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Bethel, CT - A rare musical treasure in Bethel turns 100 this year.
The 1914 pipe organ at historic St. Thomas Episcopal Church will star in a centennial recital at 3 p.m. Friday, November 28. The recital is free to the public.
St. Thomas pipe organ is one of only 14 Hall organs known to remain unaltered from its installation state, according to the Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. The Connecticut-based Hall Organ Company built more than 500 church organs between 1898 and the late 1940s.
The organ, composed of thousands of individual components, likely took a shop of 20 workers several months to build, Pittsburgh organist and organ builder, Joseph Tuttle, said
Tuttle gave a recital on the organ last year and has done maintenance work on it. He said St. Thomas organ shows exceptional craftsmanship and artistry. The construction methods used at the time involved manufacturing almost every component by hand without the aid of modern power tools, he explained. The artistry comes from both those craftsmen physically producing the organ, as well as from the pipe voicer whose skill was to make each pipe sound beautiful when it speaks.
At least two features make St. Thomas pipe organ especially unusual, Tuttle said. First, the voicing is in the Romantic style. During the 1930s through 1980s, many organs with this type of voicing were altered or replaced in favor of voicings styled after organs of the Baroque Era in Northern Germany. Second, the mechanics used in St. Thomas organ, which allowed the organist greater ease and control than ever before, have not been in common use for more than 70 years.
St. Thomas pipe organ was given to the church by Mrs. Josephine L. Shephard in memory of her husband, George Anson Shephard (1839 1904), and her son, Frank Hartshorn Shephard (1863 1913). We owe a lot to the vision of parishioners who recognized the value of this instrument and saw to its upkeep over the years, said the Rev. Norma Schmidt, St. Thomas Priest-in-Charge.
Tuttle and Anthony Rispo will perform in the Centennial Recital. Tuttle is organist and choir director at St. Johns Lutheran Church in Highland, Pennsylvania. Rispo is a concert organist and composer who has served several NYC area churches.
For more information:
Norma Schmidt
Priest-in-Charge
St. Thomas' Episcopal Church
95 Greenwood Avenue
Bethel, CT 06801
203.743.1494
The 1914 pipe organ at historic St. Thomas Episcopal Church will star in a centennial recital at 3 p.m. Friday, November 28. The recital is free to the public.
St. Thomas pipe organ is one of only 14 Hall organs known to remain unaltered from its installation state, according to the Organ Historical Society Pipe Organ Database. The Connecticut-based Hall Organ Company built more than 500 church organs between 1898 and the late 1940s.
The organ, composed of thousands of individual components, likely took a shop of 20 workers several months to build, Pittsburgh organist and organ builder, Joseph Tuttle, said
Tuttle gave a recital on the organ last year and has done maintenance work on it. He said St. Thomas organ shows exceptional craftsmanship and artistry. The construction methods used at the time involved manufacturing almost every component by hand without the aid of modern power tools, he explained. The artistry comes from both those craftsmen physically producing the organ, as well as from the pipe voicer whose skill was to make each pipe sound beautiful when it speaks.
At least two features make St. Thomas pipe organ especially unusual, Tuttle said. First, the voicing is in the Romantic style. During the 1930s through 1980s, many organs with this type of voicing were altered or replaced in favor of voicings styled after organs of the Baroque Era in Northern Germany. Second, the mechanics used in St. Thomas organ, which allowed the organist greater ease and control than ever before, have not been in common use for more than 70 years.
St. Thomas pipe organ was given to the church by Mrs. Josephine L. Shephard in memory of her husband, George Anson Shephard (1839 1904), and her son, Frank Hartshorn Shephard (1863 1913). We owe a lot to the vision of parishioners who recognized the value of this instrument and saw to its upkeep over the years, said the Rev. Norma Schmidt, St. Thomas Priest-in-Charge.
Tuttle and Anthony Rispo will perform in the Centennial Recital. Tuttle is organist and choir director at St. Johns Lutheran Church in Highland, Pennsylvania. Rispo is a concert organist and composer who has served several NYC area churches.
For more information:
Norma Schmidt
Priest-in-Charge
St. Thomas' Episcopal Church
95 Greenwood Avenue
Bethel, CT 06801
203.743.1494