The Organ - a history
Instruments of this type date from antiquity. The organ evolved from
the Middle Ages onwards and throughout the Renaissance, reaching a peak
of perfection in the High Baroque period (1650 - 1700). Towards the end
of the 16th century, organ design advanced to the stage where a large instrument
consisted of several sections, virtually independent organs in themselves.
First came the pedal section, connected to its own set of pipes, and later,
the 'Rückpositiv', 'Oberwerk' and 'Brustpositiv' (see dictionary below).
The end of the 19th century saw the introduction of electropneumatic systems
which made playing easier.
The sound of an organ note is unvarying, and therefore largely excludes
the possibility of dynamic expression. Even the development of 'swell'
mechanisms in the beginning of the 18th. century (which introduced some
dynamic variation) could not fundamentally alter the even tone of organ
pipes. For this reason, the organ is best suited to polyphonic music with
independent parts, as exemplified by the fugual composition of J.S. Bach
and others.
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