Spreckels Organ

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The Spreckels Organ was designed by Ernest M. Skinner and is on display in San Francisco, USA at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor, a three-quarter scale replica of Paris's Legion d'Honneur [1], that looks like a Roman temple overlooking the Pacific Ocean.[2]

The organ was commissioned by John D. Spreckels. Placed on the right side of the console is a plaque that reads: "John D. Spreckels has generously given the organ in this temple for the pleasure of those who, like himself, are lovers of music AD MCMXXIV." Spreckels donated the organ as a tribute to his brother Adolph, who was dying from syphilis. Adolph died before it was completed.[3]

Inside the Palace of the Legion of Honor, the Skinner Organ is presented in a very plain setting. Similar to other Organs of Skinner design, it is simply there and can be easily overlooked. Although completed by The Skinner Organ Company in 1923 and dedicated by Ernest Skinner as Opus 455, the placque makes no mention of Skinner's influence.

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[edit] Materials used

In tune with the overall majesty of the Legion of Honor, Skinner included other elements in the construction of this organ that were not in Skinner organs. Features such as the use of rare woods incorporated into the working designs: ebony, mahogany, walnut and the use of ivory keys and stops, and three high pressure wind turbines totaling power of 48 horsepower (36 kW) to provide the main wind supply for the organ's pneumatic system. Boasting additional assets of pneumatically operated percussion instruments, a thunder pedal, a set of large tubular chimes, and the final cost of over $110,000.00 a scarce six years before the dawn of the Great Depression, the allotment for this instrument was the seen as the last word in modern entertainment.

[edit] Historical context establishing the novelty of the organ

Important to note, that in the period 1917-1923, organ concerts were so highly regarded, that public community performances usually numbered attendance nearing 1,000.

By the time Ernest Skinner came to build the Spreckels organ, he was already highly regarded within the industry. For many, the possession of a Skinner organ signified that its ownership was suggestive of regal nature. For a time in which much of America's population were still utilizing the outdoor privy, a space not intended as a house of worship to include a Skinner organ, was nearly unheard of. Of course, the era of the silent movie was in full swing, but still novel the idea to provide the public with entertainment was respected and well received- most usually, only shopping centers or department stores on the East Coast featured such accoutrements. Rarely did such culture come to the West Coast, and certainly not in the form of a Roman temple overlooking the Pacific Ocean! None the less, the California Palace of the Legion of Honor spared little expense insuring that the finest of entertainment would be provided for its patrons.

[edit] Organ features

In the overall intrinsic quality of the instrument, Skinner crafted the final piece to include a four manual, one hundred and seven stop, sixty-three rank and four-thousand five hundred and forty-two pipes organ. All together, the organ comprises of one Great Organ, a Swell Organ, a Choir Organ featuring a 16 foot Contra Dulciana, Choir Organ Echo, a Solo Organ, Solo Organ Echo, an Arch Organ outfitted with 8 foot Arch Clarion, a 64 foot Gravissima and a 32 foot Bourdon Profunda, in addition to the final Traps that were enclosed in the Choir: Bass drum, castanets, Chinese block, crash cymbal, gong snare drum (f), snare drum (ff), and a tambourine triangle. Proponents have acclaimed that that an instrument that is capable of producing these sounds, (similar to that of an Orchestra), is a work of art, no matter its outright visual appeal.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.legiondhonneur.fr
  2. ^ http://www.thinker.org/legion/about/subpage.asp?subpagekey=61
  3. ^ "The Spreckels Organ Pavilion in Balboa Park" by Richard Amero (San Diego Historical Society