W. Sauer organ building Frankfurt (Oder)
W. Sauer organ building Frankfurt (Oder)
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legal form | GmbH |
founding | 1857 |
Seat | Frankfurt (Oder) |
management | Wilhelm Sauer |
The company W. Sauer Orgelbau Frankfurt (Oder) is a German organ building company that was founded in 1857 by Wilhelm Sauer . In 1917 it passed into the possession of the Walcker company from Ludwigsburg , but retained its independence under its workshop manager Karl Ruther. In the 19th and first half of the 20th century, it was one of the largest organ building companies in Germany. In 1996 the company was converted into a GmbH with its headquarters and workshop in Müllrose ( Brandenburg ) and a new company was founded in 2000.
history
The company developed into the leading organ builder in Prussia in the second half of the 19th century . Wilhelm Sauer retired in 1910 and sold his company to Paul Walcker , who had been operations manager since 1892 and deputy managing director since 1894. His nephew Oscar Walcker (1869–1948) from Ludwigsburg took over the company in 1917, which has since operated under the name "Wilhelm Sauer (Inh. Oscar Walcker)". Before the Second World War , between 100 and 120 people were employed. After the war, which had largely destroyed the workshops, the company was continued on a smaller scale under Anton Spallek. At the end of 1945 six employees were employed, in the 1960s around 30 employees. The son Gerhard Spallek, who had entered his father's workshop as an apprentice in 1945 and passed the master's examination as an organ builder in 1962, was given management responsibility in 1966. In 1972 it was nationalized as "VEB Frankfurter Orgelbau Sauer", the number of employees was 40, and Gerhard Spallek became operations director. In 1990 it was re-privatized as “W. Sauer organ building (owner Werner Walcker-Mayer) ”. Gerhard Spallek acted as managing director. In 1994 new workshops were opened in Müllrose. From 1996 the company operated under the name “W. Sauer Organ Building (Frankfurt / Oder) Dr. Walcker-Mayer GmbH & Co. KG ”. When the Walcker parent company in Kleinblittersdorf went bankrupt in 1999, Werner Walcker-Mayer resigned as owner and managing director of W. Sauer. In 2000 the workshop was opened under the name “W. Sauer Orgelbau Frankfurt (Oder) GmbH “was newly founded and has been managed by four shareholders since then.
plant
Wilhelm Sauer created organs in the late romantic style and used the cone chest . Instruments were produced in large numbers in an almost industrial way, but as a rule emphasis was placed on solid materials. 1100 organs were built by 1910. In Berlin alone, Sauer built 70 organs. Under Paul Walcker, who switched to the pocket drawer, 90 organs were built in seven years. By the Second World War, the number of new organs under Oscar Walcker grew to around 1,600. Before the nationalization, the company returned to the predominant manufacture of mechanical grinding chests. After 1972 exports to Eastern European countries increased sharply. In 2011, Opus 2276 was completed.
List of works (selection)
Organs up to 1910 can be found in the article Wilhelm Sauer .
The size of the instruments is indicated by the number of manuals (Roman numerals) and the number of sounding registers (Arabic numerals). A separate pedal is indicated by a capital "P". Italics indicate that the organ in question is no longer or only the prospectus has been preserved.
