Pasi Organbuilders, Roy, Washington, Op. 14

Saint Cecilia Cathedral, Omaha, Nebraska


     The firm of Pasi Organbuilders of Roy, Washington, has installed a new landmark organ in
Saint Cecilia Cathedral, the Mother Church of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Omaha. The
organ is comprised of 55-stops over three manuals and pedal, 29 of which are playable in two
temperaments: 1/4-comma meantone and a new well-tempered tuning devised for this instrument
by organbuilder Kristian Wegscheider of Dresden, Germany. The organ replaces a 37-rank
electro-pneumatic instrument from 1918 by the one-time firm of Casavant Bros. of South Haven,
Michigan.

 

     The idea of a dual-temperament organ for Saint Cecilia Cathedral developed in early
conversations between organbuilder Martin Pasi and cathedral organist and music director Kevin
Vogt, and was inspired by the dual-temperament organs at Stanford University (C.B. Fisk, Op. 85)
and the Wegscheider organs at the Allstedt Schloßkapelle (Op. 1) and Dresden-Wilschdorf (Op.
21). While the two temperaments of the Stanford Fisk are made possible by five extra pipes per
octave, and the smaller Wegscheider organs boast six extra pipes per octave, 29 stops of Pasi
Organbuilders, Op. 14, contain eight extra notes per octave, tipping the scale of the concept from a
single organ with extra pipes to the equivalent of two organs which share a third of their pipes.
The abundance of extra pipes allows the circulating temperament to accommodate much of the
Romantic and modern repertoires, while retaining enough key color to bring Baroque music alive
and to lock into tune the mixtures and reeds in the best keys.

 

     All stops in the Oberwerk and selected stops in the Hauptwerk and Pedal divisions are
available in both temperaments. The well-tempered and meantone organs share the following
notes in every octave: C, D, G and A. The desired temperament may be chosen independently in
each division by the choice of stops. Each dual-tempered voice has two sliders and separate stop
controls: traditional drawknobs for the well-tempered stops and Italian-style levers for the
meantone stops. This is thus a simpler and more flexible system than a shifting roller board (e.g.
Fisk, Op. 85) or a shifting stop action mechanism (e.g. Wegscheider, Op. 1 and Op. 21).

 

     While an argument could be made that it would have been easier to build two separate organs,
the economy of the Pasi dual-temperament design yields much larger and more complete organs in
both temperaments than would be possible if separate cases, chests, actions and wind-systems
were to be built for the same price.

 

     The mechanical key action is suspended to provide the most direct link between keys and
pallets. Solenoid slider motors and an electric combination system by Taylor of England enhance
the mechanical stop action of the well-tempered side of the organ. The meantone stops may be
drawn only by hand, but the well-ordered Italian levers allow for the drawing of an entire chorus
with one sweep of the hand.

 

     All of the pipes were made by hand in the Pasi shop, with the exception of 10 wooden basses
recycled from the previous organ. Metal pipes are made of an alloy of 97% lead, with a remainder
of tin and trace metals, cast to variable thickness and hammered to increase density. Flue pipes
are cut to exact length and cone- or scroll-tuned for maximum stability of tuning. Wooden pipes
are of poplar and Douglas fir. The freestanding case is of white oak and incorporates pillars,
arches and ornaments from the original 1918 organ façade designed by cathedral architect Thomas
Rogers Kimball.

 

     Tapered wind lines deliver wind to the organ from a separate, adjacent bellows room, which
will be a dedicated public space for education about the organ. The organ is winded by four 4' x 8'
wedge-shaped bellows, either fed by a 2 horsepower silent blower or raised with calcant pedals by
human assistants. The option of hand-pumped (or in this case, treaded) wind and the resulting
possibility of a messa di voce bloom in the organ's sound are reflected in an excerpt from John
Dryden's Song for St. Cecilia's Day painted around the perimeter of the bellows room ceiling:

But bright Cecilia raised the wonder higher
as to her organ vocal breath was given…

     Both the instrument and its builder seem to consciously evade characterization as either
eclectic or stylistically specific. While the stoplist may look like a complete "eclectic" organ,
preference is clearly given to a colorful, well-blended Schnitgerian tonal ideal. For instance, the
smooth 16'
Posaune easily balances only a couple of other stops, but seems to grow in gravitas as
brilliant choruses are built upon it. A colorful variety of flutes, principals and mutations seem to
blend and balance in every conceivable combination and permutation. Conversely, while materials
and
blockwerk-like choruses may recall Niehoff, and reed scales and shallots Schnitger and
Cliquot, liberal incorporation of harmonic flutes and slotted strings equally sympathetic to Bach and
Widor contributes to the artistic fusion and synthesis characteristic of "universal" and
"cosmopolitan" organs of every age.

