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Opus 11
Trinity Episcopal
Cathedral
147 N.W. Nineteenth Avenue
Portland, OR 97209
Rosales
Organ Builders, Inc.
Los
Angeles, California
Opus 11
- 1987
The year 2007 marked the 20th anniversary of
Rosales Opus 11. The event was observed by a recital
featuring John Scott on October 29. Click to see John
Scott's program
and to read a review in The Oregonian.
Jonathan Ambrosino writes of this instrument:
It has been now
eighteen years since I first saw that organ. I still have my
handwritten notes and impressions from that visit (three
years before my first laptop!). It was David Junchen who
urged me to see it most of all, and Grahame Davis, ... and
seemingly countless others. Sometimes it's difficult to
think back to those far more unyielding times, when its
fusing of the supposedly unfusable reflected the culture as
much as the instrument itself. It was a clear watershed,
amplified by so many people understanding that very fact
right from the start.
Specifications
GREAT - Manual I |
16' |
|
Prestant |
8' |
|
Principal |
8' |
|
Flute harmonique |
8' |
|
Bourdon |
8' |
|
Gamba |
4' |
|
Octave |
4' |
|
Spire Flute |
2 2/3' |
|
Octave Quint |
2' |
|
Super Octave |
|
|
Cornet V |
|
|
Mixture VII-XI |
16' |
|
Bombarde |
8' |
|
Trumpet |
4' |
|
Clarion |
|
POSITIVE - Manual II |
16' |
|
Bourdon |
8' |
|
Principal |
8' |
|
Bourdon |
4' |
|
Octave |
4' |
|
Rohrpipe |
3 1/5' |
|
Grosse Tierce |
2 2/3' |
|
Nasard |
2' |
|
Doublet |
1 3/5' |
|
Tierce |
1 1/3' |
|
Larigot |
|
|
Mixture V-VII |
8' |
|
Trumpet |
8' |
|
Cromorne |
4' |
|
Clarion |
|
SWELL - Manual III |
16' |
|
Bourdon |
8' |
|
Principal |
8' |
|
Bourdon |
8' |
|
Flute harmonique |
8' |
|
Viole de Gamba |
8' |
|
Voix celeste |
4' |
|
Principal |
4' |
|
Flute octaviante |
2' |
|
Octavin |
|
|
Cornet IV |
|
|
Mixture IV |
16' |
|
Bassoon |
8' |
|
Trumpet |
8' |
|
Hautbois |
8' |
|
Vox Humana |
4' |
|
Clarion |
|
PEDAL |
32' |
|
Bourdon |
16' |
|
Open Wood |
16' |
|
Prestant |
16' |
|
Bourdon |
8' |
|
Octave |
8' |
|
Flute |
8' |
|
Bourdon |
4' |
|
Super Octave |
|
|
Mixture VII |
32' |
|
Contra Trombone |
16' |
|
Bombarde |
16' |
|
Trombone |
8' |
|
Trumpet |
4' |
|
Clarion |
|
Couplers & Accessories |
Great to Pedal |
Positive to Pedal |
Swell to Pedal |
Positive to Great |
Swell to Great |
Swell to Positive |
Rossignol (Nightingale) |
Etoile (Cymbelstern) |
32' Open Wood Resultant |
32' Bombarde Resultant |
|
Compass: 61/32 |
Key Action: Mechanical |
Stop Action: Electric |
Combination Memory: 32 levels |
THE TRINITY CATHEDRAL
ORGAN
by Barbara Owen
Axiom: An organ is not
a “piece of equipment.” It is a musical instrument, and
it can be (or should be) a work of art. Works of art
aren’t bought off the shelf. They are commissioned, and
the commissioner and commissionee become partners in the
incarnation of a dream.
Ten years ago John Strege, the Organist-Choirmaster of
Trinity Episcopal Church in Portland, Oregon,
increasingly frustrated by the limitations thrust upon a
growing and vital music program by an inadequate organ
and an outmoded chancel arrangement, began to dream. He
shared his dream with his Rector, the Rev. William H.
Wagner. They both shared it with their congregation, and
it slowly began to come into focus.
A Dream is the opposite of a quick fix. It has to be
allowed a life of its own, and room to grow. Dreams
require patience of a saintly sort. After five years,
things began to happen at Trinity Church. Realizing that
an organ, more than any other instrument, interacts with
and is influenced by the room in which it stands, the
church took a long holistic look at its rather ordinary
chancel – and began making changes.
