Tuesday, 10 March 2015

Sing with the Choir of St John's


The Choir of St John's, Princes Street, Edinburgh, is recruiting for all voices.

We are one of Edinburgh's leading church choirs and one of the busiest, comprising around thirty volunteer singers and two volunteer organists directed by Stephen Doughty.

The choir in concert
We rehearse on Thursdays from 7.30-9.15pm and sing three choral services each Sunday, 9.30am Matins, 10.30am Eucharist, and 6pm Evensong. This means we sing 8-10 pieces each week as well as psalms and hymns. We have a huge repertoire stretching from the Renaissance to new commissions so a high level of commitment and good sight-reading ability is essential. We also have a strong social life, with evening events usually ending with a drink or two. Being an amateur choir there is no official 'dep' system, but members are expected to attend most services, and arrange with other members of their part to ensure cover if they are away.

In addition to these regular commitments, all kinds of musical and social events take place throughout the year:
  • January: Choir party and cabaret - a chance to try out some alternative genres of performance!
  • February: Shrove Tuesday Party - the choir provide less-than-sacred musical entertainment and pancakes for the congregation
  • March/ April: Palm Sunday short choral performance of the passion story
    Good Friday - 7pm Choral Meditation, often a Requiem Mass or Passiontide work.
    Sunday after Easter - weekend away at the Cathedral of the Isles on Cumbrae
  • May: concert with orchestra, to showcase the choir outside the liturgical setting.
  • July: 'half-holiday' with no rehearsals or evensong. Groups from the choir often go on holiday together whether camping in the Highlands or European city breaks.
  • August: During the Edinburgh Festival we sing full choral masses at the 10.30am Eucharist and often showcase new repertoire. This often includes a Haydn or Mozart mass with orchestra, or works with early music or brass ensemble.
  • October: Weekend away singing at a Cathedral or Abbey: in the past this has included Ripon, York, Durham and Hexham.
  • November: Choral Meditation for All Souls.
  • December: Advent Carols.
    Carol singing engagements around the city, including the City Chambers and Roxburghe Hotel.
    Service of Nine Lessons and Carols: the highlight of our choral year.
    Christmas services: 11.45pm Midnight Mass on Christmas Eve, 9.45am Christmas Day Eucharist, and 11.15am Lessons and Carols for Christmas.
  • January: Epiphany Carol Service
Christmas, with Rector Markus

As well as these (fairly) regular events there are often one-off events such as participating in festive Choral Evensong for the reopening of Melrose Episcopal Church in February 2015, performing Ronald Center's 'Dona Nobis Pacem' in November 2013, or singing with the Choir of St Mary's Cathedral at the consecration of the Bishop of Edinburgh in May 2012.

A blustery Sunday morning
Our Director of Music Stephen Doughty is also Chorus Master of the Belfast Philharmonic Chorus and Director of the Garleton Singers in East Lothian. He is highly sought after for 'Come and Sing' events in Edinburgh and Belfast and as an orchestrator and arranger, and is an examiner for the Associated Board. His full biography is available on his website, stephendoughty.co.uk

St John's is a beautiful church built in 1818 with a fine acoustic and recently refurbished Willis organ. It is a progressive and welcoming Scottish Episcopal Church whose congregation and clergy highly value the contribution of the choir. You can find out more on the church's website, stjohns-edinburgh.org.uk


Cultural exchange at the Edinburgh Festival

A worrying incident on the isle of Cumbrae





If you are interested in singing with the Choir of St John's, please contact the Director of Music Stephen Doughty to arrange an audition at sjtdoughty@gmail.com, or come along to a service and catch somebody in red afterwards.


Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Festival Worship 2014

Sunday 3rd August

10.30 Eucharist: "I'm not a religious man"
Communion Service Collegium Regale- Howells
Mine eyes for beauty pine- Howells
Let all mortal flesh keep silence- Bairstow
Our Festival Worship opens with Howells monumental service for Kings College, Cambridge, a firm fixture in Anglican music lists, and Bairstow’s dramatic anthem - a firm fixture in St. John’s!

6.00 Evensong: "A victim of 4 o’clock dinners..."
Evening Canticles in D minor - Walmisley
How lovely are the messengers- Mendelssohn
Cathedral Fugue in E flat- Attwood
Walmisley, born 200 years ago was organist of both St. John’s & Trinity Colleges in Cambridge, and is best known for his Evening service. Music of his godfather, Thomas Attwood, also features.

