Charles Brenton Fisk

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Charles Brenton Fisk
Born(1925-02-07)February 7, 1925
DiedDecember 16, 1983(1983-12-16) (aged 58)
Other namesCharlie[1]
OccupationOrgan builder
Years active33[2]: Preface 
Known forBuilding historical organs
MovementOrgan Reform Movement
RelativesJoyce C. Stearns (uncle)

Charles Brenton Fisk (February 7, 1925 – December 16, 1983) was an American pipe organ builder. He was one of the first to use mechanical tracker actions instead of electro-pneumatic actions in modern organ construction. Originally involved in the Manhattan Project, Fisk made a career change from atomic physics to organ building. He later co-founded C.B. Fisk, Inc., an organ building firm.

Life and career[edit]

Early life and education[edit]

Fisk was born in Washington, DC, United States on February 7, 1925. His parents were Brenton Kern Fisk, a lawyer, and Amelia Worthington Fisk, a social worker and suffragette.[3] In the early 1930s, the Fisk family moved to the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts.[4] As a soprano, he joined the choir of the Christ Church of the Cambridge Common, at which E. Power Biggs was the choirmaster and the organist.[5][failed verification] Fisk reports that at this point in life, his interest in organs had not fully matured yet.[6]: 87 He played trumpets and organs.[5]

On Fisk's 13th birthday, he was given a reed organ, on which he made minor repairs.[7]: 2  According to one of Fisk's friends, Fisk fiddled with electromechanical devices and built his own amplifiers when he was 14 years old.[5] Fisk later said that organ music was his favorite to play on the amplifiers because it "showed the amplifier off". He was well-versed in creating tube amplifiers and acquaintances of his parents often requested amplifiers built by Fisk.[6]: 88 

Fisk studied at The Cambridge School of Weston from 1938, and graduated from the school in 1942.[8][7]: 1  In 1943, when Fisk was 17, he secured a job in the University of Chicago's Metallurgical Laboratory with the aid of his physicist uncle, Joyce Stearns, who also worked there.[5][1] Stearns had suggested to Fisk's parents that Fisk work with him in the laboratory to avoid conscription during World War II.[7]: 2 [1]

Military service and work at Los Alamos[edit]

Charles Fisk's US army ID from 1945.

Soon after graduating high school, Fisk was drafted[3] to Army Air Corps, where he worked as a Link Trainer mechanic. A year later, he was transferred to the Los Alamos National Laboratory in July 1944.[5][8][6]: 88 

While at Los Alamos, Fisk was assigned as an electronics technician and a lab helper in the Bomb Physics division.[3] He worked under Darol Froman with twenty other people. As a member of the 9812th Special Engineer Detachment, Fisk was part of a unit that collected knowledgeable people to conduct research.[1][9]

His job included soldering pre-amps for electronic sensors. These sensors were used for detecting the presence of a spherical implosion during bomb testing. A spherical implosion is needed for plutonium bombs to function. Those designs were eventually implemented as the Fat Man atomic bomb, which was dropped onto Nagasaki in 1945.[5] He worked as a part of the Manhattan Project,[4] however, he was not made aware of his involvement until some weeks before the bomb was dropped.[1]

“The work I am doing means nothing to me. That is, I don't understand what the object of it is. Of course, the principle of the whole thing is secrecy, and I am just as much in the dark about the project as you are. My official status is ‘Lab helper in the Metallurgical Lab of the University of Chicago.’ Metallurgy and the University of Chicago have about as much to do with the project as a baby elephant.”[1]

— Charles Fisk, letter to his parents in February 1943

College education in physics and music[edit]

After the war concluded, Fisk studied at Harvard University.[10] Continuing his interest in music, he joined a glee club at the Memorial Church of Harvard University.[7]: 3  He graduated from Harvard with an undergraduate degree in physics in 1949.[3][1]

