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Organ Rehab
Duke Chapel’s original organ, built and installed
in 1932 by the Æolian Organ Company, will be removed and reconditioned
over the next eighteen months before being reinstalled in late
2008.
The Æolian organ, one of four organs in the chapel and the one
that accompanies the Chapel Choir and various worship services,
is located in the chancel. “With the addition of a new console,
it will also have an enhanced role in teaching, recitals, and concerts,”
says chapel organist David Arcus.
Although the Æolian received minor repairs and renovations over
the years, the organ is in dire need of a major overhaul after
more than seventy years of consistent use, says Duke Chapel organ
curator John Santoianni.
“The Æolian reminds me of an automobile I once owned which looked
great, but needed many repairs,” Santoianni says. “You could not
tell from looking at the outside just how much mechanical work
was needed.”
The organ will be named for Kathleen Upton Byrns McClendon ’80
in honor of a $600,000 gift that she and her husband, Aubrey McClendon
’81, made for the project in 2003. While the instrument is out
of service, a small electrical organ will be brought in for temporary
use.
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