 

     The fifteen reed stops of the organ are particularly noteworthy, made with resonators as long
as the stop's character and the reed's "flip point" will allow achieving as much fundamental in the
tone as possible. Both Hauptwerk and Pedal divisions boast both Schnitger-and Cliquot-style
Trumpets. The smooth Hauptwerk 16' Trumpet and it's counterpart in the Unterwerk (Swell),
the 16' Bassoon (really another 16' Trumpet) are equally at home in chorus and consort
registrations. A Dutch-style Vox Humana, a Schnitgerian Trichterregal and Dulzian and a
French Oboe complete the palette.

 

     A large case, open between Hauptwerk and Oberwerk divisions, and a remarkably effective
swell enclosure for the Unterwerk, provide primary resonating cavities for the instrument. The
large, resonant nave of the cathedral, however, brings the organ into its full glory. Recently fitted
with a new plaster ceiling and splendidly decorated in a bright Iberian style by Evergreene Studios
of New York City, the pristine Spanish Renaissance Revival cathedral begun in 1905 literally sings
with seven seconds reverberation when empty and four seconds when full. The ceiling restoration
and interior decoration crowned a complete cleaning and restoration of the cathedral in 1999, led by
liturgical design consultant Br. William Woeger, FSC, who is also the director of liturgy at the
cathedral, and the architectural firm of Bahr, Vermeer & Haecker. Robert Mahoney of Boulder,
Colorado, was the acoustical consultant.

 

     The organ will be inaugurated with a yearlong celebration entitled "The Saint Cecilia Organ
Festival," commencing on October 3, 2003. The festival will include a performance on March 23,
2003 by Olivier Latry, events throughout the year featuring John Ferguson George Ritchie, Marie
Rubis Bauer, Kevin Vogt, Craig Cramer, Kimberly Marshall, James Higdon, and others, and will
concluded in the fall of 2004 with a conference on the liturgical organ.
 

     The following artisans participated in the building of this instrument: George Brown, Emanuel
Denzler, Martin Elsaesser, Markus Hahn, Dominik Maetzler, Brett Martinez, Christian Metzler,
Markus Morscher, Markus Nagel, Markus Pasi, Martin Pasi, Chris Schinke, and Robert Wech.

 

 

Hauptwerk (Well-Tempered)
Manual I, 58 notes (C-a3)
(* Denotes stops sharing pipes
with the meantone organ)
16' Praestant*
8'Octave*

8'Rohrflöte*
8'Salicional
4'Octave*
4'Spitzflöte
2 2/3' Quinte*
2'Superoctave*
1 1/3' Mixture V*
1'Mixture IV
8'Cornet V (discant)
16' Trumpet*
8'Trumpet*
8'Vox Humana*

8'Trompette

Oberwerk (Well-Tempered)
Manual II, 58 notes (C-a3)
8'Praestant*
8'Suavial* (discant)
8'Gedeckt*
4'Octave*
4'Rohrflöte*
2 2/3' Sesquialtera II*
2'Octave*
2'Waldflöte*
1 1/3' Quinte*
1'Mixture IV*
16' Dulzian*
8'Trichterregal*


Unterwerk (Well-Tempered)
Manual III, 58 notes (C-a3)
(in a swell enclosure)
16' Bourdon
8'Principal
8'Harmonic Flute
8'Gamba
8'Celeste (tenor c)
4'Principal
4'Harmonic Flute
2 2/3' Nazard
2'Octavin
1 3/5' Tierce
2'Mixture V
16' Bassoon
8'Trompette
8'Oboe
4'Clairon

Pedal (Well-Tempered)
30 notes (C-f1), flat/parallel
32' Subbass
16' Praestant*
16' Subbass (transmission)
8'Octave* (transmission)
8'Gedeckt
4'Octave*
2 2/3' Mixture V*
32' Trombone (transmission)
16' Posaune*
8'Trumpet*
8'Trompette
4'Clairon
2'Cornet*

Hauptwerk (Meantone)
Manual I, 48 notes
(C, D, E-c3, d3 )
16' Praestant
8'Octave
8'Rohrflöte
4'Octave
2 2/3' Quinte
2'Superoctave
1 1/3' Mixture V
16' Trumpet
8'Trumpet
8'Vox Humana

Oberwerk (Meantone)
Manual II, 48 notes
(C, D, E-c3, d3)
8'Praestant
8'Suavial (discant)
8'Gedeckt
4'Octave
4'Rohrflöte
2 2/3' Sesquialtera II
2'Octave
2'Waldflöte
1 1/3' Quinte
1'Mixture IV
16' Dulzian
8'Trechterregal


Pedal (Meantone)
28 notes (C, D, E-f1)
16' Praestant
8'Octave (transmission)
4'Octave
2 2/3' Mixture V
16' Posaune
8'Trumpet
2'Cornet

Accessories
Tremulant
Zimbelstern
Rossignol
Normal Couplers
12 General Combinations
Sequencer
96 Levels of Memory