After graduating, Fisk wished to stay in New Mexico and was offered a position as an assistant in Los Alamos. However, Fisk, due to his father's declining health and his commitment to his would-be future spouse Ann Lindenmuth, rejected the offer.[7]: 4  For a year and a half, Fisk studied cosmic rays at the Brookhaven National Laboratory. From 1950 to 1951, he lived in California and attended Stanford University, intending on getting a PhD in physics.[3][6]: 89 [1] At Stanford, Fisk also studied under the American organist Herbert Nanney and became an apprentice of the organ builder John Swinford.[11][3] He left Stanford's physics curriculum after only completing one six-week semester,[3][1] and ended up switching to a music curriculum.[2]: 1  The Boston Globe and The Diapason attributed Fisk's decision to leave physics to the unease he felt for contributing to the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[9][3] However, an opinion essay from The Georgia Review instead argues that attributing his career change solely on moral grounds is an oversimplification.[1] In a letter Fisk sent to his parents on August 12, 1945, he wrote:

"With only two bombs we have killed between 250,000 and 300,000 Japanese people. Divided evenly over the number of people on the project, each member is responsible for the death of four Japanese. I cannot count this as an honor."[5]

and

"As for myself, I see no reason why you should not tell people of my association with this project. Despite all the foregoing, there has been introduced into our lives an element of pride, the pride that accompanies the success of a mission. I think I can look a combat soldier in the eye now. If you feel like being a little proud too, that's OK. But bear in mind that this is not basically something to be proud of, and if you feel like offering a prayer for the human race, now is a good time."[1]

In October 1950, Fisk wrote to his parents to tell them that he was switching to a career in music.[11] Fisk continued working part-time as an apprentice under John Swinford in Redwood City, California,[5][12] while also studying under music professors Putnam Aldrich and George Houle.[2]: 1  One of the first times that Fisk worked on an organ was when he assisted Swinford in building the organ for Santa Barbara's Trinity Episcopal Church.[3] After Holtkamp offered him a position in 1952, and in 1954, Fisk, at Swinford's urging, became his apprentice in Cleveland, Ohio.[7]: 7 [5][2]: 1  Fisk learned various aspects of shop technique under Holtkamp, which was something that his apprenticeship with Swinford had lacked.[3][7]: 9  Eventually, he dropped out of his music degree program to focus on organ building.[12]

In a later interview by Keith Yocum, when Fisk was 54 years old, Fisk commented:

"I don't know enough about Hiroshima and Nagasaki to know what was lost there, culturally, but I know what was lost in some of the big cities in Europe, which seems much more tragic to me right now. For instance, I can't get over what an incredible tragedy existed in one particular place: Katharinenkirche—St. Catherine's Church—in Hamburg, where there was an organ that Bach played, that was just perfect. . . . The joys that could have come out of that one particular instrument were such that. . . . I just think of what was lost."[1]

Regarding this last quote, in an essay published in The Georgia Review, Laura Matter opined: "I cringe at the way that a mere thing—a musical instrument—took a privileged place over human lives in his late calculations [...] Empathy is fundamentally an act of imagination: we imagine variations on what we know, and so it was the loss of the organ that Charlie most keenly felt".[1]

Marriage[edit]

Fisk's first marriage was to Ann Warren Lindenmuth, with whom he had a son and a daughter.[3]: 5  His second marriage was to Virginia Lee Crist, who was from Gloucester. He and Crist married at Rockport, Massachusetts.[13] Fisk and Crist had two daughters and a son.[14]

C.B. Fisk, Inc.[edit]

In 1955, Fisk returned to New England from Cleveland. Afterward, he became a partner of the Andover Organ Company in Methuen, Massachusetts, a company that was founded in 1948 by Thomas W. Byers.[3][15] Like Fisk, Byers was an organ builder who preferred manual organs over electric ones.[16] In 1958, Fisk took full ownership after Byers left the company,[16] and changed the firm's name to C.B. Fisk, Inc., in 1960. In 1961, the firm relocated to a more spacious, recycled factory in Gloucester, Massachusetts.[3][11][2]: 1  As a result of the move, employees had to move from Methuen to Gloucester. Employees who did not wish to move stayed in Methuen and established a new Andover Organ Company.[2]: 2  After Fisk's death, C. B. Fisk, Inc., continues to manufacture organs to the present day,[3] with it becoming an employee-owned company.[17]