year | opus | place | building | image | Manuals | register | info |
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1911 | 1111 | Heinersdorf | Village church | II / P | 12 | After the Second World War, the organ was in a desperate condition and no longer playable. For its centenary in 2011, the organ was inaugurated again after it had been restored by the Sauer company in several construction phases. | |
1913 | 1158 | Berlin-Pankow | Hope Church Berlin-Pankow | II / P | 29 | Prospectus and 9 registers preserved → Organ | |
1913 | 1160 | Wroclaw | Centennial Hall | V / P | 206 + 2 | ||
1915 | 1182 | Sibiu | City parish church | IV / P | 78 | Restored in 1998. | |
1925 | 1307 | Halle (Saale) | Moritz Church | III / P | 59 | pneumatic action → organ | |
1925 | 1308 | Vieselbach | Holy Cross Church (Vieselbach) | III / P | 33 | pneumatic pocket drawer, donation of the landowner Otto Lippold in memory of his son who died in the First World War ; 2003–2006 restoration by Christian Scheffler from Sieversdorf near Frankfurt an der Oder | |
1926-1928 | Goerlitz | St. Peter and Paul | at 95 | electro-pneumatic, behind the brochure by Eugenio Casparini (1703); Demolished in 1978 due to dilapidation and replaced in 1997 | |||
1928 | Bremen-center | The bell | IV / P | 76 | pneumatic pocket drawers, electro-pneumatic actions; 2006 restoration by Christian Scheffler | ||
1929 | 1404 | Strausberg | Marienkirche | III / P | 37 | 2011–2015 restoration by Christian Scheffler (Sieversdorf). → organ | |
1930 | Bielefeld | Rudolf-Oetker-Halle | III / P | 53 | 1953 renovation, 1973 new gaming table and changes to the disposition by Willi Peter | ||
1931 | Kufstein Fortress | Hero organ in the citizen tower | II / P | 26th | Erected as a war memorial ( First World War ). In 1971 W. Sauer Orgelbau (under Gerhard Spallek) enlarged to 4 manuals and 46 registers, rebuilt in 2009 by Eisenbarth and expanded to 65 registers. On her we daily u. a. The good comrade played. | ||
1931 | Guestrow | St. Mary | III / P | 35 | behind the Paul Schmidt prospectus with electro-pneumatic pocket drawers; today III / P / 43 | ||
1937 | 1516 | Berlin-Hermsdorf | Apostle Paul Church | III / P | 37 | → organ | |
1938 | Rostock | Marienkirche | IV / P | 83 | Extension conversion with electro-pneumatic action → organ | ||
1939 | 1615 | Berlin-Bohnsdorf | Village church | II / P | 13 | 1969 rebuilt by Sauer, 2009 restoration by Christian Scheffler (Sieversdorf); → organ | |
1949 | Berlin-Hermsdorf | Village church | II / P | 19th | |||
1951 | 1692 | Berlin-Bohnsdorf | Paul Gerhardt Community Home | II / P | 12 | → organ | |
1954 | 1707 | Eichwalde | Eben Ezer Chapel | II / P | 9 | → organ | |
1957 | 1715 | Berlin-Niederschöneweide | Friedenskirche | II / P | 20th | → organ | |
1960 | 1729 | Berlin center | Saint Michael Church | II / P | 25th | electro-pneumatic action → organ | |
1961 | 1723 | Erkner | Church of Galilee | III / P | 40 | → organ | |
1966 | 1770 | Wismar | Marienkirche | II / P | 16 | → organ | |
1968 | 1839 | Birkenwerder | Evang. church | II / P | 12 | → organ | |
1971 | 1955 | Ribnitz-Damgarten | St. Bartholomew Church | II / P | 14th | → organ | |
1972 | Rambin | Parish church | I / P | 8th | |||
1974 | 2008 | Nordhausen | St. Mary on the mountain | I / P | 8th | ||
1975 | 2026 | Rostock | Christ Church | II / P | 17th | → organ | |
1976 | 2041 | Berlin-Kreuzberg | New Apostolic Church | I / P | 4th | ||
1976 | Berlin-Weissensee | Parish church | II / P | 15th | → organ | ||
1977 | Gera | Stages in the city of Gera | III / P | 50 | |||
1980 | Halle (Saale) | Concert hall St. Ulrich Church | III / P | 56 | |||
1983 | 2140 | Wittenberg | City Church | III / P | 53 | Extension of the previous organ | |
1984 | Neuruppin | St. Trinity Monastery Church | II / P | 24 | → organ | ||
1986 | 2198 | Zingst | Peter and Paul Church | II / P | 17th | In the historical case by Friedrich Albert Mehmel → Organ | |
1987 | 2207 | Jena | Jena Philharmonic | III / P | 61 | ||
1988 | 2216 | Schwedt / Oder | St. Mary of the Assumption | II / P | 17th | → organ | |
1988 | 2217 | Wolgast | St. Peter's Church | II / P | 22nd | → organ | |
1998-2000 | 2264 | Weimar | Herder Church | III / P | 53 | in the historical case by Johann Gottlob Trampeli (1812); Reconstruction of the previous organ by Eberhard Friedrich Walcker (1907) including 36 stops of the Sauer organ from 1953/1964 | |
2004 | 2272 | Oberkassel (Düsseldorf) | Church of the Resurrection | III / P | 65 | ||
1994-2007 | 2260 | Berlin-Pankow | Hope Church Berlin-Pankow | II / P | 33 | New construction in several construction phases including the prospectus and 9 registers of the predecessor organ by Sauer (1913) and another 10 registers from the broken Sauer organ of the crematorium Berlin-Baumschulenweg → Organ | |
2010 | 2275 | Hell | St. Martin's Church | II / P | 22nd | New building after church fire in 2007, five transmissions |
literature
- Hans Martin Balz : Divine Music. Organs in Germany (= 230th publication by the Society of Organ Friends ). Konrad Theiss, Stuttgart 2008, ISBN 3-8062-2062-X .
