Eberhard Friedrich Walcker
Eberhard Friedrich Walcker (born July 3, 1794 in Cannstatt ; † October 2, 1872 in Ludwigsburg ) was a German organ builder and, like his grandson Oskar Walcker (1869–1948, company owner since 1916), “Walcker Hof organ builder under King Wilhelm II. from Württemberg and suppliers to the Vatican ”. The organ building company in Ludwigsburg, which went back to him, was at times one of the largest and most renowned in the world.
description
Eberhard Friedrich was born as the son of the organ builder Johann Eberhard Walcker , who founded his workshop in Cannstatt in 1780. In 1820 he transferred the company to Ludwigsburg, the company's long-term headquarters. Eberhard Friedrich Walcker is considered the most important German organ builder of the 19th century. It gained importance through various technical and sonic improvements, in particular through the perfecting of the cone chest . He was trained in the organ building workshop of his father Johann Eberhard Walcker and founded his own workshop in Ludwigsburg in 1821 (from 1854 under the name EF Walcker & Cie. ). His first important work was the organ in the Paulskirche in Frankfurt, completed in 1833 (Opus 9), which received international attention.
Walcker's epoch-making innovations in organ building include the perfecting and dissemination of the cone chest, a style-defining disposition for German organ romanticism and the consistent use of partials inspired by Abbé Vogler . Walcker succeeded in building the first open 32 'register, which, due to its design, turned out to be satisfactory in terms of sound including the low notes. It is also thanks to him that the blind sill was introduced in Germany; a facility that he - mediated by Vogler - took over from England and France .
student
Carl Gottlieb Weigle began an apprenticeship as an organ builder with his brother-in-law Eberhard Friedrich Walcker in 1826. Later he became the first assistant in almost all of the company's large organ buildings, especially the renovation of the Stuttgart collegiate church organ from 1837 to 1845. In 1845 he set up his own workshop in Stuttgart, which was continued as the Friedrich Weigle Organ Builder .
In 1864, the previously employed by Walcker organ builder founded Johann Nepomuk Kuhn with another employee in Männedorf on Lake Zurich , the company Kuhn Organ Builders .
development
The company stayed in Ludwigsburg until 1974. In 1957 a branch was founded in Vienna , which then moved to Guntramsdorf in 1961 . After a stopover in Murrhardt , the main company moved to Bliesransbach (district of Kleinblittersdorf ) in Saarland . After an insolvency in 1999, both companies were managed independently from the year 2000 by Werner Walcker-Mayer's sons as organ builder Michael Walcker-Mayer in Guntramsdorf and as organ builder Gerhard Walcker-Mayer in Bliesransbach. Both companies continue to manufacture Walcker organs and see themselves as part of the Walcker organ building tradition.
List of works (selection)
Works by Eberhard Friedrich Walcker
year | opus | place | building | image | Manuals | register | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1821 | 1 | Stone hob | Protestant church | I. | 9 | Built in 1820 as the first instrument by the Walcker organ building workshop in Ludwigsburg and modernized in 1902 by Link in Giengen. It is now in the Ludwigsburg residential palace (picture). | |
1823 | 2 | Weinberg | Johanneskirche | II | 16 | Housing and register preserved, new building in 1956 (Weigle) and 2005 (Mühleisen) | |
1823 | 3 | Kleingartach | ? | ||||
1833 | 9 | Frankfurt | Paulskirche | III / P + P | 74 | ||
1839 | 35 | Stuttgart | Collegiate Church Stuttgart | IV | 74 | 1837–1839 Reconstruction of the organ from the Zwiefalten monastery church . Neo-Gothic prospect and implementation on the west gallery, extended to 80 registers. Completely destroyed in 1944. 1950 new building (Walcker) | |
1823 | 36 | Women | I. | 10 | |||
1839 | 37 | St. Petersburg | St. Petri | III | 63 | Not received | |
