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Project 2000 makes Y2K deadline

by Herbert L. Heustis

Herbert L. Heustis is a contributing editor of THE DIAPASON.

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In the process of building an electronic index, the immense value of the Internet became apparent. The most difficult challenges were exemplified by two problems: the first was the need for easy data entry and the second was a need for universal access, once the work was completed.

Ease of data entry required a way to get data into the computer without bogging down in a laborious time and cost intensive process.  Funds were not only "limited"—they were nonexistent. The solution to this problem was the work of volunteers who were retired organ enthusiasts. Typing assignments were organized into 10-hour blocks. Each volunteer had an assignment and, upon completion, sent the diskette to us. They could use any word processor and pace themselves at their best rate.

The second problem was not so easily solved. A "beta" version of the software was circulated with mixed results. Some users praised the work we had done and others replied with a litany of complaints relating to the software—they were very frustrated if it didn't work on their computer! It was obvious that we were facing a problem of universal access, as well as distribution, packaging and the like.

The answer to these problems became apparent one evening when your lowly scribe was surfing the net and came across the Early Music Archive at the University of Vienna School of Economics. It was our enormous good fortune that Gerhard Gonter, administrator of the archive, offered us a place on the "Osiris" computer. Thus, the Osiris Archive of organ specifications was born and with it, a home page for Herbert L. Heustis Index.

Technically, the Osiris Archive is a "Unix FTP Site" which means that it is completely transparent and "software free." The files on this site can be downloaded to any computer with any net browser or ftp software.

The reader can now see that we achieved both universal data entry and universal access. By eliminating the requirement for any particular software, we removed barriers to the use of the program and the acquisition of information. Over the last decade, there have been numerous announcements of "organ databases," but few actual accomplishments. It is a good guess that the gremlin that stops progress on these project is the need for specific software, formatting and hardware requirements. The Internet and the free-form databases that it makes possible solve these problems and allow database projects to go forward to completion. In its ninth decade of publication, Herbert L. Heustis salutes the Internet for making its electronic database possible.

Related Content

Keeping Up with the OrganNet Or, "Try Not to Spin Your Wheels in Cyberspace"

by Herbert L. Huestis
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It seems like eons have passed since personal computers appeared in our lives--but it has only been a little over a decade since I bought my first grey box with a green phosphor screen--a 1984 Kaypro. It was built like a truck, was a great word processor, made no fan noise, and the cursor did not blink. Unfortunately, this super typewriter was considered obsolete in three years, and I replaced it with a "PC" with a fan so loud I thought it was going to take off. Nowadays, when I acquire a computer, I kill the blinking cursor and fuss with the fan to make it as quiet as the old Kaypro. So much for "keeping up!"

Today, the Internet challenges us as much as those first computers did. Kenneth Matthews writes to Piporg-L from San Francisco:

All right. If someone will explain to me, I promise to pay attention this time. I can't figure out (or remember) where Osiris actually is . . .

--Kenneth (spinning my wheels in cyberspace) Matthews

Ken's problem is not unique on the Internet. There are thousands of offerings, but you have to know where to find them. The Osiris Archive is no exception. Ken is trying to keep up, too.

There is so much activity on the OrganNet (Piporg-L) that most "cyber-organists" are panting to keep pace. Piporg-L started with 40 subscribers and has since passed the 600 mark. I long resisted Windows software, thinking I could avoid clicking on icons in favor of the ten commandments of DOS. Finally, I gave in so I could "surf the net" when Piporg-L joined the World Wide Web with their own "web page." This "hypertext" presentation of Piporg-L includes a link to the Osiris Archive as well.

What does all this mean?   Well, it means that you can load "Mosaic" or "Netscape," set your sights on http://albany.edu/~piporg-l or http://osiris.wu-wien.ac.at/ftp/pub/earlym-l/organs

and a page will appear on your computer screen to guide you through the OrganNet (Piporg-L) or The Osiris Archive.

From these "web pages" you can investigate a variety of organ topics from the Organs of Glasgow, to over six hundred specifications in the Osiris Archive. This is a big jump from just a few years ago, when this whole business was just getting started.

Here in a nutshell, are a few corners of cyberspace that organists can enjoy:

Piporg-L: Pipe organs and related topics

http://albany.edu/~piporg-l

The Piporg-L web page will introduce you the contents of the list, starting with a quick guide to searching the archives, biography files, the Osiris Archive, and recordings of organ music in the CD-Connection catalog.

Osiris Archive

http://osiris.wu-wien.ac.at/ftp/pub/earlym-l/organs/

The Osiris Archive web page describes how to search for over 600 organ specifications in the Osiris database. It lists help files that answer the most frequently asked questions about the archive--how to search for files, upload and downloadspecifications and how to volunteer to type new specifications for the archive. Last but not least, it provides a link to The Diapason Index --some 14,000 entries from the annual reviews that are published each year.

