My brother in law Mark McCreary was a pipe organ repairman until his passing a few years ago. Taking over the business from his father Mac. Good to see that others are still keeping these incredible mechanical wonders working. Mark told me that the apprenticeship for a pipe organ journeyman was 20 years. Incredibly complex pieces of equipment. Keep up the good work!
The fact you can fly a helicopter around inside is a testament to just how massive the building is. Grand Central station could fit inside of there and still have room. Most military hangars only come close to it in size. And its got THE largest musical instrument ever created inside of its walls. I commonly like to say that pipe organs are alive. Well this one makes this entire building a living, breathing being. And remember this place is almost 100 years old by now. A true testament to the fact that the 1920s was a golden age in human history.
Lots of great things. Some of the best quality pens, books, notebooks, organs, beer at the very start, great time for a lot of stuff. The world never quite recovered after WWII maybe, who knows lol
Thank Heaven above that this organ is receiving the attention that it so needed.... I am so happy that it wasn't junked out and lost forever..... generations in the future will thank those responsible for saving this magnificent organ....
So grateful for all the dedicated people that first...created this magnificent instrument and the building. Second to all those who have restored and preserved the building and the organ. During the 50's we went to Atlantic City every summer. My grandparents told me stories about "the old days". I never got to hear the organ but they had. Thank you for this behind the scenes views of the organ. But....my goodness who cleans it ? I give kudos !!
Wow, this is one heck of an organ. It's nice to see it getting restored to it's original glory after it was seemingly damaged beyond repair. Also there are some pieces played by this organ that legit made me imagine a symphony orchestra playing the piece.
I find the details of the craftsmanship amazing. For example at 9:40 notice that the stair treads are not only notched into the rails, but DOVETAILED! The wood finish is beautiful, even on portions that were not expected to be seen.
I am looking forward to playing the instrument, soon. I gave a performance on the Wanamaker organ and now I have to play the Boardwalk Hall Auditorium. Dr. S. J. Thompson
Sir, I'm thankful to have an early LP of Virgil Fox playing the Wanamaker Organ. A little after acquiring it, I was priveleged to attend one of his concerts in Portland, OR. I'd love to hear you play... Great success to you!!!!!
A great instrument. I have set my Amazon Smile charitable contributions to go to the restoration of this fabulous instrument. I hope to get back to hear this fine organ again.
There are no words to describe how magnificent this is. Truly captivating. Mind blown 6 people to clean restore 33,xxx pipes, stops, etc… “One down, only 33,119 to go.” I imagine it’s a job just to label them. Incredible. Hopefully get to hear this in my lifetime. I’m 44 so I’m very hopeful:
Thank you so much for such a wonderful tour! I never even knew we (the U.S.) had such a thing! It's so sad that the world's largest organ started as a typical government boondoggle: "Let's build the world's largest organ!" with no thought given to the expense of upkeep or maintenance. Now, nearly 90 years later, maybe it will finally get the attention it deserves. Thank you all for taking on such a project. I may have to come up there just to hear it, once it's done.
The largest and second largest organs in the world are only 50 miles apart. The second largest, and largest fully functioning organ is the Wanamaker Organ in Philadelphia.
Completely mind blowing wonderful! So much skill and imagination it's hard to comprend that something so grand was even possible. What would we do without music and pipe organs. 🤔
This is just amazing! A number of years ago, our church installed a pretty good sized pipe organ. My #2 son was about 12 years old and the kid who would figure out how anything worked. He was very bright and was well behaved, so I arranged for him to shadow the guys who installed the organ. It truly was a match made in heaven because the craftsman were eager to teach and my son was like a sponge, and could ask well thought out questions. Ot was a once in a lifetime experience ❤
Yes, it was built in Merrick NY, right there by the railroad station. Many Times my Father pointed it out to me while waiting for a train. DAD was a sound (Audio) engineer for NBC television. He might not play music, but he surely knew what good sound was all about.
Thank you for this superbly recorded virtual tour. I enjoyed it tremendously. I'm a rusty pipe organ player from England, who went to school with Rick Wakeman, yes, the same one who played with YES and recorded an album called: "The Six Wives Of Henry VII".
