A synthesizer of some description, maybe a keyboard, or perhaps a drum machine. A pipe organ? Probably not. If you answer to the name of [Wendell Kapustiak] though, you’d say yes to that question.
Musical instruments come in all shapes and sizes. For sheer scale and complexity though, you can’t beat pipe organs. [Rob Scallon] visited the Fourth Presbyterian Church in Chicago to look at ...
Jon McCann, also known as The Philly Captain, captured the moment, while showing the iconic Eagle sculpture inside the ...
But church leaders and experts say the shrine’s historic pipe organ, which has provided the soundtrack for masses, baptisms, weddings and holy days over the past nine decades, doesn’t quite ...
Pity the poor pipe organ. The behemoth instruments are often thought of as fusty relics of classical music — heard only in churches, vintage horror movies and increasingly fewer baseball stadiums.
University of Florida organists past and present and musical enthusiasts will gather later this month to celebrate 100 years of the Andrew Anderson Memorial Pipe Organ at the University Auditorium.
The pipe organ inside the University Auditorium is named in honor of Dr. Andrew Anderson, who in 1924 donated $50,000 toward its installation.