Fact Finder - Music

Fact
The Pipe Organ's 'Ranks' of Sound
Category
Music
Subcategory
Musical Instruments
Country
Germany
Description
The pipe organ is often called the 'King of Instruments' due to its massive size and sonic range. A single organ can have thousands of pipes, organized into 'ranks.' A rank is a complete set of pipes that all produce the same type of sound (e.g., flutes, trumpets, or strings) but at different pitches. When an organist pulls a 'stop,' they are engaging or disengaging a specific rank of pipes. The largest pipe in a rank determines the pitch; a '16-foot stop' produces a sound an octave lower than an '8-foot stop.' The pipes themselves fall into two categories: 'flue pipes,' which work like a recorder by blowing air across an edge, and 'reed pipes,' which contain a vibrating metal tongue. The complexity of the 'action'—the mechanism connecting keys to pipes—has evolved from mechanical wooden trackers to modern electric and digital systems.