5:56. Those turning over white lights. Stunning. Like spirits raising up. And I’m trying to imagine all 33k pipes run by a huge blower. I bet standing next to the stage wouldve Rocked your DIAPHRAM
The sound of this organ gives me goosebumps! The lush sounds from 22:20 onward are incredible! The 2 manual and pedal pipe organ I build for myself will be a tiny bit smaller :))
Pipe organs are positively awesome. It's the only instrument where both the artist and the audience must come to the instrument. Even grand pianos are relatively easily moved from place to place. And the complexity, given when it was originally designed, is equivalent to the technology of Apollo 11. Few readers of this post will even know who Dr. Albert Schweitzer was, and even fewer will know of his intimate connection to the pipe organ. God grant that the pipe organ should never be erased from our culture.
Keep dreaming . I studied piano and organ and unbelievably got to play a big pipe organ once a week for a school year. Unbelievable and never to be forgotten. It was a student thing , not that I was some great player ! Today if I was physically able, I would volunteer to clean the church just for the opportunity to play.
25:30 this part of the song (I have no idea what it’s called someone please tell me) captures my love for music as a whole. I can’t describe it but Jesus that sounds like what you’d hear when going to heaven!
Wonderful, loved it. Thank you. Anyone know if there is a full recording of the first piece of incidental music used and who played it? (I forget its name though I know it well).
All of the music in this video was played by Peter Conte during one of the noon concerts at the Hall. Search for him on TH-cam and find it on one of the Boardwalk Hall videos.
I find this amazing ' this marvel of engineering is more complicated than a 1980's Aircraft Carrier. I bet there are more buttons and switches than a cockpit of a 747 passenger plane. I'd love to travel and see it and hear it before l die 👍💥😎
Is the organ played on a schedule, is there a behind the scenes tour offered. Is there a website associated with the organ, schedules of concerts, tours etc. Thank you
When we see all the pipes we think wow that must take a lot of air. yes if we were to use every pipe but as far as I know an organist only has 8 fingers and 2 feet and 2 thumbs so 12 pipes unless it takes 3 pipes to make one note. So interesting and I could be wrong in my assumption. Thanks! I have a question; when a section of pipes is awaiting restoration does it mean they are inoperable or they can be used but need tuning and refinishing the pipe itself? Thank you!
As spectacular an engineering feat, and sonically magnificent this organ is, it doesn't match the architectural and artistic splendor of the great baroque pipe organs of Europe. Of course, many of those, having MANY thousands of pipes, also produce a magnificent, glorious sound. The great music of that era is still unsurpassed. One name is sufficient; J.S. Bach. For centuries, all pipe organs, from the smallest, to the great cathedral organs of Europe were completely manual with no electrical assistance. Great pipe organs---the largest instruments ever produced---are a tribute to man's ingenuity, creativity, and aspirations. Let them always be preserved and used. There is nothing like them.
with the massive size of the hall, i would think the delay of sound and the amount of reflections would make it disorienting to play.. but then again anyone capable of playing such a machine is a pro and wouldn't be put off by those factors.
The newish Mormon Tabernacle organ is mighty grand, with 11,623 pipes. The building which houses it is surely large, but it might do the organ an injustice because the building is hardly big enough to easily fly a helicopter inside it. But I'm not too sure how it compares with the much older Mormon Tabernacle organ.
WOW!!! I thought the Wanamaker was big. This beauty is ENORMOUS! So the Wanamaker must be the second biggest in the world then? Oh yeah. He just said it was LOL
There are 2 other organs that are the largest theatre organs in the world namely the Karma labs Wurlitzer (now the largest theatre organ in the world) & the Sanphilipo Wurlitzer ( was the largest but now is the second largest) Both these are " Manafactured" organs which were modern creations built from original parts of other historical organs. The largest original fully functioning theatre organ in the world is the Radio city New York Wurlitzer.
i never knew the true size and magnitude of these things until today, i always thought they where just a more complicated piano with each pipe corresponding to a key, i thought the pipes you could see where the only ones but i now know that an organ is THE ENTIRE BUILDING.
One suprising thing is that there does not appear to be any Reserviors/Regulators present anywhere as being the worlds largest pipe organ one would expect there to be the largest Reservior s in the world including some large double risers or does this use small theatre organ style regulators hidden under the pipe chests.
I am writing a screenplay where 2 young children are playing hide and seek throughout all the chambers. What would be the one thing besides the noise that might make an 8 year old child feel lost and afraid, if they were to go into an area that's small tight, claustrophobic. Any perspective from you would be greatly appreciated!