C. B. Fisk, Inc., employed notable organists Barbara Owen, Fritz Noack, and John Brombaugh.[18] Some of these organists have moved on from C. B. Fisk and created their own organ-building companies, with Noack establishing the Noack Organ Company[19] and Brombaugh establishing John Brombaugh & Associates.[20]

Membership in professional associations[edit]

Fisk was a member of the American Pipe Organ Association, the International Society of Organ Builders, the American Institute of Organ Builders, the Organ Historical Society, and the American Guild of Organists.[8]

Death[edit]

Fisk died on December 16, 1983, aged 58 years,[4] due to a liver autoimmune condition, at Philips House, Massachusetts General Hospital.[1] Fisk had lived with sclerosing cholangitis for nearly 3 decades, but it was only diagnosed a few years before his death.[1] Fisk's funeral was held on December 20, 1983, at St. John's Episcopal Church, Gloucester. On January 21, 1984, a memorial service for Fisk was held in the Memorial Church of Harvard University.[3]

Fisk Organs[edit]

Organ building[edit]

1984 Fisk-Nanney organ in the Stanford Memorial Church (op. 85)
Robert Huw Morgan plays Bach's Fantasia and Fugue in G minor on the Fisk-Nanney organ at the Stanford Memorial Church in Stanford, California.

In contrast with the tracker-action organs of the baroque period,[21] the use of electro-pneumatic action mechanisms was the prevalent practice in early 20th-century organ building. However, Fisk was among the first builders to break with this practice; he adopted the tracker action and stop-action mechanisms of historical European and American organs, making him one of the first modern American organ builders to do so.[5] This was a part of the Organ Reform Movement, of which Fisk was cited as a major participant by The American Organist.[22]

In tracker-action organs, the movement of the keys or pedals is mechanically linked to the valves, enabling air to flow through the organ pipes. In electro-pneumatic action, valves and keys are connected electrically, without the use of mechanical trackers.[16] An organ manual is a set of keys that are played with the hands, similar to the keyboard on a piano. However, unlike a piano, an organ can have multiple manuals, one above another.[23]

To further his understanding of traditional organs, Fisk studied features of historical European organs. Trips to European countries were commonplace,[11][21] with the first one being in 1959, where he traveled with Arthur Howes.[2]: 7  Fisk was particularly interested in the organ located in Jakobikirche church, and he made three journeys to Germany to studied the organ.[24] He then tried to emulate them in his designs.[3][5][25]

In addition to building new organs, Fisk restored various historical organs.[8] Barbara Owens, a former collaborator of Fisk, wrote that his works were influenced by German and French organs.[2]: 29  His organs were described as having an eclectic nature, as he never stuck to only one style of organ building.[26]

Opus numbers[edit]

Fisk gave his organs opus numbers. Some of these works were never built due to cancellations. Some were merely restorations of, and additions to, existing organs. Additionally, opus numbers 1 through 24 were not built by Fisk. This was because he continued the preexisting opus numbers of the Andover Organ Company, meaning those organs were built by Byers.[2]: 2 

Opus 24 through 27 were built when Byers and Fisk co-owned Andover, and opus 28 through 35 were built before the rebranding to C. B. Fisk, Inc. Opus 35 through 85 were built by C. B. Fisk, Inc., when Fisk was still alive, and the rest were built after his death.[2]: 77–82 

Philosophy[edit]

Jones Boyds, an organist at Stetson University, wrote that Fisk had mixed views on the organ being used along with an orchestra, basing it on this quote from Fisk: "[T]he fortunes of the organ and of the orchestra are to an extent mutually exclusive and my personal view is that the one instrument takes the place of the other [...] There is a human craving, musically speaking, for a towering musical effect. The organ satisfied this craving for hundreds of years before the 19th century orchestra took it over". Still, Fisk studied concert-hall organs ever since 1976.[27]

