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Grace Church Organ

 

The Grace Church Organ was built in 1981 by Fritz Noack of Georgetown, Massachusetts. It consists of 40 stops on three manuals and pedal. The instrument is a “tracker” and has an entirely mechanical action, judged to be the most reliable and durable of organ actions. Tracker organs are relatively rare as compared to the more common electric or pneumatic type. A tracker gives the organist more precise control over the exact moment that air enters the pipes and is more touch sensitive than other types of organs. The Grace Church organ tonal design is eclectic, effectively playing music of all style periods.

 

GREAT
POSITIVE
SWELL
PEDAL
16’ Bourdon 8’ Gedeckt 8’ Stopt flute 32’ Grand Bourdon
8’ Principal 4’ Principal 8’ Viola 16’ Open Bass
8’ Second Principal    
4’ Recorder 8’ Celeste 16’ Bourdon
8’ Chimney Flute 2 2/3’ Nazard 4’ Violin 8’ Principal
4’ Octave
2’ Gemshorn 4’ Chimney Flute 8’ Stopt Flute
2 2/3’ Twelfth 1 3/5’ Tierce III Cornet 4’ Octave
2’ Fifteenth 1’ Piccolo 2’ Principal 2’ Night Horn
V Cornet
III Sharp 1 1/3 Quinte IV  Mixture
IV-VI Mixture 16’ Bassoon (prepared)
8’ Hautbois 16’ Trombone
8’ Trumpet 8’ Cremona 8’ Trumpet

4’ Clarion

4’ Clarion