The Osiris Archive is growing daily with submissions from all over the world. The archive is located at the Vienna University of Economics and is part of the Earlym-L archives (a sister list to Piporg-L).  As hoped, it contains not only organ specifications, but playing impressions, recording discography and builders' notes. This material is kept in a free form database and is listed by organ builder, site, city, country and date of construction.

The Diapason Index

http://osiris.wu-wien.ac.at/ftp/pub/earlym-l/organs/diapason.index

The Diapason Index may now be searched online from the Osiris Archive web page, or may be downloaded into your own word processor. These files are "comma delimited text files" and may be imported into your favorite database program, such as Dbase or FoxPro.  Downloading the file takes a bit of time --usually about 20 minutes if you have a fast modem.

Organ CDs

http://albany.edu/~piporg-l/organcds.@cd-conn

This spring, Ben Chi, co-owner of Piporg-L, posted an announcement that he had downloaded the organ catalog of The CD Connection, a well known catalog order firm. He culled out some 1,500 organ CDs and saved them on Piporg-L. To download this CD list by email, send this message to

[email protected]:

get organcds.@cd-conn

Be prepared for a moderate length download. This is a 27 page text file. Once you have loaded this file into your word processor, you may search for title, composer and artist, using your own word processor's "search" command. Prices of the organ CDs in this catalog are reported to be very competitive.

The OrganNet Today: A Tangled World-Wide-Web We Weave

by Herbert L. Huestis
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The organ world of the Internet is indeed awash in web pages--a tangled mass of advertising with each "www.com" page clamoring for the "net-surfer's" attention. Some are merely informative sites, while the greatest share are "home pages" of organ builders and technicians. No one wants to be left out of the world wide web--there are books in every drug store promoting the benefits of advertising on the Internet. Someone behind every new web page is hoping for a bit of the largess that is promised by the purveyors of a new form of drug store novel: How to Succeed on the Web! What was once a vehicle for research and information is looking more and more like a topsy-turvy "yellow pages."

That being said, the situation will surely get worse before it gets better. Here and there one finds various sites that guide the earnest user amongst and between the "billboards," so they can find topics of real interest. The first bit of advice to organists who want to let their "fingers do the walking" on the Internet is to start with major "links" in the organ world, rather than trying to sort out the thousands of entries that are listed on the "search engines" like Webcrawler, Lycos, Yahoo, InfoSeek and Alta Vista.

Some links are found right where you would expect them--for example, The American Guild of Organists at http://www.agohq.org and the Royal College of Canadian Organists at http://www.capitalnet.com/~rjewell/rcco.html. Many fine offerings may be found at "Pipe Organs and Related Topics" at http://uacsc2.albany.edu/~piporg-l and of course, The Diapason at http://www.sgcpubs.com/thediapason.html and The Osiris Archive at http://osiris.wu-wien.ac.at/earlym-l/organs.

A most unexpected listing of pipe organ subjects appears under the "Nerdworld" banner at http://www.nerdworld.com.nw8061.html. Here the reader will find the American Pipe Organ Builders Association pages, resource pages for finding recordings of pipe organ related compact disks, and the usual organ builders' home pages!

Enough of internet jargon--perhaps it is useful to highlight typical people and places that serve as tour guides to this electronic malaise of competing "addresses." There are a few personalities who have emerged as leaders in "OrganNet" happenings. Here they are:

Ben Chi and Piporg-L

http://uacsc2.albany.edu/~piporg-l

The Piporg-L list remains as the most successful email gathering place for organ enthusiasts. The links presented here are logical and well organized. An evening spent perusing information and organizations here will be rewarding indeed.

Steve Fox and The Seattle Pipe Organ Scene

This is a fine example of "area" tours that are available on the net. Similar examples may be found all over the world. Armchair travelogues abound, and thanks to the web, world-wide commuters can plan the itinerary of any trip around organs of a geographical area. Steve can be found at http://www.eskimo.com/~sfox/seaorgan.htm.

Maureen Jais-Mick and AGO online

Ongoing columns in The American Organist serve as an excellent guide to OrganNet surfers. Its not a bad idea to clip out these columns and keep a little notebook of worthy places. Look for Maureen at http://www.agohq.org/-tao/agonline.html

Ross Jewell and Christopher Dawes of the RCCO

These two gentlemen are the "communications" department of the RCCO and their guide to the net is very focused and well organized.

Nerdworld

Nerdworld links are available in an extensive number of subject areas and topics of interest. This straightforward listing tends to highlight important organizations and associations and picks up important links that are hard to find elsewhere.

Here are a few tips to help unravel the morass of information you will encounter in a typical jaunt on the Internet.

Bookmark your interesting links

All internet software has long provided a means to "bookmark" points of interest found in an evening's surfing. That little mouse button called "add bookmark" can be extremely handy if you want to return to the scene of the crime to gather a bit more information later.