Jonathan Ambrosino, an organ historian, wrote that although Fisk was inspired by older organs, he added his own personal touches rather than exactly replicating historical organs.[28]

In 1968, The Diapason published an article, written by Fisk and called "The Organ's Breath of Life", in which Fisk argued in favor of using historical organ wind systems.[25] In his essay, he wrote that organs should return to the "warbling" sound of a hand-cranked wind supply with mechanical changes to the electrical wind supply. This idea was negatively received in its publication[29] but now is an industry-standard.[30][6]: 92–93 

THE ORGAN IS…A MACHINE, whose machine-made sounds will always be without interest unless they can appear to be coming from a living organism. The organ has to seem to be alive.

— Charles Fisk, Organ's Breath of Life[31]

In September 1987, Fisk wrote an article called "Some Thoughts on Pipe Metal", in which he described the differences between the tonal qualities of metals used in pipes. He described lead pipes as "a darkness, a hollowness, a sound as of deepest antiquity [and] a strength of sound." and that tin pipes embodied the "sound of refinement". It was published by The American Organist and was cited by organists Jonathan M. Gregoire and Hans Davidsson.[32][33]

Noted organs[edit]

1964 Fisk organ in King's Chapel, Boston, Massachusetts (op. 44)

In 1958, Rice University commissioned the Andover Company to build an organ (opus 25). This is one of the first that Fisk made completely from scratch. Before this project, Fisk only performed repairs and additions to already-built organs. Opus 25 marks the last electric organ Fisk would ever make; all of his later works predominantly have tracker actions. A historical feature he adapted in this organ is the Rückpositiv [de]. Rückpositiv is a smaller section of organ pipe that can be played separately from the larger main pipe. Though Rückpositiv can be easily seen in old organs, they were essentially extinct in the 1960s when this organ was built. It is also known as the Andover-Fisk Organ.[16]

His first significant work was constructed in 1961: a two-manual, fully mechanical-action organ (op. 35). It was built in Mount Calvary Episcopal Church, Baltimore, with the help of organ builder Dirk Flentrop. Flentrop advised on the design of tonal and mechanical components, while Fisk decided on the final design, voicing, and construction.[18] The name "Flentrop-Andover" was chosen because it was built when Fisk was still the president of the Andover Company. Andrew Johnson, an organist at Mount Calvary Church, described the organ as being "clear" and "responsive". He also wrote that the organ seemed to "shape the player". This organ includes two pedals that may be configured to activate specific stops to achieve a different tonal qualities. This bypasses having to pull the organ stops manually. These special pedals specifically affect the lower register section, called the Pedal division, of the main keyboard, which is also known as the Great.[22]

In 1964, Fisk built the first modern mechanical organ, of three manuals, in King's Chapel on Tremont Street (op. 44)[8] superseding an E.M. Skinner organ. Organist George Bozeman wrote in The Tracker that it provided a "vivid, rich sound, and a crystalline clarity that reveals the color and texture of each stop".[34] In American Record Guide, William Gatens wrote that based on a recording of it, the organ sounded "thin and strident" and felt "dry" compared to Fisk's later works.[35]

In 1967, Fisk built a pedal instrument for the Memorial Church of Harvard (op. 46).[10] At first, Fisk made an attempt to renovate a pre-existing E. M. Skinner organ in Appleton Chapel, the smaller chancel of the Memorial Church. Despite Fisk's efforts, an organ tuned for the chancel turned out to be unbalanced for the larger chapel, and vice versa. Because of this, it was decided to build a new organ; this time located in the chancel.[36] As for the completed organ, organist Christian Lane said that the control of the wind felt "amazing and voluptuous".[10] In 2010, the Fisk organ was relocated to the Presbyterian church in Austin, Texas, and was replaced by 1929 Skinner Organ Co. organ.[10] Because the Presbyterian church had taller ceilings, it was possible to install full-length 32 ft (~10 m) stops.[17]

