Mechanical Music Digest  Archives
You Are Not Logged In Login/Get New Account
Please Log In. Accounts are free!
Logged In users are granted additional features including a more current version of the Archives and a simplified process for submitting articles.
Home Archives Calendar Gallery Store Links Info
MMD > Archives > September 2000 > 2000.09.30 > 01Prev  Next


Choosing an Organ Scale
By Ingmar Krause

Oh my god -- how I could I ever think that this discussion would
never occur...  But, oh well, I can give my personal contribution,
even I will have to rename the title of it a just little bit:

  "A musician's, arranger's and organ grinder's
   dream of an organ and it's scale"

I have to divide all of this into simple points, as probably nobody
will be ever be able to extract any useful information.  :-)

Point 1:  As a matter of fact, even though there are many songs and
possibilities for it, a normal monkey-organ will never be the perfect
solution.  Why not, you will be able to see as of the next points:

Point 2:  Even though chromatic seems to be luxurious, herein lies the
basic condition for the possibility of everything (!).  To get this in
a harmony with cutting costs is hard -- you will need:

Point 3:  Limitation of the scale -- you can have that as easy as just
taking one octave of everything.

Point 4:  Combining: for taking a standard scale, it has to be combined
out of the ranks available.  For a new scale, decisions have to be made
of how big you want this scale to be:

 - one octave melody
 - 2nd octave melody*
 - one octave accompaniment
 - one octave bass
 - one octave countermelody
 - another octave countermelody*
 *) could be combined together

For MIDI-System every pipe accessible.

Point 5:  MIDI-System also via direct input (keyboard)

Point 6:  Percussion: has to be as "colourful" as already the
assortment of different sound-directions chosen for the different
ranks.

End-Product:  An almost cathedral-sized organ, just portable and with
percussions and other elements not to be found in church-organs; 4-way
(or more) controlled, multipurpose concert organ.

*dreaming*

Well, so much to what I can say about it.  Any volunteers for making
that as a present for me?  ;-))

greetings by(e) InK - Ingmar Krause

P.S.:

Point 6 is about the most important point for building something
very special new.  Point 2 is about all what you wanted to know about
a modern scale.  Point 3 and 4 show how this is made affordable (under
limitation of Point 6 to the contrary, though).  Compacting this is
like the achievement of the MPEG mp3 compression standard: very hard,
but worth it.


(Message sent Fri 29 Sep 2000, 09:37:53 GMT, from time zone GMT+0200.)

Key Words in Subject:  an, Choosing, Organ, Scale

Home    Archives    Calendar    Gallery    Store    Links    Info   


Enter text below to search the MMD Website with Google



CONTACT FORM: Click HERE to write to the editor, or to post a message about Mechanical Musical Instruments to the MMD

Unless otherwise noted, all opinions are those of the individual authors and may not represent those of the editors. Compilation copyright 1995-2024 by Jody Kravitz.

Please read our Republication Policy before copying information from or creating links to this web site.

Click HERE to contact the webmaster regarding problems with the website.

Please support publication of the MMD by donating online

Please Support Publication of the MMD with your Generous Donation

Pay via PayPal

No PayPal account required

                                     
Translate This Page