The background music is all listed in the description! But it is as follows: Musical selections used during the tour: INTRODUCTION & RIGHT STAGE CHAMBER - Liebesfreud, Fritz Kreisler - Organist Peter Conte LEFT STAGE CHAMBER - Cortège, Claude Debussy - Organist Peter Conte CEILING & GALLERY CHAMBERS - Choral, Joseph Jongen - Organist Peter Conte BLOOPERS - The Entertainer, Scott Joplin - Organist Scott Breiner
@@BoardwalkOrgans Rachmaninoff's arrangment of our national anthem interpreted by Tim Sharp would sound great on this thing when it's on Full Organ mode.
All of the musical selections used during the tour are listed in the description, but the beginning is Liebesfreud, Fritz Kreisler - Organist Peter Conte
If memory serves, the ceiling Fanfare and Echo divisions are in the worst shape, correct? I’ve seen videos of the Fanfare chamber, and it’s deplorable and saddening. Here’s hoping they’ll both get some needed TLC in the future!
I imagine myself going back to the 1940's where i disassemble every pipe and every part of this organ and bringing it home with me before the 1944 hurricane destroys the Boardwalk auditorium
If you visit our website at www.boardwalkorgans.org you can find out more information about the organs as well as donate! Look for the "Donate Now" button on the left side of the page.
It’s every type of pipe organ, but voiced on much higher pressures than normal and with way huger scale pipe work than normal to fill this gigantic building with sound.
The organ was damaged by a hurricane in 1944. Until recently, the vast majority of the instrument was unplayable. In 2017, around 20% of the organ was functioning. Now about half of the organ is working.
My brother in law Mark McCreary was a pipe organ repairman until his passing a few years ago. Taking over the business from his father Mac. Good to see that others are still keeping these incredible mechanical wonders working. Mark told me that the apprenticeship for a pipe organ journeyman was 20 years. Incredibly complex pieces of equipment. Keep up the good work!
I worked for him. Learned all I know, allowing me to maintain my own organ😊
@@Leotheviolist I cannot imagine this organ to be "an incredible mechanical wonder". What is incredible is the size, the cost.
The fact you can fly a helicopter around inside is a testament to just how massive the building is. Grand Central station could fit inside of there and still have room. Most military hangars only come close to it in size. And its got THE largest musical instrument ever created inside of its walls. I commonly like to say that pipe organs are alive. Well this one makes this entire building a living, breathing being. And remember this place is almost 100 years old by now. A true testament to the fact that the 1920s was a golden age in human history.
Yeah there was definitely something special about the 1920s. A Renaissance jam-packed into a single decade.
Lots of great things. Some of the best quality pens, books, notebooks, organs, beer at the very start, great time for a lot of stuff. The world never quite recovered after WWII maybe, who knows lol
Just imagine Albert Speer planned a 100,000 pipes organ for the grand hall in Germania playing Wagner during parades!
Thank Heaven above that this organ is receiving the attention that it so needed.... I am so happy that it wasn't junked out and lost forever..... generations in the future will thank those responsible
for saving this magnificent organ....
So grateful for all the dedicated people that first...created this magnificent instrument and the building. Second to all those who have restored and preserved the building and the organ. During the 50's we went to Atlantic City every summer. My grandparents told me stories about "the old days". I never got to hear the organ but they had. Thank you for this behind the scenes views of the organ. But....my goodness who cleans it ? I give kudos !!
Wow, this is one heck of an organ. It's nice to see it getting restored to it's original glory after it was seemingly damaged beyond repair. Also there are some pieces played by this organ that legit made me imagine a symphony orchestra playing the piece.
Whoa. An engineering masterpiece.
I find the details of the craftsmanship amazing. For example at 9:40 notice that the stair treads are not only notched into the rails, but DOVETAILED! The wood finish is beautiful, even on portions that were not expected to be seen.
I love Fritz Kreisler's tune in the intro. Sounds great on the organ!
I am looking forward to playing the instrument, soon.
I gave a performance on the Wanamaker organ and now I have to play the Boardwalk Hall Auditorium.
Dr. S. J. Thompson
Sir, I'm thankful to have an early LP of Virgil Fox playing the Wanamaker Organ. A little after acquiring it, I was priveleged to attend one of his concerts in Portland, OR. I'd love to hear you play... Great success to you!!!!!
Playing this organ would be so amazing. I imagine playing the Wanamaker was amazing too. Thank you for sharing Dr. Thompson.
A great instrument. I have set my Amazon Smile charitable contributions to go to the restoration of this fabulous instrument. I hope to get back to hear this fine organ again.
