Johann Michael Röder Explained

Johann Michael Röder was a German organ builder in Berlin and Silesia from the first half of the 18th century. He was a pupil of Arp Schnitger.

Life

Röder's year of birth and death are unknown. He was apprenticed to Schnitger for four years as a journeyman carpenter. In 1712, Vincent Lübeck described him in a letter to the Tangermünde council as a "big talker" who "greatly despises and contempts Herr Schnitger".[1] In Röder's works, the influence of his teacher can be clearly heard, but he went his own way in the external design of the organs and moved further away from Schnitger than any of his students. Thus, he abandoned the Werkprinzip, did without a and built the pipe organ rather flat. His special technical skills earned him the name "Mechanicus" and led to all kinds of late Baroque such as kettledrum-beating angels, eagles, stars of orders, suns and others.[2]

Johann Mattheson commented positively on Röder's organ in Breslau: "All emperors, kings and princes would be astonished if they saw the engraving of it and it consists of 56 sounding parts: 4 principals, as one a 32, one a 16 and two a 8 feet, a glockenspiel, which is tracted by the angels moving in the Gloria with their hammers in their hands with the help of the pedal as well as a pair of küpferner (visible) timpani, on which likewise two angels perfectly present everything that can be had on natural timpani with their mallets and can be played with the trumpet as well as intros and lifts.[3]

List of works (selection)

New organs by Röder are known in and Lower Silesia. Some are partially preserved.

New organ buildings

Year Location Churchclass=unsortable Picture!ManualCasingclass=unsortable Notes
1713BerlinAlte GarnisonkircheII/P23Transferred to the Potsdam church St. Nikolai in 1724; burnt in 1795
1716Sydow near BernauDorfkircheI8Positive, later replaced by Lütkemüller.[4]
1717Berlin-DorotheenstadtDorotheenstädtische KircheI/P19Transferred to the Stadtkirche Wesenberg in 1833, later redisposed several times; front, wind chests and pipes from 4 stops preserved. – Orgel[5]
1720BerlinAlte Schloss- und DomkircheII/P32not preserved[6]
1720–1722Krosno OdrzańskieSt. Marien, heute St. HedwigIII/P55Front preserved, in 1930 new construction by Sauer.[7] [8] [9]
1721–1725BreslauSt Mary Magdalene Church, WrocławIII/P56Reusing parts from the organ built by Martin Scheufler, Röder built the large pipe organ that adorns the nave. In the course of a new organ building in 1889-1891, the Röder organ was removed, the front went to the Silesian Museum (Katowice) and was lost after the Second World War.
1726–1729Hirschberg (Jelenia Góra)Gnadenkirche, today KreuzerhöhungskircheIII/P50Front and about 40 complete stops preserved, in 1905 rebuilt the organ pneumatically and extended the disposition to 70 stops, in this form the organ is completely preserved and restored in 1998[10] [11] [12]
1729–1730Großburg (Borek Strzeliński)DorfkircheII/P22Front preserved.[13]
1733–1737Liegnitz (Legnica)Ev. Marienkirche (Liebfrauenkirche)II/P341914 New construction by Friedrich Weigle with preservation of 5 stops, afterwards alterations and restorations, front and some pipes preserved[14] [15]
1740Burg StargardReformierte KircheI/P29not preserved[16]
1742GreiffenbergDorfkircheI/P7 (oder 13?)Attribution, 1842 reconstruction by Morgenstern, (I/P, 13), 1967 restoration by Schuke on I/P, 12.[17] [18]
1743–1744PrenzlauHeilig-Geist-KapelleI/P15for 400 thalers, converted around 1899, today housing the .[19]
1745PrenzlauMarienkircheII/P20Replaced by Buchholz organ in 1847, destroyed in 1945
1746Groß SchönebeckDorfkircheI/P12New building offer by Joachim Wagner of 1746 not implemented, in the same year contract signed with Röder, who apparently resigned (or died) afterwards, completed by Gottlieb Scholtze in 1749, afterwards several rebuilds, case and some parts of the baroque organ preserved.[20]

Further work and offers

Year Location Churchclass=unsortable Picture!ManualRegisterclass=unsortable Notes
1708BernauSt. MarienOffer to repair and rebuild the Scherer organ of 1572 (III/P, 41), not considered, but carried out by Arp Schnitger instead.[21]
1711–1716TangermündeSt. StephanIII/P32Repair and rebuilding of the organ from Hans Scherer d. Ä. (1624); received half of this – Orgel

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Fock: Arp Schnitger, .
  2. Fock: Röder, .
  3. Mattheson: Grundlage, .
  4. Karl Richter: Orgelhandbuch Brandenburg. Vol. 3. Barnim. Freimut & Selbst, Berlin 2014, also Introduction Barnim. Institute for Organ Research, with disposition, according to Pfarrarchiv Grüntal, Orgelakten
  5. http://www.orgelmuseum-malchow.de/orte/wesenberg.htm Orgel in Wesenberg
  6. http://www.orgbase.nl/scripts/ogb.exe?database=ob2&%250=2058622&LGE=DE&LIJST=lang Orgel
  7. https://musicamsacram.pl/instrumenty/opis/1282-Krosno-Odrzanskie-Kosciol-sw-Jadwigi-Slaskiej Orgel
  8. http://www.organy.pro/instrumenty.php?instr_id=2571 Sauer-Orgel
  9. http://fotopolska.eu/foto/325/325911.jpg Foto des Crossener Orgelprospektes
  10. http://www.orgbase.nl/scripts/ogb.exe?database=ob2&%250=2044355&LGE=DE&LIJST=lang Organ in Hirschberg
  11. http://fotopolska.eu/foto/234/234499.jpg copperplate of the organ in Hirschberg
  12. http://www.organy.pro/instrumenty.php?instr_id=59 Organ
  13. https://mapy.eholiday.pl/galeria-borek_strzelinski-borow-strzelin,65176.html?view=popup Borek Strzelinski organy
  14. https://web.archive.org/web/20080726161407/http://www.veeso.de/liegnitz.html Orgel in Liegnitz
  15. https://musicamsacram.pl/instrumenty/opis/1626-Legnica-Kosciol-ewangelicko-augsburski-Marii-Panny Heutige Orgel
  16. http://www.orgbase.nl/scripts/ogb.exe?database=ob2&%250=2019118&LGE=DE&LIJST=lang Orgel
  17. Hannes Ludwig: Orgelhandbuch Brandenburg. Vol. 2. Uckermark (Ostteil). Freimut und Selbst, Berlin 2008, the attribution was made by Wolf Bergelt in the 1980s.
  18. http://www.orgbase.nl/scripts/ogb.exe?database=ob2&%250=2050691&LGE=DE&LIJST=lang Geschichte der Orgel
  19. https://www.prenzlau.eu/cms/detail.php/bb3.c.277346.de Sanierung der Heilig-Geist-Kirche
  20. https://orgellandschaftbrandenburg.de/orgelinventar/barnim/groß-schönebeck Orgel
  21. [Uwe Pape]