The Organ

The organ of the Church of St. Andrew and St. Paul was built in 1931 by the renowned Casavant Frères of Ste. Hyacinthe, as that firm's opus #1457. It is one of the largest instruments on the island of Montreal, containing nearly 7000 pipes. About 70% of the pipes are located in the chancel; the other pipes speak from the rear gallery. Only the Trompette en chamade (installed in 1992) is visible, mounted prominently below the Black Watch window. The instrument was cleaned and overhauled by Casavant in 1976-77, and several stops and a new console were added by Caron, Gagnon, Baumgarten in 1992. This console was replaced by Casavant in 2001. In 2011 two "new" old stops were added from a 1921 Casavant organ formerly located in Richelieu Valley United Church: the Main Great's Harmonic Flute 4' and the Tower Swell's Vox Humana 8'. Like all of the Casavant instruments built between ca. 1900 and 1960, op. 1457 is built in the late-Romantic Anglo-American style. The tonal design of the instrument was conceived for the playing of orchestral transcriptions and orchestrally-inspired solo repertoire and accompaniments; the Wagnerian orchestra, with its kaleidoscopic yet seamless colour changes, was the aesthetic ideal for many organists of the period. Click here to view photos and the stoplist.

Join us in celebrating our intercultural congregation on
Heritage Sunday February 19
more details here


The Church
of St Andrew and St Paul

3415 Redpath Street
Montréal QC  H3G 2G2
CANADA 
tel. 514-842-3431
info@standrewstpaul.com
Map
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