1843 | 46 | Schramberg | St. Mary | III | 35 | ||
1846 | 62 | Hoffenheim | Protestant church | II | 27 | Sound monument of early romanticism |
|
1847 | 68 | Heilbronn | Kilian's Church | III | 50 | destroyed in the air raid on Heilbronn in 1944. 1959 new building (Walcker) | |
1848 | 78 | Markgröningen | Bartholomäuskirche | II | 33 | In 1978 the church received a new organ built by the organ building company Vier. The prospectus of the Walcker organ was adapted to the new organ and 12 registers were adopted. | |
1849 | 82 | Maulbronn Monastery | Monastery church | II | 21st | Rebuilt 1949–1970, new buildings in 1972 (Walcker) and 2013 ( Grenzing ). | |
1849 | 86 | Wurmberg | Petruskirche Wurmberg | I. | 13 | ||
1854 | 126 | Neuhausen on the Fildern | St. Petrus and Paulus (Neuhausen auf den Fildern) | II | 32 | Restored in 2005 by Hermann Eule Orgelbau | |
1855 | 127 | Mannheim | Main synagogue | 22nd | first organ in a synagogue in Baden. New building in 1899 by Walcker. Destroyed in 1938. | ||
1855 | 130 | Zagreb | Zagreb Cathedral | III | 52 | Disposition today: IV / 78 2005 restored by M. Walcker-Mayer |
|
1857 | 144 | Ulm | Ulm Minster | IV / P + P | 100 | Expanded and implemented in 1885 | |
1857 | 150 | Frankfurt | Frankfurt Cathedral | III | 51 | Not received | |
1859 | 165 | Frankfurt | Frankfurt Synagogue | II | 37 | burned on the night of the pogroms in 1938 | |
1860 | 170 | Mimbach | Christ Church Mimbach | II | 16 | Restored by Lenter in 2017 | |
1863 | 191 | Wiesbaden | Market Church | III | 53 | Rebuilt several times | |
1863 | 193 | Boston | Methuen Memorial Music Hall (formerly Boston Music Hall ) | IV | 89 | Today the organ has 84 registers on four manuals and a pedal. The instrument has an electro-pneumatic action. The original game table from Walcker is available, but not connected. Instead, you operate the organ from a mobile console. | |
1866 | 216 | Kempten | St. Lorenz | II | 36 | In 1938 an extension was made by Josef Zeilhuber , whereby part of the old pipework was taken over. The instrument has since had 64 registers. | |
1865 | 213 | Mulhouse / Els. | Temple Saint-Etienne | III | 62 | Changed several times, especially in 1953 by the organ manufacturer Schwenkedel. | |
1869 | 252 | Dirmstein | Dirmsteiner Laurentiuskirche, Protestant part | I / P | 11 | Still in use today. | |
1869 | Waldkirch | Collegiate Church of St. Margarethen | II | 26th | Restored in 1973 and 2003 | ||
1870 | Neuchâtel NE | Collegiate Church Neuchâtel | III / P | 45 | The organ is currently not in use. After modifications in the 20th century, the instrument now has sliding chests, an electric action and a Rückpositiv. | ||
1872 | 272 | Bad Dürkheim | Castle Church | II | 23 | Not received | |
1872 | Merzhausen (Usingen) | Protestant church | II / P | 11 | Work received; originally built in 1872 by Walcker (without housing) for the evangelical castle church Bad Homburg for 5000 Mk and then purchased by resolution of the Merzhausen community of November 30, 1909 for approx. 1500 Mk; Parapet organ above the altar with a seven-part baroque prospectus (builder unknown; acquired on June 4, 1778 including musical mechanism for 375 florins from the Catholic Peter and Paul Church in Bad Camberg; 19 ′ high and 12 ′ wide; enthroned on the central tower King David and trumpet angels on the side towers; baroque "ears"; prospectus made of zinc pipes; left side tower and the two stacked pipe fields to the right of it are blind [console behind it]; most of the pipes are to the right of the prospectus in their own organ case); two box bellows. | ||
1873 | 292 | Webenheim | Martin Luther Church | II | 15th | 1958 reconstruction by Lotar Hintz (Heusweiler), 1985 partial renovation by the Walcker company (Kleinblittersdorf). The instrument has 15 registers distributed over 2 manuals and pedal. The wind chests are mechanical cone chests and are located in a large swell box. It is probably the oldest surviving swellable organ by Walcker. |
Works of the company EF Walcker & Cie.
