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Image kimball organ
Image kimball organ




image kimball organ
  1. #Image kimball organ manuals
  2. #Image kimball organ manual
  3. #Image kimball organ series

It seats 3,000 people (including the rear balcony). It is 181 feet long, 128 feet wide, and 75 feet high. The Theater is, itself, a room of gigantic size.

#Image kimball organ series

Now featured for recitals throughout the season in addition to the noon concert series when the main arena is in use. Recent restoration efforts led by the non-profit Historic Organ Restoration Committee (HORC) have returned approximately 95% of this instrument to operation and it is Pipes and orchestral instruments hidden behind the walls of the main stage. There are no electric amplifiers or speakers included. All of these sounds are (as with the organ in the main arena) produced by compressed air acting upon Incredible array of unique sound effects such as birds, trains, sirens and gongs. With the accompaniment of motion pictures in mind (all films before 1927 were silent), it is especially good at creating the illusion of a full symphony orchestra as well as producing an Kimball organ, Opus 7073, of the Adrian Phillips Theater is one of the largest original installations left in a public entertainment venue in the nation. Designed Designation of Girls High School.ĭetroit Publishing Co. New York City Landmarks Preservation Commision Report, June 28, 1983.

image kimball organ

"Girls' High School Keeping to Front," Theĭiapason (July 1912). New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. Guide to New York City Landmarks (Third Edition). Courtesy Jeff Scofield.ĭolkart, Andrew S. Specifications for this organ have not yet been located.

#Image kimball organ manuals

It had two manuals and pedals, and the action was pneumatic. The first pipe organ to be installed in the New York City high schools was that placed in the Girls' High School of Brooklyn in 1903. Macfarlane, Arthur Bird, Gaston Dethier, and E. Guilmant, Max Reger, Debussy, Bizet, Ralph Kinder, W.

image kimball organ

Frederick Smith, organist and choirmaster of Grace Episcopal Church, Plainfield, N.J., performed the opening recital on April 25, 1914. Stops of the old Pedal organ were increased from 30 to 32 notes. The Great organ was retained, and stops of the Swell organ were extended by 12 pipes above the limit of the keyboard.

#Image kimball organ manual

A third manual was added, the tubular-pneumatic action was electrified, and a new movable console was installed. In 1912, the Kimball Company was contracted to enlarge the 1903 organ at a cost of $3,000. Larger instruments were subsequently placed in other high schools, numbering four in Brooklyn and one each in the boroughs of Manhattan and the Bronx.

image kimball organ

Since the installation in 1903 of the original two-manual and pedal Kimball organ in Girls' High School, the value of such an instrument, from an educational standpoint, was quickly realized. From the 1983 NYCLPC Landmark Designation Reportģ manuals, 27 registers, 25 stops, 25 ranks The facility is now the Board of Education Brooklyn Adult Training Center. Girls' High School is an outstanding example of 19th century school architecture by one of the major practitioners in that field and it also represents an important step in the development of a comprehensive publicly supported education system. Snyder is also responsible for introducing the Collegiate Gothic style to public school architecture in New York. Snyder who was then Superintendent of Buildings for the Board of Education for the City of New York, Snyder had been appointed to that position in 1891 and, after incorporation in 1898, was head architect for school buildings in all five boroughs. Constructed of red brick with stone trim, it was designed in the Collegiate Gothic style by C.B.J. In 1912, another addition to the school was opened along the southern or Macon Street facade of the building. Designed in a striking and dynamic combination of the Victorian Gothic and the French Second Empire styles by James W. Girls' High School, one of the first public secondary schools in New York City, is an architecturally distinctive structure occupying the entire blockfront on the east side of Nostrand Avenue between Halsey and Macon Streets in the Bedford section of the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn. (now the Board of Education Brooklyn Adult Training Center)






Image kimball organ