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The organ was built for the former
Parish Church by William Hill and Son of Islington, at a cost of £1600.
Hills had recently built several large organs including those at Peterborough,
Lichfield and Chester Cathedrals. It was a large three manual organ with
40 speaking stops, tightly packed into what is now the North Ambulatory.
It was dedicated at Evensong on Wednesday 10 February 1904.
In the 1950s and 60s the Cathedral East end was enlarged
and the organ rebuilt by the successors of the original firm now
called Hill, Norman and Beard. It was raised some 20 feet above the Ambulatory,
from where it speaks into the new and resonant Chancel. The instrument
was enlarged and a new Nave Organ provided to produce adequate tonal projection
down the Nave. A new four manual console was positioned in the loft opposite
the main organ.The Nave Organ was playable from either the Great or Solo
Manuals and Pedals.
In 1977, the main organ was dismantled for cleaning by J W Walker and
Son. An opportunity was taken to remedy some of the defects of the 1961
scheme that had become apparent over the intervening 16 years. The projection
of tone from the main organ down the Nave was still unsatisfactory. The
Great Organ was therefore moved to the front of the chamber and the Positif
organ relocated in a new case of its own on a lower level. The Swell organ
was provided with additional shutters on the South side of the box. These
open vertically and aid in the projection of sound into the nave.
All the mixtures on the organ were redesigned to provide higher harmonics
and most of the pipework was re-voiced to give a brighter tone.The Solo
Trumpet was moved to the centre of the organ, just above the Positif case.
The result of the improvements was that the Cathedral gained an instrument
of great versatility, able to produce the right sounds for music of many
different styles and periods. Above all the tone is tremendously exciting
and full of character.
In 1987, during the Cathedral's extensive re-ordering, the Nave Organ
was dismantled. The Purcell Trumpet (En-Chamade) was stored and eventually
incorporated into the main case. The Nave section was replaced by the
Bradford Computer Organ, built in Bradford by Ahlborn UK and designed
by Bradford University. The stop list is similar to that of the original
Nave Organ, but it is not a copy of the sound of the pipes. The sound
is encoded as data in a computer memory which contains information as
to the volume of the various harmonics in the sound, starting transients
and pitch information.
These are controlled by two microprocessors and a third microprocessor
scans the keyboards waiting for a key or stop knob to be operated. This
Section was installed in 1990. The microprocessors are capable of performing
11 million multiplications and divisions per second and jointly the threemicroprocessors
execute 5 million instructions per second.The full organ sound is overwhelming
and an Organ recital in the Cathedral is an event of considerable interest
and importance.
Click here for
some images of the organ
THE ORGAN OF BRADFORD CATHEDRAL
(Willian Hill & Sons 1904, Hill Norman & Beard 1961, J.
W. Walker & Sons 1977)
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GREAT ORGAN
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SWELL ORGAN
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PEDAL ORGAN
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Open Diapason 8
Principal 8
Rohr Flute 8
Octave 4
Spitz Principal 4
Clear Flute 4
Fifteenth 2
Quartaine II
Mixture III
Tromba 8
Clarion 4
Trumpet Major 8
Octave Trumpet 4 |
Geigen Diapason 8
Hohl Flute 8
Spitz Flute 8
Spitz Flute Celeste (ten C)
Geigen Octave 4>br>Stopped Flute 4
Super Octave 2
Quint Mixture III
Sharp Mixture II
Contra Fagotto 16
Cornopean 8
Oboe 8
Clarion 4
Tremulant |
Sub Bass 32
Open Wood 16
Open Metal 16
Violone 16
Bourdon 16
Quintaten 16 (from Positive)
Octave 8
Violoncello 8
Bass Flute 8
Fifteenth 4
Block Flute 2
Mixture III
Trombone 16
Trumpet 8 (from Solo)
Octave Trumpet 4 (from Solo) |
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SOLO ORGAN
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CHOIR ORGAN
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NAVE PEDAL (Electronic)
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Viola da Gamba 8
Gedeckt 8
Orchestral Viole 8
Holz Flute 4
Nazard 2 2/3
Italian Principal 2
Clarinet 8
Tremulant
Trumpet Major 8
Purcell Trumpet 8 |
Quintaten 16
Flute a Cheminee 8
Prinzipal 4
Koppelflote 4
Nazat 2 2/3
Ocrav 2
Tierce 1 3/5
Sifflote 1 |
Dolce Bass 16
Gedeckt 16
Flute Bass 8
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NAVE ORGAN
(Electronic, Floating)
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Dolce Bass 16
Principal 8
Salicional 8
Celeste 8
Lieblich Gedeckt 8
Octave 4
Spitz Flute 4
Wald Flute 2
Mixture III
Trumpet 8
Nave on Solo
Nave on Great |
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COUPLERS
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ACCESSORIES
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Solo to Pedal Swell to Pedal Great to Pedal Choir to Pedal Nave to Pedal Solo Octave Solo Sub Octave Solo Unison Off Swell Octave Swell Sub Octave Swell to Great Positive to Great Solo to Great
Swell Octave to Great
Swell Sub Octave to Great Solo to Choir Swell to Solo Great Reeds on Positive |
6 General Thumb Pistons(Capture system with 8 memory
levels) 9 Reversible Coupler Thumb Pistons Reversible Thumb Piston for Trombone 8 Thumb Pistons to Great 8 Thumb Pistons to Swell 5 Thumb Pistons to Solo 5 Thumb Pistons to Positive 4 Thumb Pistons to Nave 8 Toe Pistons to Pedal 2 Great to Pedal toe Pedals (Reversible) Swell to Great Toe Piston (Reversible) Full Organ Toe Piston (Reversible) 3 Balanced Swell Pedals Pedal Combinations to Great Pistons |
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