year | opus | place | building | image | Manuals | register | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1876 | 325 | Oppegård | Oppegård kirke | 4th | Expanded by two registers in 1930, replaced in 1976. Restoration of the organ in 2008/09 by Christian Scheffler | ||
1877 | 333 | Wernigerode | Castle Church | I / P | 8th | → organ | |
1878 | 350 | Darmstadt | Castle Church | II / P | 11 | The organ burned down completely in the bombing raid on Darmstadt on September 11, 1944. | |
1878 | 306 | Vienna | Votive Church | III / P | 61 | In 1915 an electric fan could be installed, in 1917 the prospect pipes had to be delivered, which were replaced by zinc pipes in 1923. In 1995/96 Klais carried out a “conservative restoration”. The instrument is the only work of this construction and size that has remained largely unchanged; it is one of the most important sound monuments in the world. → Disposition | |
1879 | 363 | Blieskastel | Preparation school Blieskastel, today cath. Part of the collegiate church (Neustadt an der Weinstrasse) | I / P | 6th | Preserved in its original condition, faced with a baroque prospectus by Franz Ignaz Seuffert | |
1884 | 413 | Riga | Riga Cathedral | IV / P | 124 | → organ
The organ was built into the case of its predecessor (Jacob Raab, 1601). At the inauguration, the arrangement of the chorale composed for the occasion was heard. Now all thank God by Franz Liszt . It is the largest mechanical organ of its time; it is one of the last remaining great organs of the Romantic era. |
|
1884 | 424 | Annaberg-Buchholz | St Anne's Church | III / P | 65 | → organ | |
1886 | 471 | Oberstenfeld | Oberstenfeld Collegiate Church | II / P | 21st | ||
1887 | 509 | Horgenzell- Wilhelmskirch | Parish Church of St. John Baptist | II / P | 11 | 1964 received from the workshop Reiser organ building rebuilt | |
1890 | Went to the Fils | Johanneskirche | 13 | replaced 1987 | |||
1891 | 600 | Frankfurt a. M. | Imperial Cathedral of St. Bartholomew | III / P | 60 | First large pneumatic cone chest organ from Walcker. | |
1893 | 638 | Lübeck | Lübeck Cathedral | III / P | 64 | Destroyed in 1942 | |
1895 | 744 | Sternberg | Sternberg town church | II / P | 21st | Pneumatic cone store organ | |
1895 | 732 | Rome | St. Peter's Basilica | II / P | 20th |
2 stentor parts, converted by Tamburini from 1953 to 1962. |
|
1896 | 770 | Aachen | Christ Church | III / P | 45 | Demolished in 1938 and replaced by a new Walcker organ, which was destroyed in 1944 and finally demolished in 1959 | |
1897 | 777 | Strasbourg | Paulskirche , main organ | IV / P | 75 | → organ | |
1897 | 793 | Saverne | Protestant church | II / P | 24 | ||
1898 | Strasbourg | Saint-Pierre-le-Vieux protestant , main organ | II / P | 24 | |||
1901 | 1085 | Heidelberg-Weststadt | Christ Church | III / P | 41 | Restoration 2009/2010 → organ | |
1901 | 942 | Neudietendorf | Ev. Brethren Church | III / P | 28 | ||
1902 | Herne | Kreuzkirche | II / P | 34 | → organ | ||
1902 | 986 | Koblenz | Evangelical Church Koblenz-Pfaffendorf | 9 | Rebuilt in 1950, relocated in the 1960s and renovated in 1994 by the Willi Peter organ building workshop | ||
1902 | 988 | Stuttering home | Church of St. Peter and Paul | II / P | 22nd | in the historical prospectus of the previous organ by Johann Michael Hesse (1767–1776) | |
