![]() | This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
John Brombaugh | |
---|---|
![]() Brombaugh in 2011 | |
Born | John Burlin Brombaugh March 1, 1937 Dayton, Ohio, U.S. |
Alma mater | University of Cincinnati |
Occupation | Pipe organ builder |
John Burlin Brombaugh (born March 1, 1937) is an American pipe organ builder known for his historically oriented tracker action pipe organs.
Born in Dayton, Ohio, Brombaugh (related to the Brumbaugh families) first heard a Hammond organ while in the fourth grade and was “mesmerized” by the combination of organ and electronics, [1] a combination that would shape his career. Brombaugh has degrees in Electrical Engineering from the University of Cincinnati (EE, 1960) and Cornell University (MS-EE, 1963) specializing in the field of acoustics, in particular musical acoustics.
After college graduation, Brombaugh worked as a development engineer for the Baldwin Piano Company. His charge "was to develop a method to produce electronic chiff and to design an artificial reverberation system". For the former, he extensively studied the construction of organ pipes, while the latter included ideas pioneered in the Hammond organ. [2] Brombaugh also secured seven patents with the Baldwin Organ Company. [3]
As a lifelong lover of classical music, especially as he heard ancient European organs on recordings – e.g. E. Power Biggs' The Art of the Organ and Helmut Walcha's of J.S. Bach's music on the Schnitger organ in Cappel – he became an apprentice under the two leading American tracker action pipe organ builders, Fritz Noack (1964–1966) and Charles Fisk (1966–1967) and then served as a journeyman (Geselle) with the Rudolph von Beckerath firm in Hamburg in 1967–68 to complete his training, especially in making reed pipes. While in Hamburg, Brombaugh used every opportunity to study the many historic organs in northwest Germany and the adjacent Netherlands.
In June 1968, he established his own firm, John Brombaugh & Co., in the farmlands west of Germantown, Ohio, his hometown; this sole proprietorship eventually became a partnership including George Taylor, John Boody, Herman Greunke, and others. In 1977, the partnership dissolved in a friendly way when Brombaugh moved his firm to Eugene, Oregon under the new name, John Brombaugh & Associates, Inc., that continued until completing its final instrument in summer 2005. He built 66 organs that are located in 23 states, Canada, Sweden, and Japan, and was a teacher to many upcoming younger builders, including Bruce Shull, Michael Bigelow, Charles Ruggles, Paul Fritts, Munetaka Yokota, Bruce Fowkes, Trent Buhr, Karl Nelson, David Petty, and Aaron Reichert. A grant from the Ford Foundation in spring 1971 enabled Brombaugh to do intense study of about 100 historic organs in Germany, the Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Austria, and Italy, and he has continued his studies at all possible times since.
The majority of Brombaugh organs are tuned in a "Well temperament". This enables them to play music composed in any key but, compared with Equal Temperament, favors the central keys used in most organ literature of all periods. Since its introduction in 1978, the "Bach" temperament by Herbert Anton Kellner [4] has become Brombaugh's standard tuning, though several of his organs are tuned in 1/4 Syntonic comma Meantone where their primary intention is for historically oriented performance of the organ literature older than that of Johann Sebastian Bach's. Many of his easily movable small positives have transposition capabilities to facilitate their playability at different pitches; these (excepting his Op. 2 that was made during his apprenticeship with Noack) are his only instruments tuned in Equal Temperament.
Although he has been interested in recovering and using many of the lost concepts from the ancient organ-builders (e.g., the use of only mechanical key action), he also considers himself a builder of this time who is amenable to the use of the best current construction methods and the use of ideas necessary for the convenience required by organists of our time. For example, his Opus 35 – an organ of 3,250 pipes, 3 manuals, and pedal with 46 stops that was dedicated on Pentecost 2001 at the First Presbyterian Church in Springfield, Illinois – is a synthesis of historical and modern techniques.
Among John Brombaugh's contributions to modern organ-building are:
Location | City | Opus | Year |
---|---|---|---|
Episcopal Church of the Resurrection [12] | Eugene, Oregon, US | 38a | 2004 |
Trinity Lutheran Church [13] | Ithaca, New York, US | 2 | 1966 |
First Lutheran Church [14] Destroyed by fire August 28, 2014 [15] | Lorain, Ohio, US | 4 | 1970 |
Ashland Avenue Baptist Church Church closed October 2006, organ moved to Sacred Heart Cathedral, Rochester, NY, for use by Eastman Rochester students, organ moved to St. Michael's Church, Rochester, NY (Video on YouTube) installed in 2014 in Schroeder Hall at Sonoma State University [16] | Toledo, Ohio, US Rochester, New York, US Rohnert Park, California, US | 9 | 1972 |
Private residence practice organ [17] | Nebraska, US | 12b | 1973 |
First Methodist Church | Oberlin, Ohio, US | 15 | 1974 |
Grace Episcopal Church [18] | Ellensburg, Washington, US | 16 | 1974 |
Central Lutheran Church [19] [20] | Eugene, Oregon, US | 19 | 1976 |
St. John's Presbyterian Church [21] | Berkeley, California, US | 20 | 1979 |
St. Mark's Episcopal Chapel [22] [23] | Storrs, Connecticut, US | 21 | 1979 |
Christ Episcopal Church [24] | Tacoma, Washington, US | 22 | 1980 |
St. Paul's Lutheran Church [25] | Durham, North Carolina, US | 23d | 1977 |
Fairchild Chapel, Oberlin College [26] | Oberlin, Ohio, US | 25 | 1981 |
Collegedale Seventh-day Adventist Church [27] | Collegedale, Tennessee, US | 26 | 1986 |
Collegedale Seventh-day Adventist Church (Ackerman Auditorium) [28] [29] | Collegedale, Tennessee, US | 27 | 1986 |
Haga Church [30] | Göteborg, Sweden | 28 | 1992 |
Music School Recital Hall, Iowa State University [31] [32] | Ames, Iowa, US | 29 | 1987 |
Pilgrim Lutheran Church [33] | Beaverton, Oregon, US | 30 | 1987 |
St. Barnabas Anglican Church [34] | Victoria, British Columbia, Canada | 31f | 1988 |
Christ Church, Christiana Hundred, Episcopal [35] | Wilmington, Delaware, US | 32 | 1990 |
Memorial Chapel, Lawrence University [36] | Appleton, Wisconsin, US | 33 | 1995 |
Memorial Chapel, Duke University [37] [38] [39] [40] | Durham, North Carolina, US | 34 | 1997 |
First Presbyterian Church [41] | Springfield, Illinois, US | 35 | 2001 |
Toyota City Concert Hall [42] | Toyota City, Aichi Prefecture, Japan | 37 | 2002 |
Florence Henry Memorial Chapel [43] (Brombaugh's final instrument) | Seattle, Washington, US | 38b | 2005 |