There are no words to describe how magnificent this is.
Truly captivating.
Mind blown
6 people to clean restore 33,xxx pipes, stops, etc…
“One down, only 33,119 to go.”
I imagine it’s a job just to label them.
Incredible.
Hopefully get to hear this in my lifetime. I’m 44 so I’m very hopeful:
Thank you so much for such a wonderful tour! I never even knew we (the U.S.) had such a thing! It's so sad that the world's largest organ started as a typical government boondoggle: "Let's build the world's largest organ!" with no thought given to the expense of upkeep or maintenance. Now, nearly 90 years later, maybe it will finally get the attention it deserves. Thank you all for taking on such a project. I may have to come up there just to hear it, once it's done.
Boondoggle. One of my favourite words!
The largest and second largest organs in the world are only 50 miles apart. The second largest, and largest fully functioning organ is the Wanamaker Organ in Philadelphia.
Completely mind blowing wonderful!
So much skill and imagination it's hard to comprend that something so grand was even possible.
What would we do without music and pipe organs. 🤔
Thank you so much for this tour! I am extremely grateful for this restauration. Mind boggling that this wonder of the world was built in just 3 years.
KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK
This was so fascinating
Thank You for the content
Fabulous to see the organ and console after all the years and the documentary was exceptional. Well done. Thank you
Just amazing instrument and the hard yards you fellas are doing to bring it fully back to life. Thank you so much. AND loved the bloopers too
The bloopers section at the end must go down in history as the most unlikely bloopers ever recorded. Well done... 😎
This is just amazing!
A number of years ago, our church installed a pretty good sized pipe organ. My #2 son was about 12 years old and the kid who would figure out how anything worked. He was very bright and was well behaved, so I arranged for him to shadow the guys who installed the organ. It truly was a match made in heaven because the craftsman were eager to teach and my son was like a sponge, and could ask well thought out questions.
Ot was a once in a lifetime experience ❤
Yes, it was built in Merrick NY, right there by the railroad station. Many Times my Father pointed it out to me while waiting for a train. DAD was a sound (Audio) engineer for NBC television. He might not play music, but he surely knew what good sound was all about.
Excellent video, liked the Jongen Chorale with the crescendo! Would be great to hear and play this impressive instrument one day!
Was one of the fortunate to have played this instrument in the early 80's, and the associated smsller instrument. THANK YOU "Tim?x.
Mea t to meant to add that I've supported this instrument annually ever since.
This was a great tour! I hope to get out there one day to see it in person.
Interesting instrument.
Thank you for this superbly recorded virtual tour. I enjoyed it tremendously. I'm a rusty pipe organ player from England, who went to school with Rick Wakeman, yes, the same one who played with YES and recorded an album called: "The Six Wives Of Henry VII".
The vox Humana stop is part of the swell flutes and low pressure reeds section.
5:56. Those turning over white lights. Stunning. Like spirits raising up. And I’m trying to imagine all 33k pipes run by a huge blower. I bet standing next to the stage wouldve Rocked your DIAPHRAM
if this organ can still play i would love to hear it play
Wa wa wee wa, it’s a very nice!
Wow! Un Bateau on a 33k pipe organ! What would Debussy think? I’m glad New Jersey rescued this magnificent instrument.
The sound of this organ gives me goosebumps! The lush sounds from 22:20 onward are incredible! The 2 manual and pedal pipe organ I build for myself will be a tiny bit smaller :))
This organ should be listed on the UNESCO WORLD CULTURE HERITAGE LIST! Its the most valuable and powerfull pipe organ in the world!
I love this video with my heart
Hi, someone please tell me what song starts playing at the 9:35 mark. It is so lovely.
My favourite part is where the 32' diapason pipes are
At 6:30
Pipe organs are positively awesome. It's the only instrument where both the artist and the audience must come to the instrument. Even grand pianos are relatively easily moved from place to place. And the complexity, given when it was originally designed, is equivalent to the technology of Apollo 11. Few readers of this post will even know who Dr. Albert Schweitzer was, and even fewer will know of his intimate connection to the pipe organ. God grant that the pipe organ should never be erased from our culture.
My Gosh...it really IS huge!
Wow. What a machine. Good luck to you :o)
What environmental considerations are there, like salt water in the air, insects? Are the lower floors now protected against another hurricane?
I can only dream of playing this 7 manual pipe organ!
