would make this organ more effective than any tonal modification could.

Database Manager on June 13th, 2009:
Replaced 3-manual 1901 Hook & Hastings Op. 1889, retaining the pipework.

Related Instrument Entries: Hook & Hastings (Opus 1889, 1901) , Casavant Frères Ltée. (Opus 2302-A, 1980)

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