- Hans Joachim Falkenberg: The organ workshop Wilhelm Sauer 1910-1995. Musikwissenschaftliche Verlags-Gesellschaft, Kleinblittersdorf 1998, ISBN 3-920670-37-X .
- Hermann Fischer : 100 years of the Association of German Organ Builders . Orgelbau-Fachverlag, Lauffen 1991, ISBN 3-921848-18-0 , p. 289-290 .
- Uwe Pape : Historical organs in Brandenburg and Berlin . Pape, Berlin 2004, ISBN 3-921140-65-X .
- Uwe Pape (Ed.): Lexicon of North German Organ Builders. Vol. 1: Thuringia and the surrounding area . Pape, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-921140-86-4 , pp. 241-245 .
- Uwe Pape, Wolfram Hackel (Ed.): Lexicon of North German Organ Builders. Vol. 2: Saxony and the surrounding area . Pape, Berlin 2012, ISBN 978-3-921140-92-5 .
Web links
- Homepage
- Hermann Fischer: Sauer, Wilhelm Carl Friedrich. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 22, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-428-11203-2 , p. 458 f. ( Digitized version ).
- Organ landscape Brandenburg
Individual evidence
- ^ Hermann Fischer, Theodor Wohnhaas : Lexicon of southern German organ builders . Florian Noetzel Verlag, Wilhelmshaven 1994, ISBN 3-7959-0598-2 , p. 340 .
- ^ Pape: Lexicon of North German Organ Builders. Vol. 1: Thuringia and the surrounding area. 2009, p. 245.
- ↑ Balz: Divine Music. 2008, p. 24.
- ^ Hermann Fischer: Sauer, Wilhelm Carl Friedrich. In: New German Biography (NDB). Volume 22, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin 2005, ISBN 3-428-11203-2 , p. 458 f. ( Digitized version ).
- ^ Fischer: 100 years of the Association of German Master Organ Builders. 1999, p. 289.
- ^ Christoph Wolff , Markus Zepf: The organs of JS Bach. A manual . Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, Leipzig 2006, ISBN 3-374-02407-6 , p. 172 .
- ↑ Homepage: Company history 1999–2002 , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ↑ Balz: Divine Music. 2008, p. 35.
- ↑ Homepage: Company history 1910–1917 , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ^ Organ of the New Apostolic Church Brandenburg (Havel) , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ↑ EWE Foundation (ed.): Complete work of art and cultural heritage: Organ restorations 2002–2014. Zertani GmbH & Co. Die Druckerei KG, Bremen 2014, p. 38, 48.
- ^ Organ in Vieselbach , accessed on November 11, 2019.
- ^ Organ in Güstrow , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ^ Organ in Wittenberg , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ^ Organ in Zingst , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ^ Organ in Oberkassel , accessed on May 22, 2019.
- ^ Organ in Holle , accessed on May 22, 2019.