Keep dreaming . I studied piano and organ and unbelievably got to play a big pipe organ once a week for a school year. Unbelievable and never to be forgotten. It was a student thing , not that I was some great player ! Today if I was physically able, I would volunteer to clean the church just for the opportunity to play.
this young man is amazing at this organ
25:30 this part of the song (I have no idea what it’s called someone please tell me) captures my love for music as a whole. I can’t describe it but Jesus that sounds like what you’d hear when going to heaven!
choral joseph jongen
Maravilloso instrumento. Te transporta y hace soñar. Cuerpo y mente se unen al instrumento.
This would take years to tune with like 10 organ tuners. This thing is huge!
I am at the hall now for the AEW show, being here for two day I had the chance to check this thing out. It is huge.
Could you please make a video of Cortège pour orgue by Claude Debussy.
The pipe organ is often called the King of Instruments. If that's the case, then this is the King of Kings. 👑
Very instructive video! I have a friend in Brazil that listened Walter Kraft playing this colossal instrument in 1975.
As if the pipe organ couldn’t be even more magnificent
I believe that the organ at the Pizza Stop Cafe in Mesa, AZ. It has been constantly added to over the years.
Wonderful, loved it. Thank you.
Anyone know if there is a full recording of the first piece of incidental music used and who played it? (I forget its name though I know it well).
All of the music in this video was played by Peter Conte during one of the noon concerts at the Hall. Search for him on TH-cam and find it on one of the Boardwalk Hall videos.
@@michaelherring1944 Thanks
I find this amazing ' this marvel of engineering is more complicated than a 1980's Aircraft Carrier.
I bet there are more buttons and switches than a cockpit of a 747 passenger plane.
I'd love to travel and see it and hear it before l die 👍💥😎
Приглашаю практически в живую потанцевать на Балу! Бал идет прямо сейчас!!
I’d give my life to be able to learn this.
As it happens, that's just about what it takes.
pretty cool, huh?
I’ve been playing it since 1967. I’m now 96 Lord Jesus I continue to ask you for ever lasting life amen lord amen 🙏
Imagine if they played Phantom of the Opera
Is the organ played on a schedule, is there a behind the scenes tour offered. Is there a website associated with the organ, schedules of concerts, tours etc.
Thank you
wow and i worked on pipe organs in Adelaide in the 80s doing up to 7 a day top up tuning
When we see all the pipes we think wow that must take a lot of air. yes if we were to use every pipe but as far as I know an organist only has 8 fingers and 2 feet and 2 thumbs so 12 pipes unless it takes 3 pipes to make one note. So interesting and I could be wrong in my assumption. Thanks! I have a question; when a section of pipes is awaiting restoration does it mean they are inoperable or they can be used but need tuning and refinishing the pipe itself? Thank you!
Organists can play at least two pedals per foot but otherwise yes you’re correct😊
I have to ask: What do the "Danger" signs all over the place actually say?
As spectacular an engineering feat, and sonically magnificent this organ is, it doesn't match the architectural and artistic splendor of the great baroque pipe organs of Europe. Of course, many of those, having MANY thousands of pipes, also produce a magnificent, glorious sound. The great music of that era is still unsurpassed. One name is sufficient; J.S. Bach.
For centuries, all pipe organs, from the smallest, to the great cathedral organs of Europe were completely manual with no electrical assistance.
Great pipe organs---the largest instruments ever produced---are a tribute to man's ingenuity, creativity, and aspirations.
Let them always be preserved and used. There is nothing like them.
with the massive size of the hall, i would think the delay of sound and the amount of reflections would make it disorienting to play.. but then again anyone capable of playing such a machine is a pro and wouldn't be put off by those factors.
How’s the restoration coming?
Why not sampling the working part and sell as a "growing" sampleset? Most Hauptwerkusers would be interested... including me!
Is this organ ever open to the public to hear?
Yes, most Wednesday's. Go early for the curators tour, stay for the noon recital.
The newish Mormon Tabernacle organ is mighty grand, with 11,623 pipes.
The building which houses it is surely large, but it might do the organ an injustice because the building is hardly big enough to easily fly a helicopter inside it. But I'm not too sure how it compares with the much older Mormon Tabernacle organ.
just "WOW" 😳
Please, include the dimensions of the building that houses the organ.