Sunday 10 August

9.30 Matins: “I like it, my boy”
Te Deum in G- Vaughan Williams
Jubilate (Collegium Regale)- Howells
And I saw a new heaven- Bainton
Stanford’s influence as heard through his pupils’ music including more of Howells’ service and Bainton’s famous anthem

10.30 Eucharist: "A German Italian"
Missa Bell’ Amfrit alltera a 8- di Lasso
Adoramus te, Christe- di Lasso
Laudate, pueri, Dominum - Hassler
Hassler’s 450th anniversary marked with polychoral music from the height of the Renaissance.

6.00 Evensong: “captivatingly enjoyable”
Magnificat & Nunc dimittis- Mathias
Lift up your heads- Mathias
Toccata giocosa- Mathias
A major figure in 20th century music, Welsh composer William Mathias would have been 80 this year.

9.30 Matins: "Rhythm & Harmony"
Te Deum- Alan Smith
Jubilate- Howard Helvey
I will sing with the spirit- Goodenough
Both the elements in the title abound is this service of recent music. Smith’s Te Deum was premiered by St Johns, and the Jubilate was composed only last year.

Sunday 17th August

10.30 Eucharist: "A Farewell to Salzburg"
Missa Solemnis et brevis K337- Mozart
Laudate Dominum (Verspers)- Mozart
Epistle Sonata K336- Mozart
Mozart’s final mass and kirchensonate for Salzburg Cathedral, an intriguing mix of expected froth and old school counterpoint,  with his famous aria from the Vespers.

6.00 Evensong: "Eine Deutsche Liturgie"
Meine Seele erhebt- Schütz
Herr, nun lassest- Franck
Singet dem Herr nein neues Leid- Schütz
Setting of the Evensong canticles from the German Baroque; Schütz’s music is full of word painting and energy, inspired by the cori spezzati tradition of Venice.

Sunday 24th August

9.30 Matins: "Tudor church music"
Te Deum- Thomas Causton
Jubilate, 5th service- Thomas Tomkins
Ecce vicit Leo- Peter Philips
If you’re a fan of the ‘Golden Age’ of English choral music then look no further than this service! Tomkins’ studied jagged rhythms contrast with Philips’ flair

10.30 Eucharist: "A Little Knight Music"
Cantus Missae- Rheinberger
Ave verum- Rheinberger
Finale- Rheinberger
Despite his rejection of the Cecilian movement, Pope Leo XIII awarded Rheinberger the Knight’s Cross of the Order of St Gregory for his glorious 8-part mass.

6.00 Evensong 
Magnificat primi toni- Victoria
Nunc dimittis a 8- Palestrina
Mihi autem nimis- Palestrina
One of only two settings of the Magnificat by Victoria that sets that entire canticle, featuring an unusual double choir format.

Sunday 31st August

9.30 Matins: "Choral favourites!"
Te Deum in F- John Ireland
Jubilate in A- Stanford
Let all the world- Vaughan Williams
Another look at the influence of Stanford: one of John Ireland’s best known choral works, the Te Deum, is paired with Vaughan Williams’ paean of praise

10.30 Eucharist: Polak, Węgier - dwa bratanki
Missa Brevis- Kodaly
Deus, Deus meus- R. Panufnik
Bridal Train- Panufnik
To mark Andrzej Panufnik’s centenary a celebration of Hungary and Poland’s  friendship featuring Kodaly’s extraordinary Mass and R. Panufnik’s haunting motet

6.00 Evensong: "Voice and Verse"
Evening Canticles in A- Stanford
Blest pair of sirens- Parry
The grand finale to our Festival Worship:  Stanford’s large-scale Evening Canticles, originally sung by 300 singers and orchestra, and Parry’s monumental ode to ‘Singing everlastingly’!

Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Notes Tremendous

2013 sees the centenary of the birth of one of the greatest composers of the 20 th century, Benjamin Britten. Notable in particular for his operas, including Peter Grimes, and his church parables, such as St. Nicholas which was performed in St John’s a number of years ago, Britten also left a significant corpus of works for the Anglican church which have become mainstays of the repertoire, not least his Hymn to the Virgin, written when the composer was only 16 years old.

Britten is also notable for his humanity, seen in the monumental War Requiem written for the consecration of Coventry Cathedral which was destroyed by bombs in WW2. The large scale work combines the text of the Requiem mass with war poems by Wilfred Owen among others and was composed specifically for three soloists- a German Baritone, a Russian Soprano and a British Tenor.

