Topic: Romantic Rühlmann I (St Johannes - Wolfen - 1898)
So I've been living in Wolfen for a while now, right next to the Johanneskirche, and naturally got curious about the organ sitting there. Turns out it's a Wilhelm Rühlmann senior instrument from 1898 (op. 204), and I decided to try recreating a replica of it in Organteq 2.
Spent January talking with local cantors and voicers familiar with the Rühlmann tradition, managed to get some recordings of individual stops which helped massively with recreating the sound. The interesting bit about Rühlmann organs from this period: they're late-Romantic but with a very specific character. Sharp strings that cut through and color the Principal 8', flutes that are quite powerful without any spitting sounds, and principals that sing with minimal chiff. The second manual isn't some weak afterthought either as it's a proper additive partner to the Hauptwerk, even on smaller instruments.
Original tuning was Parisian pitch with equal temperament. The current organ stands around 440 Hz now, but I've used 435 in the preset since that's historically accurate.

Overall, it was interesting to work specifically with local organs (most of which are by Rühlmann by the way). His work somewhat resembles Cavaillé-Coll. One local organ in Bobbau was actually built after Rühlmann studied with Cavaillé-Coll, which explains his love for using French stops instead of those typical in German Baroque, for instance. The replica turned out quite convincing. Not perfect itself, but perfectly playable.
I've uploaded the preset to FXP Corner along with a three keyboards mapping file that matches the actual organ's compass:
Manual I & II: C-f³ (54 keys each)
Pedal: C-d¹ (27 keys)
Preset itself:
https://forum.modartt.com/file/6dov4p5s
Keyboard mapping:
https://github.com/coignard/organteq-st...boards.otm
René Coignard