Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Examples
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: “You know Bach: you know all”
- Part One Background
- Part Two Maxims
- Appendix 1 Symphonies pour orgue, “Avant-propos”
- Appendix 2 Technique de l'orchestre moderne, “L'orgue”
- Appendix 3 Initiation musicale, “L'orgue”
- Appendix 4 L'orgue moderne; La décadence dans la facture contemporaine
- Appendix 5 Key to Widor's System of Abbreviated Registration, Symphonie gothique, First Movement
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 1 - Symphonies pour orgue, “Avant-propos”
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Examples
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: “You know Bach: you know all”
- Part One Background
- Part Two Maxims
- Appendix 1 Symphonies pour orgue, “Avant-propos”
- Appendix 2 Technique de l'orchestre moderne, “L'orgue”
- Appendix 3 Initiation musicale, “L'orgue”
- Appendix 4 L'orgue moderne; La décadence dans la facture contemporaine
- Appendix 5 Key to Widor's System of Abbreviated Registration, Symphonie gothique, First Movement
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Foreword
Although it may not be customary to place a preface at the front of musical editions, I believe it is necessary to put one here in order to explain the character, the style, the procedures of registration, and the sign conventions of these eight symphonies.
Old instruments had almost no reed stops: two colors, white and black, foundation stops and mixture stops—that was their entire palette; moreover, each transition between this white and this black was abrupt and rough; the means of graduating the body of sound did not exist. Consequently, Bach and his contemporaries deemed it pointless to indicate registrations for their works—the mixture stops traditionally remaining appropriate to rapid movements, and foundation stops to pieces of a more solemn pace.
The invention of the “swell box” dates back to just before the end of the eighteenth century. In a work published in 1772, the Dutchman Hess de Gouda expressed the admiration he felt upon hearing Handel, in London, coming to grips with the new device; some time later, in 1780, Abbé Vogler recommended the use of the “box” in the German manufacture of instruments. The idea gained ground, but without great artistic effect—for in spite of the most perspicacious efforts, they did not succeed in going beyond the limits of a thirty-key manual and an insignificant number of registers.
It was necessary to wait until 1839 for the solution to the problem.
The honor for it redounds to French industry and the glory to Mr. A. Cavaillé-Coll. It is he who conceived the diverse wind pressures, the divided wind-chests, the pedal systems and the combination registers, he who applied for the first time Barker's pneumatic motors, created the family of harmonic stops, reformed and perfected the mechanics to such a point that each pipe—low or high, loud or soft—instantly obeys the touch of the finger, the keys becoming as light as those of a piano—the resistances being suppressed, rendering the combination of [all] the forces of the instrument practical.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Widor on Organ Performance Practice and Technique , pp. 75 - 78Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2019