Salisbury Cathedral – New Chamber Organ

30th January 2025

Salisbury Cathedral has just received a new chamber organ, kindly funded by the Friends of Salisbury Cathedral.

Salisbury gets new chamber organ thanks to the Friends.

The new instrument is to provide a world-class chamber organ for the cathedral and will be used to accompany much of the Cathedral Choir’s pre-nineteenth-century repertoire, as well as to provide an exemplary continuo instrument in concert work with ensembles such as the City of London Sinfonia, and Florilegium.

Salisbury gets new chamber organ thanks to the Friends.

John Challenger, Salisbury Cathedral’s Assistant Director of Music, said:

“We are absolutely thrilled by the arrival of our wonderful new chamber organ. We have waited a long time to receive the instrument, and it has been well worth the wait. We are delighted with every aspect of it – the exceptional tone quality, its compactness, its versatility and reliability. Of course, Salisbury already possesses a world-class Father Willis organ, and our new Klop chamber organ, which is more suited to accompaniments from the Renaissance and Baroque periods, will provide the perfect contrast to our much-loved Romantic-style Willis organ.”

The instrument is a generous gift by the Friends of Salisbury Cathedral, the charity committed to the welfare and preservation of the Cathedral.

The project was initiated by former Chair of the Friends, Duncan Glass, and seen through to its conclusion by Canon Treasurer Kenneth Padley.

It was used for the first time in worship at Evensong in and in concert for Handel’s Messiah in December and just last weekend at Salisbury Cathedral’s Epiphany Devotion, the last of the popular processional services of the season.

Day to day, the organ is housed in the quire, but its sturdiness and portability makes it ideally suited for performances in any space inside the Cathedral.

Luke March, Chair of Friends of Salisbury Cathedral, said:

“Music is such an integral part in the life of our great Cathedral. With grateful thanks to all those who generously support the Friends, we are delighted that the Cathedral was able to commission this new Chamber Organ from The Netherlands, and that we have been able to play our part in enhancing the musical life of the Cathedral”

This new instrument has been made by Henk & Niels Klop, renowned builders of harpsichords and small organs based in The Netherlands.

Photos – Finnbarr Webster

With no regular funding from the Government, and limited funding from the Church Commissioners, our cathedrals survive or fall by their ability to find creative ways and partnerships to generate the income needed to fund, not just operational costs, but also the huge costs of repair and maintenance.

Only ten of our cathedrals, plus the two Royal Peculiars of Westminster Abbey and St George’s Chapel, Windsor, charge an entrance fee.

Despite that, all our cathedrals are free to enter for worship, for prayer and to light a candle, and no-one would ever be turned away.