1902 | 905 | Koenigswinter | Christ Church | II / P | 15th | Replaced in 1976 by a work from the Oberlinger Orgelbau workshop , the prospectus (based on plans by the Honnef architect Stein) still preserved. | |
1903 | 1052 | Ludwigsburg | Garrison Church | III / P | over 50 | 1957 disadvantageously (slightly) changed. → organ | |
1903 | 1112 | Krefeld | Luther Church | II / P | 30th | Restored in 2009/10; Return to its original condition from 1904. → Organ | |
1904 | 1146 | Ulm | St. George | 47 | 2004 Restored by the Kuhn organ building workshop . → organ | ||
1905 | 1190 | Antwerp | ev. church "De Brabantse Olijfberg" | 1984 restored by Kaat en Tijhuis (Kampen, Netherlands) | |||
1906 | 1319 | Berlin-Moabit | Holy Spirit Church | 41 | 2006 Restored by Michael Mauch, Stuttgart. → organ | ||
1906 | 1321 | Berlin-Moabit | Reformation Church | 42 | Only poorly repaired after war damage and replaced by a new building from 1964 by Detlef Kleuker . In 1966, four registers were incorporated into the Reformation Church's choir organ. | ||
1906 | 1143 | Bad Nauheim | Dankeskirche (Bad Nauheim) | Rebuilt in 1965. The remote plant was shut down. On October 15, 2011 this was put back into operation. → organ | |||
1907 | 1371 | Eupen Belgium | ev. peace church | Restored in 2005 → organ | |||
1907 | 1405 | Großrudestedt | ev. Church of St. Albanus | Restoration planned | |||
1908 | Barcelona | Palau de la Música Catalana | Restored in 2003 | ||||
1908 | Hamburg | Laeiszhalle (Hamburg Music Hall) | Installed in the Thalia Theater in Wuppertal in 1950 - changed significantly in 1954 and installed in St. Engelbert , Cologne-Riehl ; there in 2008 restored by Orgelbau Klais and brought closer to the original character | ||||
1909 | Dortmund | St. Reinoldi | V / P | 105 | In World War II , destroyed in 1958 with 72 stops on four manuals and pedal with electro-pneumatic tracker action built. | ||
1910 | Berlin | Rheingau high school | Pneumatic organ 1987 restoration |
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1910 | 1537 and 5744 | Lübeck | St. Gertrude | II / P | 1980 renovation (also by Walcker, opus 5744), supplemented by an auxiliaire with six registers; Additionally installed a new, movable gaming table | ||
1911 | Wiesbaden | Luther Church | III / P | 50 | 1986/87 and 2011 restored as a two-organ by the Klais workshop in Bonn. The original disposition was restored. | ||
1911 | 1609 | Ilmenau | City Church of St. James | III / P | 65 | 1961 new gaming table by the Sauer company (Frankfurt / Oder), 1992/93 restoration and Rekonstr. Console by the Scheffler organ workshop → organ | |
1911 | Nordhausen | St. Mary on the mountain | II / P | 29 | Organ destroyed in the bombing of Nordhausen in World War II | ||
1912 | 1668 | Kairo-Boulaq, Gaalastr. | Church of the German-speaking Evangelical Congregation in Cairo and all of Egypt | 2011–2012 renovation by Gerhard Walcker-Mayer | |||
1912 | 1700 | Hamburg | St. Michaelis Church (Hamburg) | V / P | 163 | Destroyed in 1944/45, at times the largest church organ in the world | |
1912 | 1702 | Idstein | Union Church (Idstein) | ||||
1913 | 1747 | Wildervank | Grote Kerk (PKN kerk) | II / P | 25th | 2001 renovation by S. de Wit Orgelbau (Netherlands) | |
1915 | 1863 | Rjukan | Rjukan kirke | II / P | 23 | 1926-27 extended and implemented, burned in 1965 | |
