Putting it another way, I feel like I’m wearing jeans to a prom, or wearing an evening gown to a picnic!
The big surprise is that I’m really loving listening to these historic instruments (and the contemporary organs built in historic Renaissance style). I’m finding that the organs are much more colorful and aggressive than I had imagined, and much louder than I had guessed they would be. Especially I’m really surprised at hearing the reeds—much more buzzy and honky than either French or German reeds.
The organ was built in 1806 by Gaetano Callido, and although it did not have a short octave like organs we have previously played on this trip, I found the action stiff and hard to play. Also new to me was the fact that the Great manual is on the top rather than on the bottom.
We drove to the Chiesa di San Cassiano in Quinto di Treviso about half an hour away. This 1865 organ is most unusual in that it is only one of five organo fonocròmico still playing. Invented by Giovanni Battista De Lorenzi, it uses a kind of “double touch” to activate two pipes for every note for every stop.
The kind of music that would suit this organ would be operatic arias, or circus music, none of which are in my repertoire! I settled on a chorale prelude by Helmut Walcha, which some one commented as “sounding oriental.”
My heart sank, though, because today was the one day I had decided to leave my organ shoes at the hotel, and here was one organ where I could really have made use of them. The organ was built in French Romantic style to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the death of Cavaillé-Coll and unfortunately, I did not have a single piece of French music with me! No shoes and no music, groan!
I asked around the other tour participants and thankfully found Stephen Morris willing to loan me some of his music. He had a copy of Flor Peeters, Aria, so that’s what I played.
Like borrowing a dress and shoes to go to the prom! (I took off my athletic shoes and played in my socks.)