keitha wrote:10 'stops' from 3 ranks....the parish priest who had the church built was convinced that he had a bargain!!
I had a similar experience: The first instrument I played regularly, from the age of 12, was an old valve organ which eventually died. Nowadays it would probably be replaced by an Allen or sim. However, the elderly PP took advice from a local organist who insisted that nothing but pipes would possibly do. Given the budget, the result was a three-stop (8'4'2') Rushworth with no pedals. £4K in 1977.
It was – still is – a beautiful instrument. And I have occasionally popped back for a half-hour play. The 8' alone sings out beautifully. But it's totally unsuitable for a large church which seats 450 people. It now sits, rarely used, in the West Gallery.
The old chap who advised – lovely man, no longer with us – eventually conceded to the next PP that a larger instrument was needed and they bought a digital organ (think it's an Allen). However, once again it's in the West Gallery, making it almost impossible to accompany most cantor-people stuff. So the latest PP added a digital piano to the collection – again, probably badly advised as the digi-organ could have been brought down to the front.
If you know any potential young organists in Liverpool, Keitha, one of our churches is about to restore a three-manual Conacher. Much of the needed £250K will come from grants and one of the conditions is that the instrument is available to the community – young practicing organists would fit this demand perfectly.
Sadly, the instrument will never be used liturgically: it is in a choir gallery, above a public gallery, so high up and so far away that the time lag makes it almost impossible. So for all things liturgical we have an Allen – rather lovely I must say. Although the church is so big that, even with the console at the front, the organist is so far away from the psalmist that it's hard work for both of them – takes quite a bit of practice!!
Sorry. OT.