Orgelbau Pirchner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Orgelbau Pirchner
TypeGmbH & Co. KG
IndustryOrgan building
Founded1817[1]
HeadquartersSteinach am Brenner, Tirol,
ProductsPipe organs
Websitewww.orgelbau-pirchner.com

Orgelbau Pirchner is an Austrian manufacturer of pipe organs, located in Steinach am Brenner, Tirol.

History[]

The company was founded in 1817 by Franz Reinisch in Gries am Brenner,[2] but moved to Steinach as early as 1825. In 1935 Johann Pirchner Sr. took over the company, but had to stop production during World War II. Between 1945 and 1973, the workshop built over 120 pipe organs. In 1973 his son, Johann Pirchner Jr., continued the Pirchner tradition, focusing on the construction of pipe organs with slider chests and tracker action. After building a new workshop in 1997, Johann Pirchner Jr. handed the company to his son Martin Pirchner, who took the Meisterprüfung in organ building in 1996.[1]

Today[]

Orgelbau Pirchner builds instruments for churches, concert halls, universities and schools. The company's primary focus is on designing and building slider chest organs with tracker-action. The scales of the pipes and their voicing are a modern interpretation of the principles of Andreas and Gottfried Silbermann.

Works (selection)[]

P = Pedal keyboard

Year City Church Picture Manuals Stops
1978 Kaltern
Kaltern Orgelempore
III/P 31
1980 Brixen
Brixen Dom innen 04
III/P 47
1985 Perchtoldsdorf St. Augustin
Perchtoldsdorf 11247.JPG
III/P 40
1989 Seitenstetten Seitenstetten Abbey
Stift Seitenstetten 20110731-7
II/P 29
1991 Salzburg Salzburg Cathedral
Salzburg Dom St. Virgil & Rupert Innen Hochaltar & Vierungsorgeln.jpg
II/P[3]

II/P

14

14

1995 Bolzano III/P 44
1999 Hall in Tirol
2852 - Hall in Tirol - Stadtpfarrkirche.JPG
III/P 50
2000 Innsbruck Innsbruck Cathedral
070406-10 Dom Innsbruck 3
III/P.[4] 57
2002 Böheimkirchen III/P[5] 31
2002 Wien Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst
Seilerstätte AO106 Pirchner-Orgel 03
II/P 15
2004 Polling, Weilheim-Schongau Polling Abbey
Kloster Polling Orgel.jpg
III/P 42
2008 Reichenthal Parish church
Reichenthal Pfarrkirche - Innenraum 2.jpg
II/P 25
2009 Lienz
Klosterkirche Mariae Himmelfahrt Lienz IV.jpg
III/P 38
2010 St. Ulrich in Gröden
Orgun nuef Urtijei
II/P 31
2011 Traunstein
St. Oswald Hochaltar Traunstein-1.jpg
I/P[6] 9
2013 Vorau Vorau Monastery
Orgel Stift Vorau.png
II/P 34

References[]

  1. ^ a b http://orgelbau-pirchner.com/en/history.php History Orgelbau Pirchner
  2. ^ (in German) http://orgeln.musikland-tirol.at/ob/Reinisch-Joseph.html
  3. ^ (in German) http://www.dommusik-salzburg.at/dommusik_2010/page.asp?id=16619
  4. ^ (in German) Reinhard Jaud: 275 Jahre Orgelgeschichte zu St. Jakob in Innsbruck. In: Domorgel St. Jakob/Innsbruck, Festschrift zur Orgelweihe, Innsbruck 2000, S. 26ff.
  5. ^ (in German) Gottfried Allmer: Große Orgeln in Österreich - ein Überblick. In: Das Orgelforum. Nr. 13, 2010, S. 88.
  6. ^ "Archived copy" (in German). Archived from the original on 2015-02-01. Retrieved 2015-02-01.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

Links[]

Retrieved from ""