In 1970, Fisk installed a three-manual and pedal organ (op. 55) that was inspired by Johann Silbermann's work at Old West Church, using casework from an early Thomas Appleton organ.[3] According to an interview in 1975, not having to build entirely new casework lowered the cost of the organ.[37]

In 1979, Fisk built a four-manual, mechanical-action instrument for Hope Presbyterian Church in St. Paul, Minnesota.[5]

In 1981, Fisk built an organ (op. 83) for the Downtown United Presbyterian Church of Rochester, New York; it was installed in 1983. It has 2600 pipes, weighs 9 tons, and cost US$300,000. Like many of his organs, it uses manual trackers rather than electric ones.[38][39]

From 1980 to 1981, a historical baroque organ (op. 72), tuned in mean-tone temperament, was recreated and installed in Houghton Chapel of Wellesley College.[3] It uses reeds copied from historical organs and historical organ wind systems.[25] More specifically, the Rückpositiv and Brustwerk sections of the organ were recreated from the Friederich Stellwagen organ located in the Jakobikirche church in Lubeck. The four Brustpedal cantus firmus stops were copied from the Compenius organ located in Frederiksborg Castle in Copenhagen.[40] Additionally, it was designed so the air supply can be supplied electrically or through manual pedals.[41]

In 1981, another organ was planned for Palmer Memorial Church, which is a de facto church of Rice University. Though Fisk was chosen as the builder, he died before the construction, although C.B. Fisk, Inc., continued to build the organ. The design commenced in 1989.[16]

In 1984, after Fisk died, a 4-manual organ (op. 85) was completed at Stanford's Memorial Church.[3][42] It was originally commissioned in 1973 but was delayed for 25 years because of financial and logistics issues. It is the largest organ in the Memorial Church and is named the "Fisk-Nanney" organ, which is in part reference to the church's organist, Herbert Nanney. It is designed to accommodate two different tuning systems meantone and equal temperament. A large iron lever above the manuals allows the organist to switch between the two systems.[42] Manuel J. Rosales was consulted during the building process.[16] In 1988, musicologist Mark Lindley published an analysis of the organ's tuning system. He found that the organ included tuning discrepancies, with various notes being a few cents off from their historical counterparts.[43] (See also: Stanford Memorial Church § Organs)

In 1992, a Fisk organ was installed in Meyerson Symphony Center, Dallas, Texas. It was originally conceived in 1982, which was when the plans to install an organ for the concert hall were set out. With a tonal design plan completed in 1983, this project was aided by architect I. M. Pei, acoustician Russell Johnson, and visual designer Charles Nazarian. Pei suggested that brass highlights be added to make the organ fit better with its surroundings. The Resonance division of the organ, which operates at high pressure, was made easier to play by using Fisk company's servopneumatic lever mechanism. The organ was well regarded by James Moeser, the former president of the American Guild of Organists, who described the organ as "one of the most important organs to have been built in this or any century".[27]

Appearance in media[edit]

Fisk has received media attention from various television shows and radio programs, such as NBC's Today Show, CBS's Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt, and NPR's The Rest of the Story.[1]

After Fisk's death, two novels based on his life were published. One is titled The Organ Builder, written by Robert Cohen (ISBN 9780060159092). It was inspired by Fisk's life and work as described in his obituary in The New York Times.[1] Another was published a few decades later, in 2020, when Stephen Kiernan published a novel named Universe of Two. The protagonist of the novel, Charlie Fish, is inspired by Fisk (ISBN 978-0062878441).[44]

In addition to these literary works, a two-volume biography named Charles Brenton Fisk, Organ Builder was published two years after Fisk's death. It includes his writings and details about the Fisk organs.[2]

In 2013, a 60-minute documentary film named "Opus 139: To Hear the Music" by Dennis Lanson was screened. The documentary details the steps C. B. Fisk, Inc. employees take to build organs and the life of Charles Brenton Fisk.[45][46]

