organ stop
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a graduated set of organ pipes of like tone quality
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The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
a graduated set of organ pipes of like tone quality
An organ stop (or just stop) is a component of a pipe organ which admits pressurized air (known as wind) to a set of organ pipes.
The term can also refer to the control that operates this mechanism, commonly called a stop tab, stop knob, or drawknob.
The term is also sometimes used as a synonym for register, referring to the rank(s) of pipes controlled by the stop.
Organ pipes are physically organized within the organ by
The mechanism used to operate the stops varies widely, but the principle is the same: the stop control at the console allows the organist to select which ranks of pipes will sound when a key is pressed. When the organist desires a rank to sound, he operates the corresponding control at the console, allowing wind to flow to the pipes. Likewise, the organist can deny wind to the pipes by operating the same control in the opposite direction. Common stop controls include stop knobs, which move in and out of the console, and stop tabs, which toggle back and forth in position.
Some organs, particularly smaller historical organs from
Over the course of the history of the pipe organ, there have been several different designs by which stops are actuated. In
the longest-standing design, known as the slider chest, there is a strip of material (typically wood) called a
slider which fits underneath a given rank of pipes. The slider has small holes drilled in it, one for each pipe in the
rank. When the stop is set such that pipes are inactive, the holes are misaligned with the pipes, preventing the wind from
flowing up into the pipes above. When the stop is set such that the pipes are active, the slider moves over, aligning the holes
with the pipes, allowing wind to reach them. Because the slider chest was developed before the advent of
Other common designs include the spring chest, the cone valve chest, and the Pitman chest.
The term unification refers to the practice of expanding the tonal resources of an organ without adding extra pipes. Borrowing or duplexing refers to one rank being made available from more than one stop knob. This allows the rank to be played at a different pitch or on a different manual. Extension refers to the addition of extra pipes to the high and/or low ends of a rank in order to allow that rank to be borrowed at a higher and/or lower pitch.
Borrowing between manuals occurs in English organs from about 1700[citation needed], but extension of pipe ranks for the purpose of borrowing at different pitches is a relatively recent development[citation needed].
Extension was heavily used in
The pitch produced by a pipe is a function of its length. An organ stop may be tuned to sound (or "speak at") the pitch normally associated with the key that is pressed (the "unison pitch"), or it may speak at a fixed interval above or below this pitch (an "octave pitch"). The pitch of a rank of pipes is denoted by a number on the stop knob. A stop that speaks at unison pitch (the "native pitch" for that note; the pitch you would hear if you pressed that same key on a piano) is known as an 8' (pronounced "eight foot") stop. This nomenclature refers to the approximate length of the longest pipe in that rank.
The octave sounded by a given pipe is inversely exponentially proportional to its length ("1/2 the length = double the pitch"), meaning that a 4' stop speaks exactly one octave higher an 8' stop. Likewise, a 2' stop speaks exactly one octave higher than a 4' stop. Conversely, a 16' stop speaks exactly one octave below an 8' stop; and a 32′ stop speaks exactly one octave below a 16' stop. Lengths used in actual organs include 64', 32', 16', 8', 4', 2', 1', and 1/2'.
Example:

Ranks that do not speak at a unison or octave pitch, but rather at a non-octave interval to the unison pitch, are called mutation stops (or, simply, "mutations"). Because they sound at intervals other than an octave (8 notes) above or below the unison sound, they are rarely used on their own; rather, they are combined with unison stops to create different tone colors.
The length label of a mutation stop gives the answer as to what pitch the rank sounds. For example, a stop labeled 2 2/3' sounds at the interval of a twelfth (one octave plus a fifth; or 13 notes) above unison pitch.
Certain stops called
Pipe ranks have particular names, which depend on a number of factors ranging from the physical and tonal attributes of the pipes in that rank, to the country and era in which the organ was manufactured, to the pipes' physical location within the organ. Each stop knob is labeled with the name of the rank it controls. In general, that label gives the organist two vital pieces of information about the rank of pipes in question:
This in an example of a typical pipe organ stoplist, showing both common stop names and conventional formatting
(
All audio examples are provided courtesy of the Encyclopedia of Organ Stops, by Edward Stauff.
Stop names are indicative of the tone made by the rank(s) of pipes they control. Organ pipes fall into five broad categories:
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