Saving documents

"Control-S" usually saves the document you are scanning directly to your computer. It's a sort of "quick ftp" meaning "file transfer protocol." That means you can almost effortlessly gather complete web pages and organ tours by "copying the file," or "saving as . . . "

Open a simultaneous word processor while you are "surfing"

It can be most helpful to open a word processor in your computer before you open your web browser. This means that if you come across an interesting address or site location, you can "copy" a bit of the screen text you encounter for future reference.

Keep a "link" notebook

This is the usual enjoinder to "organize your thoughts." It seems that "surfing" on the net suggests that the computer user is mindlessly floating from one bit of information to another, when in fact, we know that the human brain does not actually have to operate that way. Many folks are natural organizers in many aspects of their life, and once they sit in front of their computer, they have the option managing their time there, just they do in other aspects of their work and leisure. It's odd that people who would not take a motor trip without a planned itinerary will park themselves in front of the computer screen and mindlessly click the mouse without thinking "where am I going and what am I doing?"

Take heart. You can plan your computer commute the same way you plan other activities. As they say, "Just do it!" If you take the time to write down your preludes and postludes and choral anthem of the week--you can make a few notes of the sites you want to visit--that way you can reduce your computer time a bit, so that you don't raise the dander of the "computer widow (or widower)" in the other room. Bon Voyage!

OrganNet Report

by Herbert L. Huestis
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The Osiris Archive--A Personal Account

Internet address:

http://osiris.wu-wien.ac.at/ftp/pub/

earlym-l/organs/

The Osiris Archive, since its inception a little over a year
ago, has grown to over 1300 organ specifications and sports a 23-page index. There is every reason to believe that it will soon double or quadruple in size. The idea of a database for organ specifications and related information has been
around for quite a long time, but the Osiris database actually worked. Why?

For me, the biggest problem in creating an organ database
was not how to enter the data, but how to design a format that would accept
information from a variety of sources without being too restrictive. Typical
databases work just fine for phone books and the rolodex at the office, but as
they grow more complex to accommodate a wide variety of details, they become
more restrictive with regard to how data may be organized. The accommodation of
organ specifications, scalings, drawings, photographs, discography and a host
of other particulars is no easy matter.

The idea of working on an organ database came into focus
when I attended the conference on "The Historical Organ in America,"
hosted by Arizona State University, The Westfield Center and The American Organ
Academy in 1991. (See Huestis and Zuiderveld, "The Historical Organ in
America," The Diapason, June 1992:10.) The outcome of that conference was
a unique organ documentary published by the Westfield Center. This documentary
was most unusual because a group of artisan organ builders, rather than
harboring "trade secrets," released architectural drawings, scalings
and procedures used for the construction of a series of very fine instruments.

That uniqueness was also evident in the wide diversity of
this chronicle of hand made organs--ranging from John Brombaugh's mean-tone
organ for the Haga Church in Göteborg, Sweden to Fritz Noack's
reconstruction of the famous Hook organ at Mechanic's Hall in Worcester,
Massachusetts.

The presentation of these volumes of data was enhanced by
the masterful editing done by Lynn Edwards of The Westfield Center. She was
able to put together a readable publication that dealt with a huge variety of
information. Squeezed into this account of contemporary organ building were
such diverse subjects ranging from tuning and temperaments to the details of
electronic combination actions. She included pipe scalings, computer drawings
(CAD), printouts of wind chest designs and illustrations of reed shallots. And
brought it off in an attractive and readable volume!

All this made me think: "How can you do something like
this in a database? Can it take in all these different kinds of information
without coming apart at the seams?" As I pondered these questions, I was
slowly learning the  mysteries of
the "Unix" computer operating system, so that I could "surf the
'Net." This was just a few years ago--before the latest generation of
computers made the Internet into a picture show. At that time, Unix operating
systems were the basis for many bulletin boards and electronic meeting places
along the Internet's cyber-highway. I realized that the Unix system was a key
to a comprehensive database for organs, because it could accommodate a huge
variety of information the same way that electronic bulletin boards house thousands of computer files on an immense array of subjects.

I struggled with this notion for a couple of years when a
solution came to me through a contact on the Internet. Piporg-l (the OrganNet)
had become established and was growing rapidly. Along with Piporg-l, a sister
list had appeared called Earlym-l. In addition to the usual offerings of early
music trivia, recordings and general comment, it included archive at the
University of Economics in Vienna. By and by, I corresponded with Gerhard
Gonter, a systems analyist at the Vienna facility, who had set up a database
list, primarily having to do with early music recordings and catalogs. I told
him what of my interest in a pipe organ database, and he offered me a spot in
the Osiris computer to set up a directory, and subsequently a home page for
world wide web access.

Running on this unix system, the Osiris directory was ideal
for a completely free-form database. I could catalog entries by builder, site,
city, country and date and anything else that seemed like a pertinent key word.
Like this:

Cavaille-coll.notre-dame.paris.france.1868

Each keyword is separated by a period, and altogether, they
become the unique title of a file that may be read with any word processor.
There are no special "fields" or "catalogues" or
"tables" to worry about. The Internet is an ideal location for this
kind of database and its phenomenal growth is surely the result of its
interactive nature. Had this database been started "in the blind"
without the possibility of interactive access, its growth would probably have
been much more limited.