Publications[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Matter, Laura (Spring 2017). "Hell and Reason". The Georgia Review. University of Georgia. Archived from the original on December 24, 2022. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Owen, Barbara (1986). Charles Brenton Fisk, Organ Builder - His Work. Vol. 2. Easthampton, Massachusetts: Westfield Center for Early Keyboard Studies. ISBN 978-0961675516.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Schuneman, Robert (April 1984). "Charles Brenton Fisk - An Affectionate Remembrance" (PDF). The Diapason. p. 4. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 18, 2022. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c "Memorial Service at Harvard set for Charles Brenton Fisk". The New York Times. January 10, 1984. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on December 24, 2022. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Charles B. Fisk". National Museum of Nuclear Science & History. Archived from the original on December 24, 2022. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d e Yocum, Keith R. (December 1979). "Charles Fisk, Organ Builder". Country Journal. 6 (12).
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Coffey, Mark Daryl (May 1984). Charles Fisk: Organ Builder (Doctor thesis). University of Rochester, Eastman School of Music. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 7, 2023. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d e William, Coughlin; Driscoll, Edgar (January 11, 1984). "Charles B. Fisk, at 58; renowned organ builder". The Boston Globe. p. 36. Archived from the original on December 26, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  9. ^ a b Guerrieri, Matthew (November 29, 2014). "After Los Alamos, Fisk helped to spark a pipe-organ renaissance". Boston Globe. Archived from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  10. ^ a b c d Walsh, Colleen (April 5, 2012). "Piping up, to good effect". Harvard Gazette. Archived from the original on February 9, 2023. Retrieved February 9, 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d Matter, Laura (2014). "Power and Glory". Stanford Magazine. Archived from the original on December 26, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
  12. ^ a b Owens, Barbara (July 1, 2011). "A Very American Firm". Choir & Organ. 19 (4): 37–40. Retrieved February 25, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  13. ^ "People and Places". The Morning Call. July 7, 1950. p. 22. Archived from the original on February 8, 2023. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  14. ^ "Death Notices". The Boston Globe. December 18, 1983. p. 80. Archived from the original on February 8, 2023. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  15. ^ "Andover's Founder Dies at Age 89". Andover Organ. January 5, 2013. Archived from the original on February 11, 2023. Retrieved February 11, 2023.
  16. ^ a b c d e f Bynog, David (2013). "Rice's Pipe Organs: Tradition of Excellence" (PDF). The Cornerstone. 19 (3). Archived (PDF) from the original on February 9, 2023. Retrieved February 10, 2023.
  17. ^ a b Owens, Barbara (2020). "C.B. Fisk, Inc., how it all began". Choir & Organ. 4: 49–50 – via Internet Archive.
  18. ^ a b Pike, David C. (September 2011). "Cover Feature in Celebration of C.B. Fisk, Inc". American Organist Magazine. 45 (7): 36–39.
  19. ^ Brown, Joel (June 17, 2010). "Pipe Dreams". Boston.com. Boston Globe Media Partners. Archived from the original on January 13, 2014. Retrieved January 13, 2014.
  20. ^ Niehaus, Mary. "Making modern pipe organs Johann Sebastian Bach would love". University of Cincinnati. Archived from the original on February 25, 2023. Retrieved February 21, 2023.
  21. ^ a b Palmer, Amy (November 9, 1989). "King of Instruments - Organ Concert is Finale to New Bern At Night". New Bern Sun Journal. p. 17. Retrieved February 25, 2023.
  22. ^ a b Johnson, Andrew (October 1, 2021). "A Living Organism: Fisk's Breakthrough Instrument Celebrates 60 Years". American Organist Magazine. 55 (10). American Guild of Organists. Retrieved February 25, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  23. ^ "Organ Types and Components". BYU Organ. Archived from the original on February 17, 2023. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
