The Organs

The organ's cathedral

The organ of the Cathedral of Blois was restored, as an historical monument, in 1999-2000 by Bernard Hurvy and Michel Jurine. While the façade recalls the earlier cathedral instrument built by John and Robert Clicquot in 1701, the lastest restoration returned the organ to its 1882 aesthetic, which is particularly suited to the Romantic symphonic repertoire.

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St Peter church

The organ in the church of St. Peter was built in 1997 by the organbuilder Dominique Thomas of Belgium. It is designed especially for the interpretation of early music, particularly Germanic repertoire. A system of "duplex registration," in which some stops are available on two manuals, increases registrational possibilities.

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Notre-Dame church, Vierzon

The organ at Vierzon's Notre-Dame church is housed in a historic 17th-century case. The instrumental part, entirely new, was begun by Gérald Guillemin in the late 1990s and completed in 2002 by Jean-Pascal Villard. The instrument is of 18th-century French aesthetic, with 42 stops on 4 manuals. Two pedalboards, German and French, are interchangeable. 

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