Today we have people creating things that makes you fly or that makes robots using just air to move them and no electricity. We still have this crazy inventions but they are in new forms, youtube is full of them!
What an amazing work of art! Hearing this is like having the creator himself leap through time to show off his wondrous creation - just as fresh awe-inspiring as the day it was completed!
@@jerryvandyke9216 It can't I'm afraid. It's owned by the Dutch Openairmuseum and for that reason the organ is part of the Dutch historical state collection. It can only be loaned to other museums.
The first time i saw one of these organs with the stacked, foldable music was on the streets of Holland, many, many years ago! It was very special for sure!!! If ever in Southern Ca out by Magic Mountain, venture over to San Sylmar and the Nethercutt (Merle Norman Cosmetics) collection to see AMAZING PLAYER REPRODUCER instruments as well as hundreds of 100 point vintage automobiles! Plus a UP private railway car with small player organ on board it! Call ahead for appointment to the tower of beauty!
Most of the surviving examples I’ve seen have been Belgian Cafe Organs. Some were still in the cafes in Belgian parks in the 1970s. I hope they are still there!
Finally popped up from my dusty file, but it was wrong. Calliope was the word I was looking for, but these are not air or steam driven like calliopes were.
De Schelm speelt niet. Er zou schade zijn door muizen uit de tijd dat ie niet in een goede opslag stond. Misschien dat het museum nog eens zo ver komt om het te laten repareren.
I know the song is primarily Singin' in the Rain, but does anyone know if that bombastic bit at the start and middle is from anything in particular? Or is it just a custom flourish from the composer/arranger?
Deze staat in de opslag volgens mij, dus tenzij ze hem weer in een museum zoals Van Speelklok tot Pierement zetten of meenemen naar een evenement denk ik dat je geduld moet hebben helaas.
Organs this size were placed in dance halls and beer gardens and the like and stayed put. But some of the street organs themselves were pretty big especially when you realized they were hauled over dirt roads and cobblestone streets. amazing.
@@guymandudely324 maybe you should- these are "dance organs" they were built for dance halls. They are not band organs or streets organs or fair organs.
So the question is "Why is all of that stuff sitting in storage and not being enjoyed by people?" I for one worked hard on some of that stuff in Holland. You think I can use that stuff in the supposed afterlife? There is no reasoning behind letting things sit unused.
How did these things make money? Did people pay to see it operate? Or were they more like an attraction to draw people into a larger thing like a circus or fair?
I miss when we had to make complicated machines to do tasks like this. We ended up with these amazing creations.
sometimes limitations can make creativity beautiful and interesting in unexpected ways
Today we have people creating things that makes you fly or that makes robots using just air to move them and no electricity. We still have this crazy inventions but they are in new forms, youtube is full of them!
Well computers are very complicated instruments!
@GreedPainLove they are but they are nowhere near as amazing to watch as these mechanical masterpieces
@@askjeevescosby2928 True that
Respect for the creators of these instruments, for their imagination and knowledge
The ingenuity that went into the creation of this wonderful piece of mechanical art just blows my mind.
What an amazing work of art! Hearing this is like having the creator himself leap through time to show off his wondrous creation - just as fresh awe-inspiring as the day it was completed!
Though this lovely old organ has seen better days, it still sounds great.
As much as I'd love to see it in it's prime, there's beauty in it's aged appearance too
Wow, a warehouse full of ‘em. I wanna go there!
Only three organs there. This is the only one that works though.
There’s a museum of mechanique’ in the San Francisco Fisherman’s wharf that has some
@@jeffreykoerhuis7283. Jeffrey do you know if this organ can be brought ?🇨🇦
@@jerryvandyke9216 It can't I'm afraid. It's owned by the Dutch Openairmuseum and for that reason the organ is part of the Dutch historical state collection. It can only be loaned to other museums.