Another key element in the growth of the Osiris Archive is
the participation of about a dozen volunteers in the preparation of document
files. Volunteers come from all over the world--the USA, Germany, England,
Singapore, Italy, and Australia, to name a few places. Several volunteers have
concentrated on historic organs, making many of the entries especially
invaluable. Some have specialized in particular places, such as the organs of
Oxford, England. Some files are very complex, with scalings for all the pipes
of the organ. Others are simply the specification and little else. A file can
be long or short, simple or complex, a simple document or a spreadsheet. All
are accessible on the Unix system.

It is a mark of acceptance of the Osiris Archive that more
and more requesters  are
disappointed when they do not find a specification there. The present total of
1300 organs is just a beginning. The time will surely come when the list is
many times that number and many organs will be represented not only by their
stoplist, but discography, builders' notes, scales and "all sorts and
conditions" of data. Until that time, we can just watch it grow.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>   

Here is an analysis of the Osiris Archive, dated January 16,
1996, giving the number of organs for each builder.

   1: adams

   1: adema

   1:
aeolian-skinner-sipe

  21:
aeolian-skinner

   5:
aeolian

   1: agati

   1:
ahrend-brunzema

   5:
ahrend

   2:
aizpuru

   1:
akerman-lund

   1: alain

   1:
alberdi-marti

   1: alley

  28: amezua

  10: andover

   1:
anneessens

   2:
antegnati

   2:
appleton

   1:
aragones

   1:
argaiz

   1:
arrizabalaga

  20: austin

   1:
azarola

   1: baetz

   1:
banayas

   1:
banzaf

   1:
baquero

   1:
barckhoff

   1: bates

   1: batz

   1: beckerath-wolff

  14: beckerath

  15: bedient

   1:
benzmiller

   2:
berdalonga

   7:
berghaus

   1:
berns-pels-zoon

   1:
betolaza

   1:
bielfeld

   1:
bielfeldt

   7:
bigelow

   1: binss

   1:
birouste

   2:
blancafort

   7: blank

   1:
boisseau

   7: bond

   1: bono

   3: bosch

   1:
bozeman-gibson

   4:
bozeman

   1:
bradford

   2:
breinbauer

   1:
brindley-foster

   1:
brombaugh-richards-fowkes

  15: brombaugh

   1: brown

   2:
brunner

   1:
buckhow

   4:
buzard

   1:
byfield

   1:
cadinanos

   1:
cahmen

   2:
caimari

   2:
calvete

   1:
cananos

   1: carod

  14: casavant

  24:
cavaille-coll

   1:
chapline

   2:
christersen-soenner

   1:
christoph

   1:
church

   4:
clicquot

   1:
cole-woodbury

   1:
collins

   1:
collon-st-michael

   1:
conacher

 
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
1: coulter

   1: crum

   1:
dallam-willis-walker

   1:
danion-gonzales

   1:
daublaine

   1:
deania

   1:
debierre-beuchet

   1:
debierre

   1:
delarosa

   1: dial

   2:
dobson

   1:
donahue

   4:
dourte

   1: drake

   1:
ducroquet

   1:
duyschot-vater

 
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
1: duyschot

   2:
echevarria

   1:
egedacher

   3:
eleizgaray

   4: erben

   1:
estadella

  11: estey

   1:
evans-barr

   1: fabry

   1:
farmer

   1:
farrand-votey

   2:
faucher

   1:
fincke

   1:
fisk-andover

  26: fisk

  10: flentrop

   2: forster-andrews

   1:
fowler

   1:
freiburger

   1:
freundt

   1:
freytag

   2:
fritts-richards

   6:
fritts

   2:
frobenius

   1:
fuhrer

   2:
gabler

   1:
garnier

   1:
garrels

   1:
gerhardt

   1: ghys

   2: gill

   1: gluck

   2: gober

   1: goetz

   8: gomez

   2:
goulding-wood

   1: graaf

   1: grant

   2:
gray-davidson

   2: gray

   3:
grenzing

   2:
groenlunds

   1:
grotian

   1:
grueneberg

   1:
guilbault-therien

   1:
guilbaut-therien

   1:
guillemin

   3:
guzowski-steppe

   1:
hagerbeer-schnitger

   1: hall

   1:
hamill

   1:
hammarberg

   1:
hammond

   4:
harris

   4:
harrison-harrison

   8:
harrison

   2:
harrold

   1:
hedlund-marcussen

   1:
heinrich

   1:
hencke

   1:
hendrickson

   2:
herbst

   1:
hernandez

   1: hesse

   2:
heuvel

   1: hilbus

   2:
hildebrandt

   6:
hill-norman-beard

   8: hill

   1:
hillebrand

   2:
hinsch

   1: hinsz

   1: hoack

   2:
hofmann

   1:
holtkamp-sparling

   5:
holtkamp

   2:
holzhey

   1:
hooghuys

  10:
hook-hastings

   1:
hook-noack

  21: hook

   1: hoppe

   1:
howard

   1:
howell

   2:
hradetzky

   1: humpe

   2:
hutchings-plaisted

   1:
hutchings-votey

   1:
hutchings

   1: iben

   1:
ihalainen

   3:
inchaurbe

   1:
international-organ-found

   1:
irisarre-serrano

   1:
isnard

   6:
jaeckel

   1: jann

   2: jardine

   1:
jehmlich

   5:
johnson

   5: jones

   1:
jordan

   2: jurva

   1:
kaat-en-tijhuis

   9:
kangasala

   1: kegg

   1:
kemper

   2: kern

   1:
kessler

   1:
kilgen-fabry

   4:
kilgen

   8:
kimball

   3: king

   1:
kirkham

  10: klais

   1:
klapmeyer

   1:
kleuker

   6: kney

   1: knol

   1:
koenig

   1:
koenken-grimm

   1: konig

   3:
koppejan

   1:
kreienbrink

   1: kuhn

   1:
kyburz

   2:
ladegast

   5: lane

   1:
larraga

   1: lauck

   1:
laukhuff

   1:
lawson

   1:
lefebre

   7:
letourneau

   2:
levsen

   1:
lewis-harrison

   2:
lewis-hitchcock

   5: lewis

   1:
lingiardi

   1: link

   1: list

   1:
lively-fulcher

   1:
llopis

   1:
loback

   2:
lorentz

   2:
maarschalkerweerd

   4:
mander

   2:
maneru

   1:
maneua

   1:
marceau

   8:
marcussen

   1:
marklove

   1: marti

   1:
martin

   1:
martinez

   1:
meere-quelhorst

   1:
merklin-kuehn

   3:
merklin

   6:
metzler

   1: meyer

   1:
michell-thynne

   2:
midmer-losh

  15: moller

   1:
monturas

   1:
monturus

   5: moore

   1:
morey-barnes

   1: morey

   1: moser

   1:
moucherel-formentelli

   1:
moucherel

   2:
mueller

   2:
muller

   1: mundt

   1: munoz

   1:
murphy

   1:
mutin-cavaille-coll

   1: mutin

   1:
navaratnum

   1:
neidhart-lhote

   1:
neijenhoff

   1: neri

   3:
nicholson

   1: niehoff-johansen

   1:
noack-hook

   3: noack

   3:
noehren

   2:
nordlie

   1:
oberlinger

   3: odell

   1:
oestreich

   1: oliva

   1:
ontko-young

   6: ontko

  11:
organeria-espanola

   1: oria

   3:
ortega

   2: ott

   1:
papenius

   1:
paschen

   3: pasi

   1: perez

   1:
peruga

   2:
petty-madden

   1:
phelps

   1:
phelps

   2:
phelps

   1: pike

   4:
pilcher

   2:
pilzecker

   1:
pirkkanen

   1: pock

   1:
pozalgues

   1:
proscia

   1: puget

   1: putz

   1: puyo

   1:
quarles-mander

   1:
quimby

   1: ranft

   1: range

   5:
redman

   1:
reichel

   7: reil

   1:
reques

   3:
reuter

   1:
richards-fowkes

   1:
richards

   1:
richborn

   3:
rieger-kloss

  10: rieger

   1: riepp

   1: roche

   1:
rodriguez

   6:
roosevelt

  29: roques

   4:
rosales

   1:
rottenstein

   1: rueda

   5:
ruffatti

   4:
ruggles

   1: rule

   1:
rushworth-dreaper

   1:
russell

   1: ryder

   2:
salazar

   3:
sanchez

   1:
sanchez

   1:
sandtner

   3:
sanjuan

   1: saur

   1:
schaedle

   8:
schlicker

   1:
schmieder

  16: schnitger

   1:
schoeler

   8:
schoenstein

   1:
schonat

   1:
schott

   1:
schrider

   1:
schroter

   1:
schuelke

   5:
schuke

   1:
schwann

   1:
semrad

   2:
serassi

   1: sharp

   1:
sieber

  17: silbermann

   1:
simmons

   9: sipe

  23: skinner

 
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
1: smethurst

   4: smith

   2:
snetzler

   1: spain

   1: spath

   1: stein

   5:
steiner

   3:
steinmeyer

   3:
stellwagen

   4:
stevens

   1:
stoltz

   1:
streit

   1:
stromback

   1:
swart-hagerbeer

   2:
tamburini

   1:
tannenberg

   7:
tarazona

  10:
taylor-boody

   1:
thielmann

   2:
thomas

   1:
thompson

   3: thule

   1:
tilton

   1:
toledo

   1: treat

   1: trebs

   1:
treutmann-hillebrand

   2: trost

   1: tuomi

   1:
ugarte

   1:
unknown-italian

  75: unknown

   1:
urarte

   2:
usarralde

   1: valdonado

   1:
van-deventer

   1:
van-daalen

   3:
vandaalen

   3:
vater-mueller-witte

   1: vater

   2:
verdalonga

   2:
virtanen

   1:
visscher

   4:
visser-rowland

   1:
volkland

   1:
von-holy

   1: votey

   2:
votteler-holtkamp

   1:
wadsworth-taylor

   4:
wagner

   1:
wahlstrom

   1:
walcker-flentrop

   9:
walcker

   9:
walker

   1:
wanamaker

   1:
wandke-frels

   1:
wangerin

   1:
weisse

   9:
wells-kennedy

   1:
welte-mignon

   1: welte

   1:
westenfelder

   1:
whalley-genung

   8: wicks

   1: wiese

   7:
wilhelm

   1:
willis-mander

  12: willis

   1:
winterhalter

   2: woehl

   1: woehl

  16: wolff

   1:
woodberry

   1:
wulf-dalitz

   7:
wurlitzer

   1: ynes

   1:
yokota

   3:
zimmer

Total = 1290

Carillon News

by Brian Swager
Default

http://www.carillons/caught.in.the.net/

Sydney J. Shep is Associate Carillonneur of the National War Memorial Carillon in Wellington, New Zealand. She wrote this reflection on carillon web sites for the newsletter of the Guild of Carillonneurs in North America. Dr. Shep is also a Printing Fellow at the Wai-te-ata Press at Victoria University of Wellington.