If you’re not familiar with the composer’s music you’re in luck- on the 25th May you will have the opportunity to join the world-wide celebrations by coming to the annual concert of the Choir of St John’s. A packed programme will feature music by Britten, including his rarely-heard Jubilate, and the gorgeous Hymn to St Cecilia from which the title of the concert comes (Britten was born on St
Cecilia’s Day.) You can also hear music by his contemporaries including some delightful part-songs by Finzi, spectacular arrangements of well-known spirituals by Tippett and American folk songs by Copland- great fun and full of surprises…!!

It’s possible you’ve been unaware of the organ in St John’s except in terms of it accompanying the hymn singing Sunday by Sunday, but here’s your chance to hear it in all its glory and played by St John’s two assistant organists, Peter Horsfall and Caroline Cradock! Britten’s only major organ piece, the Prelude and Fugue on a Theme of Vittoria will be coupled with two works by the teacher Britten most admired, Frank Bridge, including the most famous one, the sumptuous Adagio.

A particular feature of the architecture of St. John’s and indeed many Anglican churches and cathedrals is that the choir and organ are placed up at the front of the church singing across the church rather than out into the church. Know what I mean? Well, why not come along on the 25th May to hear the choir in full voice, freed from the constraints of the choir stalls and filling the church with their lovely singing. I’m sure you’ll find something in the programme to get your toes tapping - satisfaction guaranteed! - and a glass of wine will help no end!

Look out for the brightly (and I mean brightly) coloured posters and flyers. Tickets are available from the church office (0131 229 7565) or on the door.

I look forward to seeing you at the concert!

Stephen Doughty
Director of Music

Tuesday, 13 November 2012

A Weekend at York Minster

St John's was quiet on Sunday 28th October without the choir present. The choir was instead singing at York Minster, filling in for the Minster choir during their half-term break. Under the expert management of Eleanor Harris, the St John's choir, with a few groupies, spent the weekend enjoying the York Railway Museum, seeing the sights, and occasionally fitting in the odd spot of music.

The Choir of St John's in York Minster
Singing in the Minster is very different from singing at St John's. The aisle is much wider. The organ seems a long way away. You can only hear your neighbour and it is difficult to get a sense of the overall sound. There is a disconcerting five second gap between our stopping singing and the echo returning. The architecture is also very distracting.

First we had to rehearse our services in the Minster and then we had to practise processing. Being such a vast place, we almost had to skip down the aisle. I found going through the screen arch into the choir very inspiring and humbling. I was conscious of generations of monks and quiristers leading the worship in that ancient, hallowed building. It was a privilege for us to be allowed to sing there.

Going through the screen arch into the choir
Come our first Evensong, we were astonished how many people, on a sunny Saturday afternoon, came in to listen to us. More alarming was the fact that the congregation was all around us, rather like sensurround sound, requiring our truth in the inward parts. But it was as nothing compared to Eucharist on Sunday morning, when we confidently sang the Rheinberger mass under the crossing to what seemed to us, used to St John's, a huge congregation. Stephen Doughty’s brisk playing of the hymns - something that may, just occasionally, have been noted at St John's - was later commented on favourably by the congregation, as was our singing. Endearingly, some members of the Sidney Smith Association, who had attended St John's a few weeks ago, specially made a point of coming to hear the choir again in York.

Stephen Doughty conducting in the nave
After Eucharist, we sang Mattins, this time to a more select audience. After Mattins, the church’s architect very kindly showed us round the current renovations to the stained glass windows and round the masonry yards- well worth seeing. Our final service was Sunday Evensong, when, in front of hordes of attenders, we sang the challenging Leighton canticles and Stephen Doughty's new work, I saw - and Lo, a Whirlwind. This anthem, a product of lonely evenings for Stephen when he was working in Malaysia earlier this year, was especially composed for our choir, setting words from the first chapter of Ezekiel, paraphrased by the future Lady Northampton (a worshipper at the Charlotte Chapel). After a melodramatic introduction, it leads into an ingenious and redoubtable double fugue - and, so we were told by the assistant organist of the Minster, very impressive it sounded too.

It was an exhausting and intense weekend, but our music-making was ably directed by Stephen and strongly supported by our excellent organists, Peter Horsfall and Caroline Cradock. It is not every church choir that can support three fine organists, and the weekend would not have been the success it was without their contribution.

