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Electric organ

An electric organ, also known as electronic organ, is an electronic keyboard instrument which was derived from the harmonium, pipe organ and theatre organ. Originally designed to imitate their sound, or orchestral sounds, it has since developed into several types of instruments:

For the organ found in electric fish, see Electric organ (biology). For pipe organs activated by electricity, see Pipe organ § Action.

by Morse Robb (Canada) — developed since c.1923, marketed 1936–1941[1][2]

Robb Wave Organ

Rangertone by Richard Ranger (United States) — marketed c.1932

[3]

by Laurens Hammond and John M. Hanert[4] (United States) — invented in 1934,[5] marketed 1935[6]–1975 (as the tonewheel organs)

Hammond organ

by Edwin Welte, et al. (Germany) — optical-tonewheel sampling organ, marketed 1935–1940s[7]

Lichtton Orgel

In churches[edit]

Pipe-electronic hybrid organs (1930s–)[edit]

Early combinations of pipe organs and electronic technology (including the electronic tone generators, at later) were developed in the 1930s.[43][44] Custom electronic organ consoles occasionally replace aging pipe consoles, updating the electrical control system for the pipes as well as adding electronic voices to the organ. Even large pipe organs are often supplemented with electronic voices for the deepest bass tones that would otherwise require 16- to 32-foot pipes.


For hybrid organs that combine pipes and electronic sounds, pipes change their pitch with environmental changes, but electronic voices do not follow by default. The frequency of sound produced by an organ pipe depends on its geometry and the speed of sound in the air within it. These change slightly with temperature and humidity, so the pitch of an organ pipe will change slightly as the environment changes. The pitch of the electronic portion of a hybrid instrument must be re-tuned as needed. The simplest method is a manual control that the organist can adjust, but some recent digital models can make such adjustments automatically.

Electronic church organs (1939–)[edit]

The first full electronic church organ was built in 1939 by Jerome Markowitz, founder of the Allen Organ Company, who had worked for years to perfect the replication of pipe organ sound through the use of oscillator circuitry based on radio tubes. In 1958, Rodgers Organ Company built the first solid-state, transistorized church organ, its three-manual Opus 1.


In contrast to frequency divider circuitry with only a few independent pitch sources, quality electronic church organs have at least one oscillator per note and often additional sets to create a superior ensemble effect. For instance, Rodgers Opus 1 featured eight sets of transistorized pitch generators. Even today, digital organs use software-based digital oscillators to create large numbers of independent pitch and tone sources to better simulate the effect of a large pipe organ.

Digital piano

List of electronic organ makers

MIDI

Organ (music)

TheaterOrgans.com FAQ

Archived 2021-08-16 at Wikiwix

Hammond Organ Company Heritage

Archived 2019-09-17 at the Wayback Machine From the 1950s to the 1970s, Schober produced a popular line of build-your-own organ kits. Models ranged from spinets up through AGO consoles.

Schober

of a Makin digital organ, currently at Hammerwood Park in Sussex after serving a dozen years at Londonderry Cathedral, where visitors had said it was "remarkably effective". This has now been enlarged to 5 manuals using further electronic organ units known as expanders, often used to enhance pipe organs, made by Content in the Netherlands and Ahlborn in Italy.

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Electronic organ manufacturers