New tech, high tech, more tech, no tech? As everyone gets on the proverbial bandwagon to create web sites, the world of the carillon is no exception. In this review of carillon sites, I want to survey some of the existing sites,  assess them according to some principles of effective web design, look at the fundamental nature of the electronic medium, and point out the pitfalls for those contemplating their own entry into this new performance field.

What are the advantages of a web site? As most of us are aware, the contemporary hunger for information has engendered a network of facts and figures which requires a different kind of tool for efficient access and navigation. The internet is one such tool which complements but does not substitute for existing tools. This is particularly true both in its role as a dynamic, continually updateable, on-line database and in its populist form, the newest vehicle for super-marketing and advertising. Print-based resources still have a place in our lives and consciousness,  and books are definitely not dead. So, what information about the carillon can be best delivered through the internet rather than through any other communication medium? Pictures, sound, video, statistics, recital programs, publications? Most of these, yes; some, definitely not; and others, well, design is everything.

Virtually all web sites these days include a picture of the tower, possibly the bells themselves, maybe even the clavier and performer. Great--a picture can paint a thousand words. But remember, not all computers have image-capabilities and those that do may not be operated by a user who wants to spend time (and money) downloading a full-screen, full-color bitmap. A useful text tag describing the image both permits the non-image user to feel part of the imaginative net-scape, and acts as a signal for the image-capable to click here if s/he so desires. Another shortcut is to provide only a thumbnail of the image with a hypertext link to its "full" size version, but again, use the full-size image opportunity to add a caption line.

Many web designers think images add a little spice to the page to save it from boredom and inertia. However,  a few images here and there, surrounded by text so dense you might as well read it in a book is not the answer. Screen resolution is an eyewearying 72 dpi, not the 1220-2400 dpi we are accustomed to in print. For example, if you are presenting a guided tour of your carillon, don't let the text do the driving. Add graphic navigational aids like maps and pointers. Otherwise, you are encouraging the reader to download to a print version, and haven't you then lost the whole point of using this electronic medium? On this point, compare <http://www.chapel.duke.edu/chapel/tour.htm&gt; Duke University Chapel with <http://smith2.sewanee.edu/gsmith/MapServe/AllSaints.html&gt; All Saint's Chapel.

Furthermore, like creating an advertising slogan or a poster, the web site requires a different kind of writing--clear, concise, to the point--definitely more a report than an essay. Hypertext links assist in ordering these chains of information nuggets. Think of the home page as both cover and table of contents, not the whole book itself. Since first impressions are everything, the home page can either tempt your reader to continue the journey, or can turn her/him away completely. A simple, catchy layout with the primary facts plus a road map for further exploration all in the space of one screen, are sufficient for the home page. The advent of frames and tables-supporting browsers has led to greater awareness of the need for simple design, a tune called KISS ("Keep It Simple, Stupid") which paper-based graphic designers have been singing for decades. Good examples are found at: <http://www.cis.yale.edu/carillon/&gt; Yale University Carillon and at <http://www.bells.usyd.ed.au/&gt; University of Sydney War Memorial Carillon.

Through several levels of linking hierarchy (the pros suggest three levels maximum--with four you're in danger of getting lost yourself), a large amount and variety of information can be presented, but order it in advance to help your readers along the path.

Let them savor the information byte by dark chocolate byte rather than confusing them with the whole cake. And to prevent information overweight, recall what Dorothy says in "The Wizard of Oz"--there's no place like home. At the bottom of each page, a "Home" or "Back to Home Page" link provides a way of getting out of the sensory maze. For the overindulgent, take a look at <http://www.cict.fr/toulouse/carillon/carillons.html&gt; if you want to be overwhelmed by blinking video clips, dark image backgrounds and text which is barely decipherable. We are in the business to communicate, even in the postmodern world, n'est-ce pas?