Enjoying the odd occasion for refreshment
And, yes, thank you for asking, we did have the odd occasion for refreshment. We made merry, as only St John's choir knows how. Over the years we've had a little bit of practice at that too.

Nicholas Grier

Thursday, 28 June 2012

Festival Worship - a Feast of Choral Music from Past to Present!

A most musical, rousing and yet spiritual start to Sunday… St John’s Festival Worship in the heart of the city.
EdinburghGuide.com

I write having just this moment finished choosing the music for this year’s ‘Festival Worship’, the feast of sacred music which will enhance the services in August, and am so excited I would like to share it with you!

As you know, St John’s maintains the three principal choral services of the Scottish Episcopal tradition every week, Matins, Eucharist and Evensong and this August the music across these services covers some 400 years and includes among its treats a first performance and a whole day devoted to the music of Giovanni Gabrieli, the maestro di cappella of St. Mark’s, Venice who died 400 years ago this year and who raised the art of cori spezzati - literally ‘spaced choirs- to its zenith.

St. John’s has one of Edinburgh's leading church choirs and attending Choral Matins here is a treat
(The Independent)

Matins (9.30am), the morning ‘call to prayer’ features no less than three anniversaries including that of John Ireland, who died 50 years ago and whose canticles and most famous anthem, Greater Love opens our Festival Worship, and the organ music of Leon Boëllmann, whose anniversary has inspired the programming Jean Huré's subtle Te Deum and Fauré's ever-popular Cantique de Jean Racine. The motoric rhythms and pungent harmonies of Hutchings' St. John's, Edinburgh Service, specially dedicated to the Choir of St. John’s and Dove's show-stopper Seek him that maketh the seven stars enliven the final Matins of the Festival.

If you come to Eucharist (10.30am), these days the main service of the day, you will hear Rheinberger's gloriously romantic Mass for double choir, Cantus Missae, written in defiance of the restrictive ideals of the Caecilian movement, Bob Chilcott's A Little Jazz Mass with its toe-tapping rhythm, drums and bass and a world premiere in John Hoyle's Missa Brevis. Over the last few years the Choir of St. John's has built a good relationship with this composer, which has been recognised in this lyrical, vibrant mass and his kind dedication to me.

While the first Sunday of August is devoted to the Launch of the Festival of Spirituality & Peace, later in the month you can Evensong (6.00pm), which has a distinctive spiritual quality all of its own. While much of the music we will perform during August originates from around the world, for Evensong on 19th August it's all firmly in-house. There's music by three members of the Choir including world premieres of Peter Silver's Responses and my own festival anthem, I saw, and Lo, a Whirlwind, coupled with canticles by a former Professor at Edinburgh University. Three major English composers - Finzi, Holst and Tippett - all combine in our final Evensong of the Festival.


I finish with news of our 'festival-within-a-festival' and our celebration of the music of the Italian composer Giovanni Gabrieli. As I mentioned earlier he was maestro di cappella of St. Mark’s, Venice. An architectural feature of St. Mark’s is the choir lofts high on either side of the altar which led to a musical style known as cori spezzati. The sound from these choirs would project back and forth across the building, coming together at moments of greatest impact. Music for 4, 8 and 12 part forces is the order of the day here and the fame of this
spectacular music spread across Europe, with numerous musicians coming to Venice to hear it, absorb it and take it back to their countries.

Sunday 12th August 2012 is the 400th anniversary to the day of the death of Gabrieli. I am delighted we will be joined by the early instruments of the Scottish Gabrieli Consort during the morning services- a collection of cornets, sackbuts, early violins, curtails and more! Come to St. John's and hear what all the fuss was about!

Stephen Doughty
Director of Music, St. John's

Monday, 7 May 2012

It’s that time again…!


Director of the Choir of St John's Stephen Doughty writes about the forthcoming Annual Concert:

Katy Boyle, in an online discussion uttered possibly one of the world’s great truisms: “99 percent of the people you ask about it will profess to hate it, but they all love it really.” What is she talking about? The Eurovision Song Contest of course!

Yes, in just a few weeks’ time people the world over will be shouting and screaming at the TV, adhering closely to Terry Wogan’s observation that “there’s not enough silliness in the world. Eurovision keeps you balanced.” Here in the UK the popular media is hopping with the news that Engelbert Humperdinck with be representing the United Kingdom. However it is not this event that I refer to in my title, but a much more important one: The Annual Concert of the Choir of St John’s.

