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Mariazell
(Austria),
Pilgrimage Church St. Michael -
Main or Wiener Organ
The
Organ
Specification
CD
Choir
or Mariazeller Organ

photo: © Günter Lade
Günter Lade
The Main or Wiener Organ of the Pilgrimage
Church in Mariazell
For a larger view click on the images.
Design and Construction
The
case of the large organ in the west gallery completed in 1739 by Gottfried
Sonnholz (III-P/36) originally had a Rückpositiv that was removed
in 1868 by the organ builder Friedrich Werner from Graz. Its pipework
was integrated into the main case according to new Romantic sound ideals.
The only remainders of the former Rückpositiv case were its architrave
in front of the balustrade and four angel figures. They had been combined
with an ornamental coat of arms of the mother convent St. Lambrecht to
close the space in the middle of the protruding and opulently embellished
curved halves of the gallery.
This Rückpositiv was once of great significance both for acoustics
and appearance: The balance between the voluminous main case and the former
Rückpositiv with 11 stops was attained by its prominent position
in the loft balustrade. It not only provided excellent distribution of
sound, it joined the side wings of the main case and created a satisfying
architectural unity of organ and organ loft.
The
call for bids for a new organ in the existing historic case called for
an organ with three manuals (Great, a second division, Swell), pedal and
50 stops. The church wanted to reuse the Sonnholz main case but made it
clear that it did not want a historicized imitation of the past; the new
instrument should be of modern design. The second division was to have
been installed behind the central 16 tower of the case in the form
of a concealed Oberwerk, where it however would have impaired the sound
of the Great below and the Swell behind it because of the crowded space
under the vaults. For this reason Mathis also proposed the alternative
of reconstructing the former Rückpositiv, an idea that had already
been briefly entertained by the Mariazell commission but rejected because
of expected opposition from the Austrian Heritage Body. The heated deliberations
of all concerned finally resulted in acceptance of this proposal: the
Austrian's Heritage Body, represented by Dr. Friedrich Bouvier, agreed
to the reconstruction of the Rückpositiv. This decision had repercussions
not only for the logical arrangement of pipework, mechanical action and
console of the main organ, but for all Mariazell organs as such. It was
now possible to abandon the initial requirement of the commission that
both of the side organs be electrically attached to the main organ as
quasi positive organs.
In
keeping with the shape of the existing architrave, based on the model
of the main case and the fronts of the side organs, the front display
of the new Rückpositiv case was reconstructed with five flats and
a double curved front. The woodwork of the Rückpositiv, that is the
case of spruce and the pipe shades of lime wood were manufactured by Mathis
in collaboration with the conservator Carl Maria Stephan from Graz.
In the course of dismantling the electro-pneumatic membrane chest organ
in April of 2001 it was possible to the examine the entire historic Sonnholz
case construction. All aspects of the construction of the new organ including
call for bids, submitting of bids, and awarding of contracts was based
on the assumption that the Sonnholz main case from 1737/39 was in its
original state. Further examinations by Stephan revealed, however, that
the lower case and the parts of the case on the rear organ loft had been
significantly modified probably in the course of the changes made by Cäcilia
in 1929. The side walls of the passage in the middle of the lower organ
case were therefore restored to their original state by reusing original
units such as doors and fittings.
The
original tin pipes of the 16 Principal were carefully examined
and catalogued. Their walls were unusually thin and their effective
length had been halved by tuning-slots. Moreover numerous languids
were missing, while others were irreparable and had to be replaced.
The front-pipes with natural lengths were narrow-scaled as was
typical for Austrian Baroque organs. Their original (higher) pitch
had been lowered by roller beards probably in 1912 or 1929. In modern
organ scaling practise the original 8 Principal with a diameter
of C = 137.2 mm would be classified as string-scaled while the 16
Principal with a diameter of its lowest pipe = 251.00 mm today would
also be classified as a string stop.
In order to provide the new organ with an optimal bass Hermann
Mathis proposed to the commission a new wooden 16 Principal
for the Pedal and to use the original front pipes as both the Great
double (c° to d''' complemented by new pipes) and a 16
Violonbass on the Pedal (C to f ').
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The layout of the new organ is clear: the pedal soundboards behind the
lateral towers of the case stand on either side of the central Great.
The Swell fills an archway behind the wind chest of the Great and therefore
speaks through the Great. Initially the two voluminous pedal stops, 32
Untersatz and 16 Principalbass, were intended to stand in the loft
behind the organ in their own casings on either side of the west window.
At the request of and according to the design of the responsible basilica
architect Wolfgang Feyferlik, however, the almost 18ft. high pipes were
placed directly behind the organ, lined up on a simple architrave extending
almost 36 feet (11,5 metres).
 
 
To achieve optimal acoustics the pipes of the 16 Principal are
situated on both sides of this unusual wind chest, while the pipes of
the 32 Untersatz (C to F sharp as acoustic stop = 10 2/3)
were placed in the center directly in front of the back wall of the organ.
The long-wave sound of the two Pedal stops disperse very well through
the passages of the organ case and the side galleries of the church.
In respect to the console a decision had to be made whether to allow
the organist a view to the nave as Sonnholz originally designed it or
whether to connect the console directly with the Rückpositiv case
according to Austrian Baroque organ building tradition. The choice was
made for a free-standing console placed directly in front of the main
case with a view to the organ. This arrangement allows relatively good
control of all divisions by the organist. The 180° rotation also has
the advantage of allowing the Rückpositiv to be a slim individual
unit with easy access to its interior as well as simplifying the mechanical
actions of the console.
The
design of the console is patterned after the Sonnholz original especially
regarding proportions as they are discernible in extant images. The construction
was dictated by function: all friezes and frames are supporting elements
of the stop action, the keyboards and their action points and of the couplers.
In keeping with centuries old tradition quality walnut is used for console,
panels, and organ bench. Because of the tanning agent of oak, its use
would cause rapid corrosion of the many metal parts of a console. Although
the organ builder had intended to retain the natural color of the walnut,
the architect had the console painted black in conformity with the color
of the main and Rückpositiv cases.
The console has three manuals of 56 keys each. The diatonic keys are
of bone and the semitone keys of ebony. The pedal board has 30 keys and
is double concave (walnut with ebony covered sharps).
The stop knobs are arranged according to the divisions of the organ;
from lower left upwards Pedal and Swell, from lower right upwards Great
and Rückpositiv. The order of the manuals is typical of the French
symphonic organ: Great (I), Positive (II) and Swell (III).
The Glockenspiel with bells is located in the vault alcove above the
Swell box and is played from the first manual keyboard. Further toy-stops
are Cimbelstern (not visible from the church nave), Vogelgesang (bird
song, four inverted pipes in a small container filled with water), Rossignol
(nightingale, a pipe with a mechanism to change its pitch in a fixed pattern),
as well as a stop that was named 'Schauer' (a German expression for the
rain) in honor of the contracting authority, the Mariazell Superior P.
Karl Schauer, OSB. This toy-stop imitates the sound of rain for use in
the sort of storm-pieces popular in the 19th century, and is patterned
after an historic example in the Hofkirche of Lucerne as a device with
iron pebbles that roll in a wooden wheel with metal edges.
  
 
 
 
The wind supply with two reservoir bellows is as it was in the Sonnholz
original on the rear wall inside the organ above the passage to the organ
loft. There is one reservoir bellow for Great and Pedal, and the other
for Swell and the two pedal stops on the architrave behind the organ.
The Rückpositiv has immediately adjacent bellows of its own situated
in the gallery's floor.

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