If that actually happened the organ couldn't have been built! It's just intense and thrilling, no "bad things" have ever happened as a result of playing these stops!
It is kind of like a horn loaded bass drum in a sense. This is 1920s subwoofer technology, organ builders called it "effet d'orage" ("thunder effect").
I was friends with former Boardwalk Hall organist Tim Hoag and h described the 64' as sounding like a helicopter. I would love to experience it from the back of the auditorium to hear what it sounds like. I was up in the same level of that chamber back around 1995 when Dennis McGurk was the curator.
Awful lot of upper harmonics, if you can call those mechanical noises that. Hopefully the sound is cleaner when listening from the auditorium, otherwise quite useless.
@@Arkienkeli_Working_Angel it's not the point to have "nice" sound, but these low big notes are the ones that you FEEL and they fill the whole room unlike any other, that's what's so special about them.
@@imeprezime1069 I am quite familiar with organs and like clean low frequencies. This diaphone has much too much banging noise and is badly out of tune also. 64' flue would be interesting but i guess the attack would be too slow to be useful. For some low frequency content check this video with frequencies dow to 5 Hz: th-cam.com/video/aHjfykusxsM/w-d-xo.html
Are there any good vids out there that attempt to capture that sound out in the auditorium? I suppose mics don't think much of the 8 Hz fundamental. There in the chamber, it sounds more like my clothes washer. It never occurred to me that my Whirlpool might be a one-note musical instrument. Since humans cannot hear 8 to 16 Hz, I assume that you just feel it, plus hear all the racket from the "reed." Is the CCCCC resonator really 64' long or 32'?
I don’t get it it’s a Low C and it has a mallet beating inside the wall of the pipe but it just sounds like a pipe that’s being beat by a mallet what does it sound like out in the auditorium And what does it sound like when played with other cords
The sliding tuners on top, those big slats of wood which cover up a slot on the side of the pipe. The more you cover up the slot, the longer the pipe (in effect), the lower the pitch.
@@cnagorka ok yes! Thank you! But I mean, how do you actually measure the pitch? This would be my right question 😄 There are specific tools to measure such low frequencies? Out of curiosity (I’m a physicist 😄)
And how else would you propose trying to hold a camera while navigating the narrow confines of a pipe chamber without hitting/damaging pipes? Have you been in one before? Just walking around in one WITHOUT a camera is difficult enough.
The low C with plastic bag sounded more like a Harley-Davidson on tickover!!🤣😂
Thanks! I am really looking forward to new uploads about newly restored 100inch reeds. Greetings from Czech republic!
This instrument is huge, it's like a multi story ship engine.
7:41 I can just hear Emperor Palpatine from Star Wars screaming out “Unlimited POWER!” after hearing that! 😂
Non pipe organ people have little appreciation for these organ parts. This is very cool sir. Thank you.
It sounds like a steam engine chuffing passed
That low frequency is just crazy! You've got a lot of guts climbing up all those levels.. with or without a camera!!😉
Very musical.
I wouldn't get into that chamber with that thing firing off. Concern with the urban legends of sudden, uncontrollable urge to empty the bowels...
If that actually happened the organ couldn't have been built! It's just intense and thrilling, no "bad things" have ever happened as a result of playing these stops!
@@cnagorka I guess so. Love the vids!, I've wondered about this instrument since reading of it as a kid in the 70s.
Sounds more like a percussion instrument to me. A metronome. Gotta say the biggest thing that this has done is earning bragging rights
It is kind of like a horn loaded bass drum in a sense. This is 1920s subwoofer technology, organ builders called it "effet d'orage" ("thunder effect").
Man, that thing is violent
Jurassic....
I was friends with former Boardwalk Hall organist Tim Hoag and h described the 64' as sounding like a helicopter. I would love to experience it from the back of the auditorium to hear what it sounds like.
I was up in the same level of that chamber back around 1995 when Dennis McGurk was the curator.
Awful lot of upper harmonics, if you can call those mechanical noises that. Hopefully the sound is cleaner when listening from the auditorium, otherwise quite useless.
@@Arkienkeli_Working_Angel it's not the point to have "nice" sound, but these low big notes are the ones that you FEEL and they fill the whole room unlike any other, that's what's so special about them.
@@imeprezime1069 I am quite familiar with organs and like clean low frequencies. This diaphone has much too much banging noise and is badly out of tune also. 64' flue would be interesting but i guess the attack would be too slow to be useful. For some low frequency content check this video with frequencies dow to 5 Hz: th-cam.com/video/aHjfykusxsM/w-d-xo.html
I’m in love. 😍
Man die Basspfeife hat aber Saft droff einfach geil.Monika aus Gemany Deutschland.
Sounds like a Steam Engine at Full Steam.
Man that's really loud
Who knew there would be a vid about a garbage bag flopping around on a channel about tubing pipe organs..
Tubing pipe organs? Like inner tube?
Never heard of a “tubing pipe organ” before. 😂
Are there any good vids out there that attempt to capture that sound out in the auditorium? I suppose mics don't think much of the 8 Hz fundamental. There in the chamber, it sounds more like my clothes washer. It never occurred to me that my Whirlpool might be a one-note musical instrument.
Since humans cannot hear 8 to 16 Hz, I assume that you just feel it, plus hear all the racket from the "reed." Is the CCCCC resonator really 64' long or 32'?
It's really 64' long!
großartig!!!!!!!!!
I have a copy of the score to Toccata Delectatione!
Um is that an organ?
Is the pneumatic hammer of Satan.-
I don’t get it it’s a Low C and it has a mallet beating inside the wall of the pipe but it just sounds like a pipe that’s being beat by a mallet what does it sound like out in the auditorium And what does it sound like when played with other cords
it's so low (aka slow waves) that the frequency is experienced by humans as a banging sound, mostly
it fills out the sound of other notes, though
@@1Gigawatt OK I did it I appreciate it. Thank you very much.
@@BubaLabinski223 an elephant or a whale would hear it more musically
@@1Gigawatt OK I dig it Thank you.
How do you tune them??
The sliding tuners on top, those big slats of wood which cover up a slot on the side of the pipe. The more you cover up the slot, the longer the pipe (in effect), the lower the pitch.
@@cnagorka ok yes! Thank you! But I mean, how do you actually measure the pitch? This would be my right question 😄 There are specific tools to measure such low frequencies? Out of curiosity (I’m a physicist 😄)
@@LucaCrippa88 Look for my video "More 64" where I show the entire process.
@@cnagorka will do! Thanks!
@@cnagorka Does not affect the frequency of the beater, though. Same with all reeds, this is kind of reed after all.
Please find someone with camera experience to help. Your camera technique makes me nauseous, although I appreciate the effort.
And how else would you propose trying to hold a camera while navigating the narrow confines of a pipe chamber without hitting/damaging pipes? Have you been in one before? Just walking around in one WITHOUT a camera is difficult enough.