On one occasion, the organ stopped working mid-practice and I
proceeded into the bowels of the instrument to investigate.
The instrument had a windchest for each manual and one for the pedals.
The air from the blower into each windchest of the organ was
controlled by a valve and regulated by means of a string stretched
over a pulley.
One of these rather elderly strings had either rotted away (the
Chapel suffered from both a leaking roof and dry rot at the same
time) or the string had been nibbled through by church/Chapel mice.
With the blower (pump) running, inspection lamp in hand, I climbed
onto the now deflated great windchest.
This windchest was the size and shape of a double bed and a bit of a
wriggle to get onto.
I pulled the string and tied the two ends together.
This, of course, substantially shortened the working length of the
string and allowed the windchest to inflate by more than its intended
amount.
It opened the valve letting lots of air into the windchest,
over-inflating it and pinning me to the framework above.
To let myself out, I had to cut the string again and allow the air to
gradually escape.
Once I had also escaped, I subsequently refixed at arm's length with
a new string of the correct length.
Curiously, I believe that the same thing happened in Austria, 150
years or so earlier resulting in Franz Gruber composing the
melody for Stille Nacht (Silent Night).
I never played for services, as the main Chapel had ceased to be used
some years earlier and services were being held in a small room on
the town side of the Chapel.
I only attended one of these and the singing of the small
congregation was accompanied on the harmonium
As a music student in the 1970s, I studied the organ as my "third"
instrument and I was kindly given the use of (and, to some extent,
learned to maintain) the three-manual Forster & Andrews organ
in Northgate End Chapel as a practice instrument during holidays.
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Malcolm Bull 2017 /
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Revised 12:24 on 3rd February 2017 / m_36 / 5