Additional multimedia features available on the net can be a trap. As with images, both sound and even more so, video, require enormous amounts of time to download, memory, and specialist software. Are the results worth it? Let's look at sound for a moment, something most folks probably think is an ideal marketing tool for an instrument which, after all, is an audio experience. We all know that the carillon and its acoustical environment is one of the most difficult instruments to record, new digital technologies notwithstanding. Translate that to computer reproduction on the net and are you really doing the carillon a favor by including a sound byte? A barely recognizable, 410K, 20-second morsel of Jef Denyn complete with high-volume hiss and overmodulation certainly doesn't do justice to the composer, performer or instrument. Ditto, a 312K, 30-second, unnamed and unnameable folksong. As the net is becoming more and more a powerful marketing tool, you could be responsible for turning people right off the carillon because your sonic shorthand is  such an inadequate representation of the real thing. No wonder an electronic carillon sounds like a better option for the un- or mis-informed!

Until sound reproduction is more advanced on the computer, an excellent solution is to list where good-quality carillon recordings can be bought. The easiest mechanism for this is to include a linked e-mail address for further information, or even an order form if you are in the distribution business yourself and have no qualms about electronic commerce. If you want to list recordings, music editions, catalogs, or other statistical information, you need to provide clearly, visually-oriented material. Take the example of music composition. Some organizations go to a lot of work to provide octave range capabilities of the music they are selling, recognizing that most carillonneurs are shopping for music they can play on their own instruments, or music of a particular variety such as original compositions, arrangements, solo, duets, etc. So, rather than long composer/title lists which make the screen-reader go cross-eyed in short order, why not provide a set of links starting with instrument size, or with genre of music. Shaping the information in a manner appropriate to the instrument and its musicians is important. Long alphabetized lists just don't sell your product to carillonneurs or anyone else out there.

And, don't forget to update your information. The whole advantage of the net is that it provides the opportunity to furnish the most recent information. Such dynamic, online database capabilities are useless if the material is inaccurate or obviously outdated. The record of last year's concerts, workshops, and congresses may provide an interesting archive of facts and figures, but does nothing for the image of an institution if such information is tired and worn, or worded in the present tense. In the hiatus between annual events, why not include a general announcement about forthcoming events and retain last year's to give an indication as to the breadth of programming. The need to be vigilant about this is an essential part of the public profile of the instrument Similarly, don't rely on someone else to tell you when your links to other sites no longer work. It is your responsibility to check them regularly or use one of the software packages that can autocheck for you. There is nothing so frustrating to the first-time surfie or seasoned user to come up with a screen which shouts "URL Not Found." This also goes for many web sites which have changed servers or directory architecture and are likewise inaccessible unless you too change your html files.

Finally, where to start to get an overview of the wealth of carillon sites out there today and to assess their strengths and weaknesses? Most people begin with the proprietary search engines which come with your browser software: yahoo, lycos, etc. Yahoo's search pulls up nine entries for carillon; judge for yourself their relevance to our concerns: the Lubbock, Texas "Carillon Retirement Center" (not a bell in sight except for the corporate identity); two entries for electronic carillon manufacture (why spend money and time on old bells when you can have the chime master system); and most obscurely of all, the University of Regina's long-standing student newspaper entitled (what else) "Carillon." Lycos is more fruitful, with 1,225 "relevant documents," the first 19 out of 20 at least having something to do with the bell instrument we all know and love. In the interests of time and sanity, I suggest you bypass this route completely and jump to an excellent point of departure, Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut Guild of Carillonneurs' home page, URL <http://www.trincoll.edu/~carrill/carillon.html&gt;. In one hit, the major carillon installations worldwide are available for your surfing pleasure. Enjoy!

Project 2000: The Diapason Index enters Y2K

by Herbert L. Huestis
Default

Part 1 was published in the January, 2000 issue of The
Diapason.

As early as 1917 the grim effects of war became all too
apparent with the confiscation of organ pipes for war industries in Europe. A
few terse announcements bespeak the horror of having pipes ripped out of ancient
instruments for the tin they contained. By 1918, pipe organ construction was
curtailed in the U.S. by a war industries board. In the absence of production,
plans for war memorial organs dominated stoplists. An editorial appeared in
1919 which was entitled "Organ Boom Has Begun." In 1927 Mathias Peter
Möller presented an organ as a war memorial to the Thanksgiving Lutheran
Church in Copenhagen, Denmark, the country of his birth.

War measures returned in 1942 when the Office of Production
Management in Washington, DC forbade construction of organs and ordered the
conversion of the industry to defense work. These restrictions continued
through 1946. Once again, generosity prevailed when the Canadian College
of  Organists announced that it
would raise $50,000 for the British Organ Restoration Fund to restore organs in
England which were destroyed in the Second World War.