1922 | 2000 | Cork | Cathedral of St. Mary and St. Anne, main organ | 62 | |||
1925 | 2094 | Recklinghausen | Urban hall construction | III / P | 71 | Damaged at the end of March 1945, demolished in 1967 in the course of renovation work in the hall. | |
1927 | 2150 | Gelsenkirchen |
Hans Sachs House ( secular building ) |
IV / P | 91 | Restorations 1982, 1989, 2003-2007; since 2007 stored in the workshop organ builder Romanus Seifert & Sohn and sold to Papenburg in 2017 . | |
1928 | Ulm | Martin Luther Church (Ulm) , main organ | III / P | 38 | Restorations in 1961 by Richard Rensch and 2007–2010 by the workshop Orgelbau Lenter, Sachsenheim | ||
1930 | Gernstedt | Gernstedt Church | ? /? | ? | 31 new prospect pipes installed, organ cleaned and re-voiced | ||
1931 | 2311 | Munich | Church of the Resurrection | III / P | 45 | ||
1932 | Medellin | Catedral Metropolitana de Medellín | III / P | 51 | Restoration 2009/2010 | ||
1934/35 | 2432 | Berlin-Mariendorf | Martin Luther Memorial Church | III / P | 50 | → organ | |
1936 | 2550 | Nuremberg | Luitpoldhalle | V / P | 220 | ||
1936 | Hemsbach | Christ Church | II / P | 29 | |||
1937 | 2576 | Schnega | Hugo Körtzinger workshop | III / P | 61 | Initially supplied as a "Walcker" small organ based on the multiplex system with 6 basic voices and 41 registers. In the course of 3 major expansions in 1939, 1942 and 1948, it was expanded to 30 registers + 31 transmissions (a total of over 2000 pipes). The private gel is in an artist's studio and has been completely preserved. The complete restoration is underway and should be completed by summer 2016. | |
1941 | 2727 | Berlin-French Buchholz | St. John Evangelist | II / P | 10 | → organ | |
1954 | 3245 | Frankfurt-Bockenheim | St. Elisabeth | 2014 general overhaul by Orgelbau Hardt | |||
1958 | 3721 | Hamburg-Stellingen | Church of the Resurrection | II / P | 10 | → organ | |
1959 | Mannheim-Neckarau | Matthew Church | III / P | 37 | |||
1959 | 3772 | Wanne-Eickel | Johanneskirche | II / P | 28 | 1994 Extension by a Rückpositiv. Since then 35 stops on 3 manuals. | |
1959 | innsbruck | Jesuit Church | III / P | 34 | Scheduling by Anton Heiller . 2007–2011 restored by Rösel & Hercher Orgelbau ; the Schalmey and Cornett registers and the tremulants have been added. | ||
1959 | 3804 | Berlin-Neukölln | Martin Luther Church | III / P | 35 | → organ | |
1960 | Dusseldorf | Apostolic Community | II / P | 15th | |||
1960 | 3975 | Schwäbisch Gmünd | St. Francis | III / P | 35 | → organ | |
1960 | St. Wendel | Auditorium of the Wendalinum grammar school | II / P | 18th | |||
1961 | gain | St. Matthew | III / P | 46 | |||
1961 | Mannheim-Friedrichsfeld | John Calvin Church | II / P | 24 | |||
1962 | Memmingen | St. Martin | III / P |
Replaced in 1998 |
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1962 | Ravensburg | Christ the King Church | III / P | 32 + 1 | |||
1962 | Bad Vilbel | Christ Church Bad Vilbel | III / P | 30th | Complete renovation 2013 | ||
1962 | Berlin-Steglitz | Baptist Chapel | II / P | 16 | → organ | ||
1962 | 4209 | Berlin-Kreuzberg | Christ Church | II / P | 14th | → organ | |
1962 | Berlin-Neukölln | Brethren | II / P | 15th | → organ | ||
1963 | Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt | Evangelical town church | III / P | 39 | In 1998 completely renovated by Kopetzki, since then 44 Reg. | ||