  24. ^ Dyer, Richard (September 27, 1981). "Historic Box of Whistles". Boston Globe. Boston Globe Media Partners, LLC. ProQuest 294072332. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  25. ^ a b c "The Fisk Organ in Houghton Chapel, an extraordinary instrument". Wellesley College. Archived from the original on December 24, 2022. Retrieved December 24, 2022.
  26. ^ Ambrosino, Jonathan (May 1999). "Diplomatic Relations". Choir & Organ. 7 (3): 20. Retrieved March 1, 2023 – via MasterFILE Complete.
  27. ^ a b Jones, Boyd (December 1995). "Looking & listening". Choir & Organ. 3 (6): 32 – via Academic Search Complete.
  28. ^ Ambrosino, Jonathan (2008). "Fusing the Tone". Choir & Organ. 16 (5): 50–54. Retrieved February 26, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  29. ^ Brombaugh, John (1985). "Bach and the Organs of His Time: Their Influence in America". The Musical Times. 126 (1705): 176. doi:10.2307/961686. ISSN 0027-4666. JSTOR 961686. Archived from the original on February 21, 2023. Retrieved February 21, 2023 – via JSTOR.
  30. ^ Bragg, Chris (October 2019). "Treading the Tightrope". Choir & Organ (6): 32 – via Internet Archive.
  31. ^ The Organ's Breath of Life Archived February 21, 2023, at the Wayback Machine C.B. Fisk, Inc.
  32. ^ Gregoire, Jonathan (2015). "Organbuilding and Sustainability" (PDF). The Tracker. 59 (2): 33. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 4, 2022. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  33. ^ Davidsson, Hans (1993). "The North German Organ Research Project at the School of Music and Musicology, University of Göteborg" (PDF). Swedish Society for Music Research. Archived (PDF) from the original on February 26, 2023. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  34. ^ Bozeman, George (September 2020). "Clavier-Übung III: Heinrich Christensen Plays the C.B. Fisk Organ at King's Chapel/Salome's Dance: Robert Parkins plays the Aeolian Organ". The Tracker. 64 (3): 33. Retrieved February 28, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  35. ^ Gatens, William (July 2005). "Fisk Organ at King's Chapel". American Record Guide. 68 (4): 227. Retrieved March 1, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  36. ^ Greenleaf, Christopher (April 28, 2010). "Harvard's Historic, Controversial Fisk Organ: Last Local Utterances". The Boston Musical Intelligencer. Archived from the original on October 7, 2022. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  37. ^ "History & Fisk Organ". Old West Church. Archived from the original on February 26, 2023. Retrieved February 26, 2023.
  38. ^ "9-ton organ's voice on display Thursday". Democrat and Chronicle. December 4, 1982. p. 7. Archived from the original on February 8, 2023. Retrieved February 8, 2023.
  39. ^ "Opus 83". CB Fisk. Archived from the original on February 27, 2023. Retrieved February 27, 2023.
  40. ^ Jones, Boyd (January 1996). "C.B. Fisk in the Nineties". Choir & Organ. 4 (1). Retrieved February 27, 2023 – via EBSCOhost.
  41. ^ "A Star is Reborn". Wellesley Magazine: 9. Spring 2011. Archived from the original on February 11, 2023. Retrieved February 11, 2023 – via Issuu.
  42. ^ a b "The Fisk-Nanney Organ". Stanford Office of Religious & Spiritual Life. Archived from the original on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  43. ^ Lindley, Mark (1988). "A Suggested Improvement for the Fisk Organ at Stanford". Performance Practice Review. 1 (1): 107–132. doi:10.5642/perfpr.198801.01.8. S2CID 144021132. Archived from the original on March 1, 2023. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  44. ^ Hallenbeck, Brent (July 29, 2020). "For new novel, Stephen Kiernan delves into moral quandary of building the atomic bomb". Burlington Free Press. Archived from the original on February 11, 2023. Retrieved February 11, 2023.
  45. ^ Killeen, Wendy (September 14, 2014). "Arts". The Boston Globe. pp. Z6. Retrieved March 12, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  46. ^ "To Hear the Music". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 12, 2023.

Further reading[edit]

  • Douglass, Fenner; Jander, Owen; Owen, Barbara (1986). Charles Brenton Fisk, Organ Builder - Essays in his honor. Vol. 1. Easthampton, Massachusetts: Westfield Center for Early Keyboard Studies. ISBN 978-0961675509.

External links[edit]