What’s the connection, you may ask? I bet you can sing the theme tune to the Eurovision contest, but do you know what it is? Since Eurovision’s beginnings the Prelude to Marc-Antoine Charpentier’s Te Deum has heralded in this great event and if you come to St John’s on Saturday 19 May at 7.30pm you can hear the piece in its original setting and in its entirety.

The words of the 4th century Te Deum are divided into multiple sections with some bright and cheery, dance-like full choruses, separated by a whole plethora of solos, duets and trios all of which are taken by different members of St John’s Choir and which together shows off the choir to great aplomb.

In the second half of the concert the choir will perform one of J.S. Bach’s most popular and enjoyable works, his Magnificat in D. Composed by Bach in his first year as Cantor of the Thomaskirche in Leipzig, the various verses of the Magnificat, (like the Te Deum above ) recalling the visitation of the angel Gabriel to Mary, are divided into 12 movements, contrasting solos with choruses. The choruses in particular are worthy of note. All in 5 parts they are full of drama and excitement and, if you’ll excuse me a momentary indulgence, suit the Choir of St John’s down to the ground.


The Choir will be joined by a suitably festive orchestra, full of flutes, oboes, trumpets and drums.  For those of you who have wanted to hear the choir in concert during the Edinburgh Festival but have been defeated by the sheer number of events that are on at the same time, here is the perfect opportunity. Tickets are available at the door but why not beat the rush and grab one in advance (0131 229 7565)? I’m sure you’ll be awarding DOUZE POINTS!!

Stephen Doughty

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Two Organs in St John's


Stephen Doughty, Director of Music and Organist at St John's, writes about the second organ installed to perform Vierne's Messe Solonnelle during the Edinburgh Festival:

On the 28 August this year, following a month of varied and exciting music-making covering some four centuries which included no less than two world premieres, the grand finale of the Choir of St John's Festival Worship took place. In a music list that had featured music for triple choir and a chamber orchestra this finale was notable, firstly for placing the choir in the acoustically-excellent gallery, and for showing off our latest acquisition- a new digital organ built by the assistant organist in St John's, Peter Horsfall.

Historically having more than one organ is a precedent that has been well established. A quick tour around some of Europes more significant cathedrals and churches reveals the Grande Orgue sitting in a commanding position in a gallery above the West door (the best position, incidentally) with a smaller Orgue de Choeur above the altar at the front of the church, close to the singers. The architecture and music of such buildings in this country generally doesn't support such musical excitement/potential sadly- the main organ is almost always at the front of the church above the choir stalls which are typically placed left and right in the Choir.

The practice of playing two organs alternately was a performance method already well entrenched even as early as the fifteenth century- an organ "duello" between Claudio Merulo and none other than Andrea Gabrieli was one of the more combustible examples in history. When I decided to programme Vierne’s monumental Messe Solonnelle, written in 1898 to be performed in Paris' Church of Saint Sulpice with its magnificent organ, (the instrument itself is a candidate to become a UNESCO World Heritage Site!) Peter jumped at the challenge of building a second instrument to show off the work’s full potential.

Typically the smaller orgue de choeur plays along with the choir, doubling their vocal lines and adding softer instrumental interludes while the brooding grand orgue powers out big chords and ground shaking introductions, often marked fff which in French organ terms is very loud and snarly indeed- great stuff! However I can’t help wondering how well the two instruments- which in a cathedral such as Notre Dame are a significant distance apart- played together. Was there an 'intermediary' conductor half way down the church..?! In the case of St. John’s technology again leant a hand with a TV camera and loudspeaker so the gallery organ could be heard at the front of the church- very successfully in my opinion!

Stephen Doughty, www.stephendoughty.co.uk

Pete Horsfall at the Gallery Organ which he built for St John's Church: the main organ is in the Choir.

Engineer Pete Horsfall, Assistant Organist at St John's, describes how he built the new gallery organ:

The gallery organ is an electronic instrument, comprising a mixture of new, old and refurbished elements. The design and construction involved mechanical, electronic and acoustic considerations – much as a 'real' pipe organ does.