1964 | Berlin-Schöneberg | Apostle Paul Church | III / P | 38 | |||
1964 | 4487 | Ingolstadt | St. Moritz | IV / P | 51 | → organ | |
1964 | 4746 | Reutti (Amstetten) | Evangelical Church of St. Giles and Katharina | I / P | 6th | ||
1964/72 | 4480 u. 5300 | Fuerth | St. Paul Church | Main and choir organ: each III / P | 54 & 13 | 1964 main organ, 1972 choir organ. Built according to designs by Walter Supper | |
1965 | 4531 | Berlin-Lankwitz | Trinity Church | III / P | 34 | → organ | |
1965 | Hof (Saale) | St. Lorenz (courtyard) | II / P | 20th | Renovated in 2012 by Orgelbau Hörl | ||
1966 | 4578 | Obertiefenbach (Beselich) | St. Aegidius | III / P | 33 | → organ | |
1967 | Landshut | Church of the Redeemer | III / P | 35 | → organ | ||
1968 | 4993 | On the mountain | St. Martin | III / P | 61 | 1973 expanded to include a bomb factory. | |
1967-1969 | 5000 | Ulm | Ulm Minster , western organ | V / P | 100 | ||
1970 | 5262 | Munich | St. Gabriel | III / P | 40 | ||
1970 | 5400 | Salzburg | Mozarteum | IV / P | 57 | Replaced in 2010 by a new building by Hermann Eules | |
1970 | Berlin-Zehlendorf | Diaconal Association | II / P | 10 | → organ | ||
1972 | 5510 | Munich | St. Charles Borromeo | II / P | 26th | ||
1976 | Oberhausen-Sterkrade | St. Clement | III / P | 37 | → organ ; the swell mechanism comes from 1986 from the Orgelbau Klimke company in Bottrop | ||
1977 | 5547 | Murrhardt | City Church | 37 | Built according to a design by Helmut Bornefeld | ||
1978 | Wuppertal | St. Suitbertus | III / P | 39 | In desolate condition, should be replaced | ||
1983 | 5837 | Munich | Our Father Church | II / P | 10 | ||
1995 | 5923 | Saarwellingen | Blasiuskirche | III / P | 43 | Use of a large part of the pipe material from the predecessor organ from Haerpfer & Erman |
Works by W. Walcker-Mayer & Cie. , Austrian branch
See: Orgelbau M. Walcker-Mayer
literature
- Theodor Schott: Walcker, Eberhard Friedrich . In: Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie (ADB). Volume 40, Duncker & Humblot, Leipzig 1896, pp. 657-659.
- Parish and Church of St. Petrus and Paulus, Neuhausen adF (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Heimatforschung, Neuhausen adF). With contributions from Markus Dewald, Markus Grohmann, Maria E. Gründig, Wolfgang Zoll. Neuhausen adF: 1997.
- Organs in Württemberg , ed. v. Helmut Völkl , Neuhausen-Stuttgart 1986, ISBN 3-7751-1090-9 .
- Organ science and organ practice: Festschrift for the 200th anniversary of the Walcker company . Edited by Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht. (Walcker Foundation for Organ Research). Murrhardt-Hausen: Musikwiss. Verl.-Ges., 1980.
- Hans Brandauer: The new organ in the Johanneskirche in Gingen an der Fils. Festschrift for the inauguration of the organ in the Johanneskirche Gingen on July 5, 1987 , ed. v. of the Evangelical Church Community Gingen, Gingen / Fils 1987, pp. 17–19.
- Johannes Fischer : The Walcker family of organ builders in Ludwigsburg . Kassel: Bärenreiter 1966.
- Ferdinand Moosmann and Rudi Schäfer: Eberhard Friedrich Walcker, 1794–1872 . Musikwissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft, Kleinblittersdorf 1994, ISBN 3-920670-34-5 .
- Hermann Fischer : Walcker, Eberhard Friedrich. In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 13, Bautz, Herzberg 1998, ISBN 3-88309-072-7 , Sp. 186-189.