The changes were made not just with the organ in mind,
but took in the needs of music as a whole and, most
importantly, music’s role in the total liturgical
experience. Lawrence Kirkegaard was called in to correct
the depressingly dead acoustics. Absorbent material was
removed, surfaces hardened, and the chancel walls
articulated to eliminate slap. Music and the spoken word
took on new meaning, and the congregational singing
improved.
The altar was moved forward, closer to the people, to
involve them more intimately in the sharing of the
Eucharist. The immovable divided choir pews gave way to
flexible seating improving choral blend and visibility.
The organ was recognized as a participant in liturgy and
music and invited to join the choir behind the altar.
But the old organ, even had its many mechanical
infirmities and tonal inadequacies been corrected, did
not fit into the plan. Installed in a side chamber its
tone was unfocused and acoustically buried.
Organist Strege had some ideas about the sort of organ
Trinity should commission. Consultation with Douglas
Butler and friendly advice from Charles Fisk helped to
clarify and shape those ideas. In 1981 a young organ
building firm from Southern California was invited to
create their magnum opus in Portland.
Manuel Rosales added his insights to those of Strege and
Butler. The starting point was Butler’s suggestion that
the organ make a “Romantic gesture.” The neo-Baroque
concept (more neo than Baroque) was decrescendoing like
the whine of autumnal locusts, but a fully neo-Romantic
organ would only trade one set of musical limitations
for another. Rosales was not enchanted with the idea of
merely copying some other organ.
While Butler wanted a Cavaillé-Coll, Strege wanted
something that would play Stanford and support
congregational song, and Rosales wanted to make his own
statement. In the end, all were agreed that, without
watering anything down, this organ had to provide “all
the delicious sounds” but also possess clear and strong
choruses. A tall order.
The construction of the organ fell behind schedule. It
tried, then vindicated, the faith and patience of a
whole church and an entire organ company. And it grew,
and evolved, and succeeded. Years from now the trials
will have been forgotten, and the members of Trinity
Church will only know that, back in A.D. 1987, they
dedicated and took into their lives a very special
musical instrument.
Charles Fisk is credited with being the first builder of
mechanical-action instruments to dare a carefully
calculated (yet not unlimited) tonal eclecticism, but he
himself gave credit for the concept to G. Donald
Harrison. The idea still scares those who, on the one
hand, feel that the smallest of organs should (or even
can) be “all-purpose,” and those who, on the other hand,
are scandalized by even the most judicious mixing of
styles, regardless of the size of the organ.
With 54 speaking stops and 87 ranks on three manuals and
pedal, Rosales’ Opus 11 is as big as an organ as its
imposing classical façade suggests. The “Romantic
gesture” has become a foundation, and yet it is not
merely a Romantic organ with a Classic caboose, any more
than it is a Classic organ with Romantic appendages. It
is rather that most difficult-to-achieve thing, an
integrated eclectic organ that will not do quite
everything, yet will do a significant amount of
musically important things authentically and with style.
The stoplist is “Frenchified,” and there is an
unmistakable French accent that can not only lift an
audience out of its seats with a blaze of reeds in a
Vierne Finale, but also interpret to satisfaction the
more refined emotions of Couperin or de Grigny.
For everything required by those composers is there, not
just on paper, but in the pipe construction and voicing.
Strip away the French reeds and mutations, however, and
you find robust principal choruses and a 16’ Trombone
capable of doing justice to the intentions of J. S.
Bach, particularly his later works. Pare it down to the
warm foundations and you have three manual 8’ Principals
to choose from to interpret either Frescobaldi or
Mendelssohn. And yes, it can accompany Stanford like a
“Father” Willis or allow one to play the second movement
of the Symphonie Gothique on a single juicily voiced
Harmonic Flute. Most importantly, it will accompany
Anglican liturgy and raise hymn-singing to new heights
of enthusiasm.
What doesn’t it do? A dearth of high narrow mutations
and spicy short-length reeds handicaps one’s choices for
some of the North European Renaissance literature,
although the principal chorus and several of the lighter
flutes make a good showing in Buxtehude’s Praeludia, and
there are two Renaissance “toy” stops – a Rossignol
(adjustable!) and an Etoile. The Great chorus is a bit
too bold for 18th century English voluntaries, yet the
secondary chorus on the Positive works well in this
context, and one can choose from three Cornets of
varying characteristics which work equally well in
French classic solos and English voluntaries.
