A Piano Player's Guide to the Organ
Most keyboard players start with the piano but there is no
need to stop there. Playing the organ can be rewarding and also
useful. A pianist with intermediate level skills should
be able to play the organ with a small amount of effort. The
main skills to master are legato playing, pedal technique and
organ registration.
Making the organ sound smooth (legato playing)
Although the keys of a piano and organ may look
alike they control very different sound mechanisms. Striking a
piano key causes a felt hammer to hit a metal string but
depressing an organ key causes a pipe valve to open or an
electronic circuit to be activated. With the key down on a
piano the string continues to vibrate with a gradual decrease
in volume. This is because a felt pad, called a damper, is
lifted off of the string; releasing the key allows the damper
to contact the string stopping it from vibrating. With the
organ a steady sound will continue until the key is released.
The pianist often uses the damper pedal to keep the dampers off
the strings after the keys have been released but no such
device exists for organs. (Some organs have a sosteneuto
control but that is beyond the scope of this
article.) What all this means to the organ player is
that to get sound the keys must be held down. The
instrument will stop producing sound the moment a key is
released. The room's acoustics may give
a little decay time but this will not be a factor in most
performance settings. The exception is large spaces like
cathedrals or sports arenas with very long reverberation
times. The good news for organists is that they do not
usually have to consider the velocity with which they
strike a key; the pipe has one volume level no matter how you
play it. This fact allows the organist to use fingerings that
would produce very uneven piano playing but sound just fine on
the organ. The organist can make finger substitutions,
wiggle the thumb from one key to another and slide fingers
between keys. A good organ technique book will help you
learn these patterns.
Learning to play organ pedals
The thought of using your feet to make music
might be intimidating at first but don't let that stop
you. Organ pedal parts are usually very simple. You have
no doubt noticed that the pedals are laid out like a big
keyboard. So if you can name your keys you can identify the
pedals by name also. The only thing a pianist will need to
learn is pedal technique. This skill will take some time
to learn. You didn't figure out the fingers overnight did
you? I suggest a book like (recommendation
here). Get some guidance from an experienced
organist or instructor so you learn it the right way. Start
with the proper kind of shoes. Something narrow with thin
leather soles is good. Shoes designed specifically for organ
playing are available at a reasonable price at
www.organmastershoes.com.
Organ registration for pianists
The other thing that is obvious to a pianist
approaching an organ console is all those knobs, buttons and
switches. They can look quite different depending on the
instrument but the controls all do the same functions. For a
quick start have an organist that plays the instrument
regularly show you some general presets you can use. Look
for a row of round numbered buttons. These buttons, usually
located under the keyboards, can completely set up the organ
with a single push. The organist controls the organs
volume and timbre by selecting different combinations of pipe
sets to play. Each control that invokes a set of pipes is
called a stop. These controls can be knobs that are
pulled out to make a sound or tabs that are flipped down
to engage the sound. The ones marked 8' sound in the same
octave as a piano for any given key. The smaller numbers
produce higher pitches and larger give the lower
pitches. See Organ Registration
Basics for a more detailed discussion of this
topic.
Pianists can become good organists
The organ is certainly more complex than a
piano but these complexities can be understood. The
musical skills you already know such as notation reading,
fingering, music theory, listening skills and expressive
playing will all be useful in learning to play the organ.
You can advance rapidly and master essential organ technique
much faster than an absolute beginner.
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