The first time i saw one of these organs with the stacked, foldable music was on the streets of Holland, many, many years ago! It was very special for sure!!! If ever in Southern Ca out by Magic Mountain, venture over to San Sylmar and the Nethercutt (Merle Norman Cosmetics) collection to see AMAZING PLAYER REPRODUCER instruments as well as hundreds of 100 point vintage automobiles! Plus a UP private railway car with small player organ on board it! Call ahead for appointment to the tower of beauty!
Most of the surviving examples I’ve seen have been Belgian Cafe Organs. Some were still in the cafes in Belgian parks in the 1970s. I hope they are still there!
These things fascinate me. A craftsman ship that will probably never come back it’s a shame.
I'm amazed at the good things humans come up with.🎉
Would like to see close up of the Jacquard Loom style punch card reader that enables this thing to play songs of any length.
Love it! Reminds me of the time in the early 80s when Piet Kee brought some street organs into St Laurens, Alkmaar to play with the big church organ.
Prachtig!!!!!! En een weerzien na zooooveel jaren. Veel geschiedenis met dit unieke orgel met zijn innemende klanken.
Ein sehr schön gestaltetes Kunstwerk ,diese alte Orgel 😊
Wow, welch hervorragendes Kunstwerk da die Musik dazu zu hören :) 🔝👏😍🎶👌
The two bring back memories of creating something beautiful for melodies that had no words.
A marvel of ingenuity, and art.
voor mij persoonlijk de mooiste mortier die er is
super duper wow. I'm singing in the rain!!!! 😮🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
Порадовали.. Звук великолепный.. Спасибо🎉❤
:Hallo my new neighbour... i play the piccolo flute and hope, you will be not disturbed.. "
" Hey nice, i play an instrument too"
Wow that’s totally awesome 😍😍👍
Thanks for posting this 🙏
Wow, just wow! Great sound quality & gorgeous for the eyes, too!
These beautiful and musical machines have another name - it is quite escaping me. The name is back there in the dusty part of my brain. Help!
Finally popped up from my dusty file, but it was wrong. Calliope was the word I was looking for, but these are not air or steam driven like calliopes were.
Fantastisch!😍😍😍😍😍
Wish there were more of these. God bless. Jesus loves you!
Great Scott Marty!
How wonderful! Thanks for sharing.
Hele mooie Mortier, met daarnaast nog een hele mooie Gavioli!
Ik ben heel benieuwd hoe het met De Schelm is. Speelt het orgel nog en zijn er nog concrete plannen voor?
De Schelm speelt niet. Er zou schade zijn door muizen uit de tijd dat ie niet in een goede opslag stond. Misschien dat het museum nog eens zo ver komt om het te laten repareren.
This is when Engineering and Artistry work together on a common basis. We need more of this and less soul sucking AI.
That man in front, was not there, his mind blowed up back to childhood.
Waooo! Espectacular!!👏👏👏👏
Amazing, and an impressive arrangement, too
This may even date from before electricity. An amazing piece of mechanised music history, as brief as the compact cassette then the CD.
Oh WOW!! It's incredible. What MADMAN built this!!
I love machines like that.
Gorgeous and amazing❤
Great fun! Thank you ❤
When were these massive musical machines typically made ? Like around what year, judging by all the artwork I wanna say 1800s ?
I know the song is primarily Singin' in the Rain, but does anyone know if that bombastic bit at the start and middle is from anything in particular? Or is it just a custom flourish from the composer/arranger?
"bombastic bit at the start and middle"
Same question here. It sounds familiar.
You are correct! “Singing in the Rain” was sung by “Gene Kelly” and “Debbie Reynolds”. 👍 😀
Beautiful.
That was crazy amazing!
Beautiful ❤❤
How fun is that?!!! Wonderful!
Aaaaah! Singing in the Rain! Fun!
What incredible fun!
mechanical marvellous
WOW!!!!🎉
Im deeply in love with my player piano!!!
Achei o máximo! ❤
Изумительно. Благодарствую. 🤔👍🏼🙏🏼
🎶 I'm dancin' n singing' in the ☔rain🎶
Amazing machine!!