Post-war topics tended to polarize into romantic and classic
camps, a trend that still continues unabated. In 1945, Dr. Wilfred Payne penned
an article, "Choosing a Design for a Post-War Organ." The author
attempted to show how to avoid confusion in deciding between romantic and
classic specifications.(45:Aug. Record 1932, year 1945.)

Perhaps these dialogues and disputes reached their zenith with
the "Great Sludge Debate of 1976." The intervening years were full of
articles on the pro and con side, including those by William Barnes, Isolde
Ahlgrimm, Henry Willis, Rudolph Von Beckerath, Joseph Whitehead, Lawrence
Phelps, George Lee Hamrick, and Ernest White. Not the least of these
contributions came from the pen of Ernest M. Skinner. In the January issue of
1961, it was noted that

Mr. Skinner was a distinguished figure at innumerable AGO
conventions. Always articulate and often argumentative he was widely known as a
personality as well as the outstanding builder of his generation. A frequent
writer of "letters to the editor" in this publication, his article on
his career  which he wrote on his
85th birthday is reprinted.

The reappearance of American tracker organs in 1960 began a
decade-long series of "Two Manual Organ" issues of The Diapason. All
manner of organ architecture received a thorough going over, not the least of
which was Ernest White's exposition on "The One Rank Mixture." Far
from tongue-in-cheek, this article was a very successful and forthright
discussion of the concept of 
breaking mixtures in contrast to compound stops.

The middle years of the long 90-year publication of The
Diapason highlight the transition of American and European organ building and
architecture toward what was perceived as classic ideals of the period. They
also chronicle what might be considered the industrial period of American organ
building and the mileau in which domestic organs were built, ranging from the
opulence of Aeolian Organ clientele to the mid-town churches that ordered
enormous pipe organs from Austin, Möller, Aeolian-Skinner and Casavant, to
name a few.

Part III of this series will take a look at the appearance
of artisan organ builders and the changing organ playing aesthetic as it
appeared in The Diapason Index from the 1970s to the present day. In the
meantime, the reader can investigate these 15,000 entries first hand at the
Osiris Archive, home of The Diapason Index, at the following address on The
Internet:

www.wu-wien.ac.at/earlym-l/organs/diapason.search.html

Searches on one keyword will take you through the index for
any primary topic. The best way to refine the search is to download the results
of the first keyword search and use any word processor to search on secondary
keywords. This provides the ability to scan on the Internet for general themes
and zero in on specific entries at a later time.

Tech Lines

by Herbert L. Huestis
Default

A computer makes keeping shop records easy

I can say from personal experience that it is possible to voice and regulate organ pipes without keeping any notes or data whatsoever--voicing by the "seat of the pants," hoping that you will stumble upon a solution to the particular problems of that day. Unfortunately, this method leads to a kind of mental blackout when one tries to analyze just what it is that one has done or is trying to do.

The heart of analysis is comparison of data, and the computer makes these comparisons a piece of cake, and a bit of fun, too. Reed pipes invite the keeping of data--especially tongue thickness and length of the resonators. If you are tuned in to keeping scaling sheets in your shop records, you can grab a blank sheet and simply fill in the blanks, as you work on the pipes.

Figure 1 is a typical data sheet on a Trumpet stop. Five items provide a wealth of information to the voicer, all of which contribute to the quality of work that can be done on those pipes. They include:

* Tongue thickness

* Resonator length

* Top diameter

* Bottom diameter

* Boot hole

If there is a disparity in any of these factors, you are likely to hear it as the pipe speaks. They are items that should fall into a logarithmic scale from the bottom to the top of the rank. If there is an oddball, you can find it and remedy the situation.

If you think of a computer spreadsheet as a digital calculator, you can understand what is going on in a typical spreadsheet that renders these data in logarithmic format. Each "square" or "cell" of the spreadsheet can hold a number or a formula. With these building blocks you can lay out a pipe scale like checkers on a criss-cross board.

Here is a typical spreadsheet calculation of the top two octaves of a trumpet, representing these five important data items. (Again, see Figure 1)

Another handy recording device is a simple database for sample pipes, perhaps each "C" in the rank. Here is a format that will work for the same set of Hutchings Trumpet pipes. (See Figure 2)

Data for sample pipes may be kept using spreadsheets, database software, or a combination of both. Interpolations may be made for data that lies between samples. (See Figure 3)

Organ technicians who wish to obtain samples of these spreadsheets and databases may contact me at:

[email protected] or

[email protected]

I will be happy to send samples that may be incorporated into various types of shop records. Spreadsheets are in generic format, and may be read in Excel or any typical spreadsheet program. Databases will be in .DBF format and may be read in database software like FoxPro or imported into Microsoft Access. Send five dollars and your mailing address, and I'll send you a diskette so you can give it a try! (H.L. Huestis, #1502, 1574 Gulf Rd., Point Roberts, WA 98281)

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