Because the organ speaks on 93mm of wind pressure and
must project to the rear of a large building, its sound
is not subtle close up in the chancel, yet certain quite
delicate effects are there for the finding. Certainly
it’s an organ that can handle not only Bach and Franck
but also the moderns, from Heiller to Messiaen; and
while its reeds and strings lack early 20th century
ultra-smoothness, one suspects that the right person
could coax a few orchestral effects from this
instrument. Like any really good organ, this one is
capable of more than might be immediately apparent from
merely perusing the stoplist.
Mechanically, the instrument should please all but the
most dogmatic purist. The comfortable suspended action,
with nothing more for assistance than balanciers in the
lowest octaves, is light, crisp, and responsive, even
when coupled. That alone testifies to careful
engineering of the traditional sort. Horizontal
rollerboards are used wherever possible because they
offer less friction than vertical ones. Rollers are kept
as short as possible to minimize torque, with splayed
horizontal trackers used to extend the range at the bass
ends.
But there is also some very clever modern engineering in
evidence in the design of the Solid State Logic stop and
combination action. One of the most feared problems with
this type of action is circumvented by a bypass
mechanism that allows the stop action (activated by
Heuss’s new electric slider pullers) to continue
functioning even if the combination action crashes. The
“French connection” is evident here, too, in the “Great
ventil” pedal and the extra pistons for Fonds, Plein Jeu,
Grand Jeu, and Sforzando.
All this functions from a deceptively simple and
uncluttered console, comfortable and inviting to the
player. There is a hint of French in its design, but
more than a hint of the American Romantic, accented by
the easily read oblique-faced stopknobs, modeled after
those used by most American builders in the 1880s and
1890s. The script lettering on the knobs, bone and ebony
manual keys, and Honduras mahogany music desk all
contribute to the feeling of subdued elegance. The
congregation can’t really see this – it is the builder’s
visual gift to the player.
The wind system is a carefully-thought-out synthesis of
old and new. The wind from the blower is fed into three
large wedge bellows, the top two of which (ganged
together) feed the manuals, the lower one the pedal
chests. The wind stabilizers are actually large
concussion bellows (winkers) attached to the bottoms of
the six manual chests, activated or inactivated by
sliders. The result is an ample wind supply which
invites the challenge of even the most demanding
textures, yet at the draw of a knob can become gently
flexible. A clever touch (one of many): the wind
stabilizers automatically go off when the manual tremolo
is drawn – available on both right and left jambs for
handy grabbing.
The long gestation period of this organ has resulted in
creative design and use of materials, unusual
accessibility of all parts, carefully worked out
mechanicals, and solid and almost overbuilt
construction.
The pipework in the organ is not all new; seven stops
were rebuilt from the old organ. That it all works
together so harmoniously is testimony to the skill and
resourcefulness of pipemakers and voicers alike.
Of the more than 4,000 pipes, 2,501 were constructed in
the Rosales workshop. Half of the remainder, including
the polished tin front pipes, were custom-made by the
German firm of Laukhuff, and the other half came from F.
J. Rogers in England. The huge scaled wooden 32’ Pedal
Bourdon was made in Rosales’ workshop, but the other 32’
stop, the Contra Trombone, was quite simply a lucky find
– a rare 1905 Austin “Magnaton,” acquired from theatre
organ expert David Junchen. Its heavy 15” diameter zinc
resonators were fitted with new boots and tongues.
Artistry and imagination are evident throughout in the
handling of all the tonal material.
Visually, the organ speaks for itself. It is a strong
visual element in the chancel, but not an obtrusive one.
What you see is what you hear, for the boldness of the
classically oriented oak case, with its handsome
basswood carvings and polished tin front pipes, mirrors
the organ’s extroverted tonal character. It all says
“proclamation!” in an unequivocal but by no means
impolite manner. It is an instrument to rejoice in, and
with – the embodiment of a decade-long dream. Long may
it continue to bring joy and beauty to the congregation
that dared dream and work for its realization.
Reviewer Joseph Adam
has described this organ as "undeniably beautiful but
solid." (The American Organist, October 1995, p.
69)
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