A-t-il dans ses cartons "Les Parapluies de Cherbourg" ? 😊
Waar kan men deze zien en horen,
Deze staat in de opslag volgens mij, dus tenzij ze hem weer in een museum zoals Van Speelklok tot Pierement zetten of meenemen naar een evenement denk ik dat je geduld moet hebben helaas.
Is this street organ for sale ? 🇨🇦
@@jerryvandyke9216Natuurlijk, every Dutchman will happily sell you something at the right price!
@@rubenskiiideze is niet van speelklok, maar van het openluchtmuseum
@@OttoVonChesterfield234 ah thanks!
❤ maravilhoso, da pra fazer um belo show 🎉
Do they have a Christmas set on video I bet it would be awesome to hear for Christmas!!!!!
Wow!
What a joy.
Wonderful!
hartstikke mooi
That is marvelous.
Good video, like
Wow,It sounds anazing
Fantastic! Where is this located? Can you tell me anything about the next organ to the left?
Prachtig orgel!
Het is waarschijnlijk de mooiste Mortier die er nog is in geheel originele staat!
Magnificent. Quite wonderful. Forgive my ignorance, but am I correct in thinking this is a Wurlitzer?
Prachtige klank.Zeer fraaie Mortier. Waar stond dit instrument eerst ?
More amazing was that they disassembled these monsters and carried them from town to town so people could dance to the music.
Organs this size were placed in dance halls and beer gardens and the like and stayed put. But some of the street organs themselves were pretty big especially when you realized they were hauled over dirt roads and cobblestone streets. amazing.
@@BG-sl9lv How do you know that 'organs this size ... stayed put?' Were you around then? Do some research before correcting me.
@@guymandudely324 maybe you should- these are "dance organs" they were built for dance halls. They are not band organs or streets organs or fair organs.
@@BG-sl9lv Many large dance hall organs were built to be dismantled into pieces for transport from town-to-town.
Ух ты!!! Ну и аппарат!!!
Очень гармоничное произведение искусства- с музыкальной, инженерной и художественной точки зрения....
increible
Cool 😎 large music 🎶 box machine!
Herrlich analog
Heel mooi!!!!
Hab es mir gleich zweimal angehört😊👍❤ und selbstverständlich auch den Kanal abonniert.
Schitterend dat dit is behouden
Klinkt fantastisch.👌 Maar het Openluchtmuseum is in Arnhem, niet in Amersfoort.
En het depot waar dit orgel staat, Amersfoort.
Is it playing "Singing in the Rain"?
凄い!最強の機械仕掛けに感心す。
De melodie die gespeeld wordt herken ik als een variatie op "singing in the rain"
My question is, how does it play?
considering it's in storage and plays little is amazingly good
cool! punch card player. a predecessor to the hollerith cards.
Its huge!
Впечатляющая музыкальная шарманка 😃
просто обалдеть !
Outra linha do tempo??
what an amazing piece of hardware. so much fun
Nice
❤❤❤❤❤❤😊
Ab 1:30 Die beiden Pfeiler: Das Gebäude wurde definitiv um die Orgel herum gebaut :-)
Wait a minute: is that "Singing in the Rain"?
Dimana itu tempat nya,?
Whoa 😮
Is that the gavioli next to the mortier?
gavioli organ The Schelm
@@mooixdraaien does it play?
@@tomgardiner794 no unfortunately not
@mooixdraaien where is this at?
@@Innev in the storage of the national museum in Amersfoort in Holland
A little EDM drum beat there at the very beginning😅😅
Impressive……😊
And to think its survived (probably) 2 world wars, cold war etc
That's _Singing in the Rain _
So the question is "Why is all of that stuff sitting in storage and not being enjoyed by people?" I for one worked hard on some of that stuff in Holland. You think I can use that stuff in the supposed afterlife? There is no reasoning behind letting things sit unused.
How did these things make money? Did people pay to see it operate? Or were they more like an attraction to draw people into a larger thing like a circus or fair?