On the mechanical side, the main components are two keyboards and a pedal-board. The two keyboards have been built up from items that were replaced in the Church's main organ during its refurbishment some years ago. Due to their age and the interim storage conditions, the majority of the keys had become prone to sticking and the electrical contacts were unreliable until each key was systematically adjusted and cleaned up. The weight and the geometry of the moving parts of a traditional organ keyboard is greatly superior to a typical synthesiser keyboard, so the refurbishment of these keyboards seemed the most appropriate option for this project. The pedal-board has been borrowed from another instrument and presented no particular challenges – other than the fact that the pedal-board is wider than two 'table legs' that it sits between! The bench seat is also borrowed from another instrument.

The lesser, but still crucial, aspects of the mechanical construction involve a customised table-top that the keyboards sit on, the music rest, and also supporting brackets for the loudspeakers. The table-top enables the keyboards to rest on a conveniently-positioned pew; luckily, the pew lent itself to the instrument’s proportions being fairly close to 'standard' dimensions, although it is doubtful that any alternative plan would have been devised even if that had not been the case. The need for a music rest epitomised many aspects of the project as a whole, in that even the apparently simplest components require to be built up from nothing, and can be every bit as challenging as the 'major' tasks - it may or may not be apparent to readers that anything requiring non-right-angled wood cutting is likely to give some headaches.

On the electronic side, each keyboard and pedal-board is fitted with a stand-alone circuit that generates a 'MIDI' signal output. (MIDI is a standard protocol used by modern synthesisers to link between electronic instruments.) The MIDI circuits connect to each individual key note (61 on each keyboard, 32 on the pedal-board), and generate a coded data stream for every 'event' (ie. key press, or key release). These circuits conveniently rationalise the amount of external wiring required, in much the same way as a computer keyboard connects to a PC using only 4 wires, despite the keyboard having 80 or so different keys.

The MIDI signals from each keyboard/pedal-board are merged together in another circuit – a non-trivial operation that interleaves the data streams from the different sources, each of which has no knowledge of any data that might be emitted from another source concurrently. In addition to the key-press information already described, the organ needs to accommodate control of the 'registration' – this is the term used to describe the different instruments (or 'stops') that are active at any time. The keyboards were already equipped with 'thumb piston' buttons, positioned just below each keyboard to allow pre-programmed stop combinations to be recalled at the push of such a button. These buttons, together with a separate panel that houses 6 additional piston buttons, have each been configured to generate selectable MIDI messages, which are merged with the keyboard streams to allow full control of the sound-generating synthesisers.

With regard to the acoustic and sound-generating aspects, it is likely that the quality of the synthesisers and the complementary acoustics of the building are of similar-ranking importance. The synthesisers, which generate the pipe organ sounds, are commercially-built devices that are designed to be used either as stand-alone instruments, or integrated into traditional pipe instruments. They are probably as good as any synthesised pipe instrument can be. But – as is often asked about synthesised organs – just how 'good' is that?

The synthesised sounds are based upon high fidelity recordings of real organ pipes (this is known as 'sampling'); mathematical functions are used to precisely extrapolate the recorded samples across all different key pitches. Whilst this, in theory, gives a truly authentic replication of the original sound, such accurate techniques can actually be the downfall of synthesised instrumentsthe sound is 'too good' or 'too regular' to be convincing. The organ synthesisers must therefore apply a controlled amount of instability and irregularity to the sounds in order to create a realistic effect. Working in conjunction with a high quality amplifier and loudspeaker system, and with the Church's natural acoustics also colouring the amplified sound, the common opinion seems to be that our gallery organ does create a pleasing and convincing sound. It is interesting to note that, soon after the instrument first sounded at St Johns, some previous concerns about "will it have enough 'body' to it?" gave way to questions about "will it sound French enough?" – immediately raising the bar of expectations to optimally match the requirements of the Vierne Mass that had been the trigger for constructing the instrument!

The instrument was constructed over the course of 4 months, and completed in July. As far as possible, the various different circuits were tested – and the bugs eliminated – before the organ was assembled in the gallery. A number of hardware and software modifications have been made to the electronics since that time, to implement a few unforeseen requirements and in response to the most persistent of the bugs that were encountered - namely, phantom notes sounding on their own accord. The 'phantom notes' bug entirely vindicated the decision to include a 'panic button' into the design, though this bug now appears to be resolved, and the 'panic button' has not been used for a while now.

Whilst the aim has been to create a traditional-style instrument, the electronic implementation does open up other possibilities that could easily be incorporated (a 'Hammond' electronic organ sound, for example?!) One might also, perhaps, devise some alternate functions for the 'panic button' – any suggestions will be received with interest!