Full metadata
Title
From Gentle to Giant: Signs of a Continuing Tradition of Organ Building in Central and Southern Germany 1750-1850
Description
When one thinks of the great German Romantic organs of Ladegast, Walcker,
Schulze, and Sauer, visions of the large colossus organs of the cathedrals of Merseburg,
Schwerin, and Berlin come to mind. These instruments were rich in power but also in
timbre and dynamic contrasts, able to crescendo from barely audible to thundering and
back. On the other hand, their eighteenth-century predecessors in the Southern and
Central German regions of Baden-Württemburg, Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony showed
a softer side characterized by few reeds and mixtures, generally small size, and gentle
voicing and winding. However, many of the traits found in these earlier instruments,
including an abundance of 8’ registers, a focus on color rather than contrapuntal clarity,
tierce mixtures, and a relatively low proportion of mixtures and reeds to foundation stops
are carried over to the early Romantic organs.
Especially interesting are the transitional instruments around the turn of the
nineteenth century. The end of the eighteenth century and beginning of the nineteenth, the
time between the death of J. S. Bach in 1750 and E. F. Walcker’s construction of the
Paulskirche organ in Frankfurt in 1833, often appears as a sort of “Dark Ages” for the
organ in which little happened to advance the organ into the new century. Modern
scholarship has largely overlooked these instruments. However, the Central and Southern
German states were among the few areas that saw a continuation of organ building
through the economic and political disaster resulting from the Napoleonic Wars, the
secularization of many institutions including the grand abbeys of Swabia, and a rapid
change in musical aesthetic toward the symphonic and the virtuosic.
In this document, I examine organs of the Southern and Central German territories
of Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony. I focus on organs that show
development from the late Baroque to the early Romantic Period, culminating in the
organs of Eberhard Friedrich Walcker in Baden-Württemberg and Friedrich Ladegast in
Thuringia. These little-known transition instruments provide intriguing insight into the
genesis of the famous German Romantic organs, giants in stature and sound.
Schulze, and Sauer, visions of the large colossus organs of the cathedrals of Merseburg,
Schwerin, and Berlin come to mind. These instruments were rich in power but also in
timbre and dynamic contrasts, able to crescendo from barely audible to thundering and
back. On the other hand, their eighteenth-century predecessors in the Southern and
Central German regions of Baden-Württemburg, Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony showed
a softer side characterized by few reeds and mixtures, generally small size, and gentle
voicing and winding. However, many of the traits found in these earlier instruments,
including an abundance of 8’ registers, a focus on color rather than contrapuntal clarity,
tierce mixtures, and a relatively low proportion of mixtures and reeds to foundation stops
are carried over to the early Romantic organs.
Especially interesting are the transitional instruments around the turn of the
nineteenth century. The end of the eighteenth century and beginning of the nineteenth, the
time between the death of J. S. Bach in 1750 and E. F. Walcker’s construction of the
Paulskirche organ in Frankfurt in 1833, often appears as a sort of “Dark Ages” for the
organ in which little happened to advance the organ into the new century. Modern
scholarship has largely overlooked these instruments. However, the Central and Southern
German states were among the few areas that saw a continuation of organ building
through the economic and political disaster resulting from the Napoleonic Wars, the
secularization of many institutions including the grand abbeys of Swabia, and a rapid
change in musical aesthetic toward the symphonic and the virtuosic.
In this document, I examine organs of the Southern and Central German territories
of Baden-Württemberg, Bavaria, Thuringia, and Saxony. I focus on organs that show
development from the late Baroque to the early Romantic Period, culminating in the
organs of Eberhard Friedrich Walcker in Baden-Württemberg and Friedrich Ladegast in
Thuringia. These little-known transition instruments provide intriguing insight into the
genesis of the famous German Romantic organs, giants in stature and sound.
Date Created
2019
Contributors
- Burns, Brandon Lee (Author)
- Marshall, Kimberly A (Thesis advisor)
- Ryan, Russell R (Thesis advisor)
- Saucier, Catherine (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
Resource Type
Extent
166 pages
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55593
Level of coding
minimal
Note
Doctoral Dissertation Music 2019
System Created
- 2020-01-14 09:17:19
System Modified
- 2021-08-26 09:47:01
- 3 years 2 months ago
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