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Let us help you select the right organ. Here is some advice we share with all churches starting the process and are not sure where to start. Feel free to contact us with questions.




In over four decades of service to hundreds of churches, we've learned a few things about organ committees. We've seen why some committees work smoothly, while some have pretty rough going. So here are a few guidelines you might want to consider when you're putting your organ committee together:


We've found that most successful committees have no more than seven people. A selection committee has to have meetings, and the more members a committee has, the harder it is to get everyone together for a meeting. Too, a large committee can find it impossible to reach a consensus.


The people on the committee don't necessarily have to be musicians, but they should be knowledgeable about church music, and they should appreciate the impact music can have on the worship experience.


This seems like an obvious thing to say, but organists have been left off many search committees. The organist can appreciate subtleties in different organs that might go unnoticed by the untrained ear. Unnoticed, that is, until the instrument is in place and being used in a worship service. The organist can also play the instruments under consideration.


It takes time to do a good job of evaluating a new church organ. To make the best possible choice, the committee members and the organist must go to where the organs are, play them, listen to them, compare them.

If prospective committee members object to spending hours of time, if they can't commit to attending meetings, DO NOT put them on the committee. Each committee member should know without a doubt that he or she has time for the kind of stewardship required to select a new organ.


The church treasurer or the financial secretary is a solid candidate for membership on the church organ committee. He or she will know what the church income is, how and when the money comes in and how it goes out. This is the committee member who would participate in, or even lead, the fund raising effort to pay for the organ.


The only way to evaluate any musical instrument is to listen to it. In that respect a church organ, for all its size, is the same as a piccolo. Once you've narrowed your choice to two or three different organ companies, listen long and carefully to each instrument before you make up your mind. After the initial demonstration, the committee should arrange to spend at least two or three hours with each organ - without a sales person present. There's no other way to tell what you're buying. Listening only to a salesman talk and play would just not be fair to your congregation. To make the right decision, you must hear your service music performed on each instrument.


The time to set a budget figure for your church organ is after you decide what will best suit your congregation's present and future musical needs. If you work the other way - start with a budget figure then find an organ to fit - you run the risk of being very disappointed. Remember: The organ you decide on now must meet the requirements of the congregation 40 or 50 years from now.

We often work with churches whose needs exceed their budgets. One way to handle the problem is to go ahead and buy the organ, then raise the money to pay for it. This has been the most successful method. People will want to give after they see and hear the excitement the new organ creates. We have years of fund raising experience, and materials are available to help you meet your financial goals. And we can put you in touch with other churches that have met the budget challenge.

Another way to get what you need is to simply wait. Our experienced technicians can help you squeeze another year or two out of your present organ while you raise the money to pay for a new one.


The standard by which we judge organ music is the classical pipe organ. The pipe organ moves air through pipes to produce a sound which is more suitable to worship than any other sound man can produce. Pipes range from pencil size to thick as a barrel and 32 feet tall. If your congregation has the space and the financial means to install an ADEQUATE pipe organ - one with SUFFICIENT VERSATILITY to handle all your services' music requirements - we would encourage you to do so.


A digital organ is far less expensive than a full pipe organ. And if it is perfectly matched to a church's acoustics and the congregation's worship practices, a full digital organ can be the affordable instrument of choice. Buch Organ uses state of the art digital technology and recent advances in the science of generating musical tones - to produce digital organs with remarkable life-like sound and unequaled versatility.

The right church organ will encourage congregational singing, not hamper it. It will make the worship service more meaningful for everyone who participates.

We will not put technology ahead of music in the design and manufacture of digital organs. The only technological changes incorporated into any Buch organ are those which improve music.


Many, many churches today opt for digital and pipe combinations when they install a new organ. These can be mostly pipe organs with some digital or they can be mostly digital instruments augmented by two or more ranks of pipes.

Both are designed to save space and money compared to a complete pipe installation. When it is properly designed and installed, a pipe-electronic combinations will sound remarkably like a full pipe installation.


Each pipe in our organs is a finely wrought musical instrument. The metal pipes are made by the finest and most prestigious pipe building firms. Wood pipes are also handcrafted to exact specifications. They use only the finest walnut and maple woods for good aesthetic appearance and superior sound.

During installation, each pipe, whether metal or wood, is adjusted - we call it "tonal finishing" - so that it speaks with absolute purity.

Windchests on which the pipes are set are made of the finest clear woods. The windchests are designed for eye appeal. They are also built to withstand the inevitable temperature changes throughout the year, a feature which helps reduce service costs.

Speakers are the voice of a church organ's digital components. The Buch Church Organ Co. uses speakers built especially for organs, and we use many different types. There is no one configuration that can handle all the acoustical and aesthetic requirements of our many installations. All the speakers are built for heavy duty use, with the range to reproduce the nuances of organ sound, and the strength to stand up to any style of playing.


The same attention you devote to selecting a new church organ should go into your selection of the company that provides the instrument. At the Buch Church Organ Co., we believe we've been successful for two reasons.

First:
We offer a top quality church organ. Whether you're looking for a digital instrument, a full pipe organ, or an digital-pipe combination, there is no finer organ than a custom Buch Organ. Other firms may sell more organs, but don't be misled by quantity. It has nothing to do with quality.

Second:
We handle the complete installation.

  • If you have a church architect, we'll consult with him or her before the organ is installed.

  • Sometimes a church will need structural changes to accommodate a new organ. If your church does not have people who can make those changes, we will provide craftsmen who excel in the art of building restoration. They can handle modifications ranging in scope from building a cabinet to renovating an entire sanctuary.

  • The Buch Company's digital technicians are precise and complete in their work. Although all cables and parts are installed out of sight, the work is done as neatly as if it were meant to be in open view.


We provide the most dependable church organs available today. But from time to time, your church organ will need the attention of a service technician. Proper service at the proper time will keep your organ sounding just the way it sounded at its dedication service.

Whether you have a service problem or simply want to ask a question about your church organ's maintenance or capabilities, Buch Organ is just a toll-free call away.


 

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Buch Church Organ Company
1391 West Main Street
Ephrata, PA  17522
Phone: 717.733.6614 - Toll Free: 800.242.3901
 

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