OT - but germane to the discussion - All this talk about the Ely Cathedral organ prompted a recall and curiosity of a recording I have in my library of an organ transcription by Arthur Wills, organist at Ely, of Mussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition. This recording is an early digital one, on Hyperion AS66006, recorded on 6-7 July 1980, and engineered by Tony Faulkner, BTW.
The notes have the following about the organ:
"An organ was built in the Cathedral in 1685, reputedly by Ranatus Harris. In 1831, Messrs Elliot & Hill built a new organ within the old cases, which stood on the choir screen. This organ was rebuilt in the North choir triforium by Messrs Hill & Son in 1850, when the old cases and choir screen were removed, and the present case to a design by Sir Gilbert Scott, was installed.
In 1908 Messrs Harrison & Harrison built a virtually new organ, incorporating some of the old pipework. Most of the organ was placed in the North choir triforium, with the console below, on the stone gallery behind the top of the choir stalls.
A restoration in 1974-75 included some tonal changes, a new Positive division in the lower part of the Scott case, development of the Pedal Organ, and modernization of the action and console. The new scheme was drawn up by the Cathedral organist, Dr Arthur Wills, in consultation with Mr. Cecil Clutton and the organ builders. It is a remarkably complete and versatile instrument, naturally well suited to music from the mid-nineteenth century onwards. The Mussorgsky-Wills transcription enables this outstanding instrument to be heard at its best."
If at best, the organ had to have been "on its last legs" at the time of the Bernstein M2 recording.
Wade