WOW!!! I thought the Wanamaker was big. This beauty is ENORMOUS! So the Wanamaker must be the second biggest in the world then? Oh yeah. He just said it was LOL
There are 2 other organs that are the largest theatre organs in the world namely the Karma labs Wurlitzer (now the largest theatre organ in the world) & the Sanphilipo Wurlitzer ( was the largest but now is the second largest) Both these are " Manafactured" organs which were modern creations built from original parts of other historical organs. The largest original fully functioning theatre organ in the world is the Radio city New York Wurlitzer.
i never knew the true size and magnitude of these things until today, i always thought they where just a more complicated piano with each pipe corresponding to a key, i thought the pipes you could see where the only ones but i now know that an organ is THE ENTIRE BUILDING.
Is there a MIDI interface or other computer-based control mechanism?
One suprising thing is that there does not appear to be any Reserviors/Regulators present anywhere as being the worlds largest pipe organ one would expect there to be the largest Reservior s in the world including some large double risers or does this use small theatre organ style regulators hidden under the pipe chests.
I wish there was an Electric version of this Organ.
Electricity makes this all work, relays, stop tabs, blowers and processors
I am writing a screenplay where 2 young children are playing hide and seek throughout all the chambers. What would be the one thing besides the noise that might make an 8 year old child feel lost and afraid, if they were to go into an area that's small tight, claustrophobic. Any perspective from you would be greatly appreciated!
Background music name?
The background music is all listed in the description! But it is as follows:
Musical selections used during the tour:
INTRODUCTION & RIGHT STAGE CHAMBER - Liebesfreud, Fritz Kreisler - Organist Peter Conte
LEFT STAGE CHAMBER - Cortège, Claude Debussy - Organist Peter Conte
CEILING & GALLERY CHAMBERS - Choral, Joseph Jongen - Organist Peter Conte
BLOOPERS - The Entertainer, Scott Joplin - Organist Scott Breiner
@@BoardwalkOrgans Rachmaninoff's arrangment of our national anthem interpreted by Tim Sharp would sound great on this thing when it's on Full Organ mode.
What was the song playing in the beginning of the video called?
All of the musical selections used during the tour are listed in the description, but the beginning is Liebesfreud, Fritz Kreisler - Organist Peter Conte
@@BoardwalkOrgans Thank you very much.
I hope there are still a good amount of pneumatic left.
The whole tour is was watching like this: 😲
20:30 Hertz, or Cycles per Second. You can't have both.
If memory serves, the ceiling Fanfare and Echo divisions are in the worst shape, correct? I’ve seen videos of the Fanfare chamber, and it’s deplorable and saddening. Here’s hoping they’ll both get some needed TLC in the future!
1:18
I’ve always dreamed of playing a very large pipe organ like that one
I imagine myself going back to the 1940's where i disassemble every pipe and every part of this organ and bringing it home with me before the 1944 hurricane destroys the Boardwalk auditorium
The next thing you should do: put a giant carousel in this place.
A triple leveled carousel and wide enough to house like 1000 per ride that is 🤣
For a while I thought that that title belongs to the LDS Church in Salt lake city.
Ho
Lee
CRAP!!!
How do you even learn how to play this thing? Amazing.....
I wonder how this organ would sound if it all works
Loud!
Incredible 😍
Just who funded this extraordinary machine and its acoustic housing??? 😮😮
Why are there only 3 comments
The comments were turned off until only a couple of weeks ago
Shame that literally nobody has taken a pic with the 64' pipes ever
There's pictures on another video of when it was being built, I'll try and find it for you.
@@JIMD6370 I meant a pic of a someone standing next to a 64' pipe , 64 feet is like 7 stories tall .
I'd appreciate it if u could find any .
So it's true, everything is bigger in America.
How long before your done
Ambatakaaaaam
People need a bank account number, to donate for restauration...
If you visit our website at www.boardwalkorgans.org you can find out more information about the organs as well as donate! Look for the "Donate Now" button on the left side of the page.
It's a cinema organ, isn't it ?
It’s every type of pipe organ, but voiced on much higher pressures than normal and with way huger scale pipe work than normal to fill this gigantic building with sound.
Here's why its called the largest pipe organ in world
The Wanamaker organ has more ranks of pipes than this…
Would be worth an 800 mile trip to hear this in person. No doubt the low pipes would be rattling your ribs.
What good is the world's biggest organ if you can't use all of it?
That's what she said.
The organ was damaged by a hurricane in 1944. Until recently, the vast majority of the instrument was unplayable. In 2017, around 20% of the organ was functioning. Now about half of the organ is working.
It's being restored as we speak.