[quote="highlandelectrone"]
As far as I am aware, John Pilling was a very keen organist, and bought the remnants of Comptons more as a hobby than anything else.
The early instruments were built as one-off specials, and used consoles supplied by George Sixsmith. As we have discussed previously, the developed the multi-generator system in a way Compton never did. The ex Free trade Hall Compton runs two generator sets, one driven at double speed. The low speed generator only provides the Great and main pedal divisions, the high speed on provides the Swell, Choir and secondary Pedal.
However, the Makin 3 manual which I have has 3 sets of generators (I have been reliably informed that some of the big jobs had 5 sets). A 5 inch set (similar to the late type Compton single side 5 inch ones) and two 2.5 inch sets (also similar to the Compton single side ones but I think with 8 octaves of sines) I say I think because it is in storage at the moment and cant check it!
The crucial difference is that the 2.5 sets provide unlocked harmonics (5ths and 7ths) thus moving the tonal synthesis forward in a massive leap.
To Musing Muso - nice to meet you, I follow your posts with interest on various forums, the ex FTH instrument, and its sisters in RFH and Rowton Castle had more of an "International" spec than a Baroque one, although there are plentiful mutations and mixtures (slightly out of tune!) See
http://cdmnet.org/Julian/schemes/elec/rfh.htmquote]
=================================
As I always take an extended break at this time of year, I am particularly pleased that the on-going Compton research has taken quite a forward leap during the past three weeks.
I don't know how relevant this is, but John Pilling, apart from being an organ enthusiast, was a director of J Bibby plc, and in the Dunn & Bradstreet register dating from circa. 1980, Compton-Makin were actually a listed subsidiary of that parent company. Apparently, Mr Pilling had electronic organs assembled in the corner of a paper-mill or paper-store, I'm not sure which.
However, the electrones installed at the Festival Hall and the Free Trade Hall, surely fall well within the period of the John Compton Organ Co., if they dated from circa 1952? It therefore follows that these were "specials" built to a much higher spec, and with a degree of sophistication not seen previously. I'm fairly certain that Leslie Bourn was around at the time, and probably stayed with Compton to the bitter end, because he was certainly there around 1959/60, as Technical Director, when he would be about 60 or 61 years of age.
Now I wonder if anyone could confirm the fact that as time (and money) was running out for the Compton concern, there was some simplification of the electrostatic tone generators. I first heard of this from a certain Dr Graham Dukes in Norway, who suggested that the number of harmonics had decreased in the later organs.
Does anyone know if this the case?
Following the departure of many of the pipe-organ building staff around 1960, and the departure of Arthur Lord to his new company, Wyvern Organs, I begin to wonder if cost-cutting wasn't a desperate attempt to keep Compton's afloat. As we know, the pipe-organ side of the business was sold off to Rushworth & Dreaper of Liverpool in 1964, leaving only the electronic organ business,a new type of space-heater and a folding caravan as the main activities of the company.
As you all pick the bones of the turkey remnants, I would welcome a broad comment as to how the best electrones compare with later transistor organs, because a Pilling special has recently been obtained by a school in Halifax, which once graced Lancaster Priory. Some reports suggest that although the flutes were quite pleasant, the chorus effect and Mixtures in particular, were described as sounding "plastic". I have only ever played one proper Electrone, which was getting on in years at the time, (probably around 1975), and although there was a bit of hum and the occasional "plop" and crackle, I found it to be quite a nice instrument overall, and far better than a dreadful Livinsgton-Burg of the same era, and infinitely better than a newer transistorised organ; the name of which escapes me.
Interestingly, the next two organs to impress me as representing the next steps forward, were a 1970's stock-model Allen, and the FM synthesis prototype at Bradford University; the latter forming the basis for Wyvern Organs for many years, before they too went the way of digital sampling.
Food for thought....but finish the turkey first!
Incidentally, I've discovered that John Compton himself was the product of his father's third marriage, to a lady called Mary Hayward, and they ran a grocery and drapery business in Newton Burgoland. This explains how John Hayward Compton could go to one of the best schools in the country, King Edward VI, Birmningham. On the other hand, with seven members of the same family under one roof, plus a servant, he may have been happy to run away!
Best,
MMI