Langshaw Barrel Organ (Lancaster)

The chamber barrel organ by John Langshaw in the collections of Lancashire Museums is currently on display at the Judges' Lodgings museum in the city of Lancaster, England.

The Langshaw barrel organ in the Judges' Lodgings. Its decorative front has been removed allowing a barrel to be seen.

The organ was built c 1790 and is of a size suitable for use in a middle-class home. It has four ranks of pipes (stops) and three barrels. The barrels are inscribed "John Langshaw / Organ Maker / Lancaster",[1] and are assumed to be the barrels originally housed in the instrument. The mahogany case is attributed to Gillows,[1] a Lancaster furniture making firm with which Langshaw is known to have collaborated.

Each of the three barrels is pinned with 10 airs. The 30 pieces preserved at Lancaster include "See the Conquering Hero Comes", the best-known number from Handel's oratorio Judas Maccabaeus. Langshaw lived in London in the years either side of Handel's death in 1759. While Lancashire Museums suggest that he knew Handel,[2] other sources suggest that his reproductions of Handel's music began after the composer's death.[3]

Display

The organ is currently displayed in a period setting in the Judges' Lodgings, a museum which is scheduled for closure in 2016. Visitors are able to hear a recording of the instrument.

Close up of barrel
gollark: They mostly do.
gollark: Look, if you have a CB prize, you basically get infinite money - er, eggs.
gollark: Ah, Irabane, they offered it.
gollark: I-something?
gollark: You can have it for just 5 CB Golds!

See also

References

  1. LANMS (2008). "A Chamber Barrel Organ made by John Langshaw of Lancaster c. 1790". LANMS.2003.22. Lancashire County Museum Service. Retrieved 20 February 2016.
  2. "Chamber barrel organ". Lancashire County Council. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  3. Malloch, William (1983). "The Earl of Bute's Machine Organ: A Touchstone of Taste". Early Music Vol. 11, No. 2. OUP. JSTOR 3137830. Missing or empty |url= (help) (accessed via JSTOR, subscription required)
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