Web links
- Internet presence walcker.com The Walcker family has been building organs since 1780 and is the current website of Gerhard Walcker-Mayer
- Organ builder Michael Walcker-Mayer in Guntramsdorf
- Website about Eberhard Friedrich Walcker
- Opus books from the organ building workshop EF Walcker , digital copies from the University of Hohenheim
- Walcker and the 19th century organ
Individual evidence
- ^ Address book of Ludwigsburg 1914
- ↑ after section history at walcker.at
- ^ Christoph Bossert: Importance of the Walcker organ in Hoffenheim
- ↑ Gerhard Walcker-Mayer: The Walcker organ in Hoffenheim ( Memento from January 26, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
- ^ Restoration of the Walcker organ in Neuhausen auf den Fildern
- ^ Volker Keller: The former main synagogue in Mannheim , in: Stadtverwaltung Mannheim, Gesellschaft der Freunde Mannheims u. d. former Kurpfalz (Ed.): Mannheimer Hefte, 1982, Heft 1 . Mannheim 1982
- ^ Restoration report of the Zagreb organ
- ↑ https://www.orgelbau-lenter.de/projekt.php?id=140
- ↑ description of the organ; Website of the pastoral care unit Waldkirch
- ^ Organ directory Switzerland and Liechtenstein: Collégiale, ancien orgue Neuchâtel NE
- ^ Franz Bösken: Sources and research on the organ history of the Middle Rhine. Mainz 1975, Volume 2 (A – K), p. 44, and v. a. Volume 2 (L-Z), pp. 617f.
- ^ Votivkirche.at: The organs of the Votivkirche , accessed on Dec. 15, 2012
- ↑ Website in the Walcker portal for the Neustadt organ
- ^ Baltikum , 1st edition 2005, Verlag Karl Baedeker , p. 300
- ↑ Gerhard Walcker-Mayer: Opus 600 Frankfurt Dom Bj. 1891 “pneumatic” ( Memento from March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ), April 25, 2007, blog.walckerorgel.de
- ^ Website of the Friends of the Walcker Organ Christ Church Heidelberg eV
- ↑ Friends of the Walcker Organ: The Walcker Organ in Krefeld
- ↑ Disposition on the website www.ulmer-orgeln.de
- ↑ Description and disposition, Protestantse Kerk Antwerpen ( Memento from January 2, 2016 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Description of the Friedenskirche organ in Eupen (PDF; 521 kB)
- ↑ Walcker organ Großrudestedt
- ^ Organ Klais: St. Engelbert, Riehl
- ^ Organs at LK with picture
- ↑ Walcker organ of the Grote Kerk in Wildervank (NL)
- ↑ The concert organ in the music hall of the Hans-Sachs-Haus , from: Festschrift for the opening of the Hans-Sachs-Haus, 1927
- ↑ Opus 2150 ( Memento of March 4, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 4.5 MB), Disposition a. a. Details
- ↑ a b Disposition of the Walcker organ of the Jesuit Church in Innsbruck. Jesuit Church Innsbruck, accessed on December 5, 2013.
- ↑ St. Franziskus Schwäbisch Gmünd - Organ disposition. City of Schwäbisch Gmünd: Festival of European Church Music, accessed on March 17, 2020 .
- ↑ Selection of Walcker organs from 1964. Gerhard Walcker-Mayer Orgelbau, accessed on July 5, 2020 .
- ^ Franz-Josef Sehr : 125 years of the parish church “St. Egidius “Obertiefenbach . In: Yearbook for the Limburg-Weilburg district 2013 . The district committee of the Limburg-Weilburg district, Limburg-Weilburg 2012, ISBN 3-927006-49-1 , p. 121-123 .
- ↑ Catholic parish of St. Laurentius Wuppertal: Our organ needs help! (No longer available online.) March 31, 2016, archived from the original on August 23, 2016 ; Retrieved October 25, 2016 .
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Walcker, Eberhard Friedrich |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | German organ builder |
DATE OF BIRTH | July 3, 1794 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Cannstatt |
DATE OF DEATH | October 2, 1872 |
Place of death | Ludwigsburg |