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*[[Mexico City]], [[Mexican Federal District|D.F.]]: The [[Banobras]] Carillon. A 47-bell instrument in the world's tallest carillon tower (125 m), which is part of a [[Mexico|Mexican]] government development bank office complex in the [[Tlatelolco]] neighbourhood.
*[[Mexico City]], [[Mexican Federal District|D.F.]]: The [[Banobras]] Carillon. A 47-bell instrument in the world's tallest carillon tower (125 m), which is part of a [[Mexico|Mexican]] government development bank office complex in the [[Tlatelolco]] neighbourhood.
*[[Montreal]], [[Quebec]]: The Carillon of [[St. Joseph's Oratory]]. A 56-bell carillon installed in 1956.
*[[Montreal]], [[Quebec]]: The Carillon of [[St. Joseph's Oratory]]. A 56-bell carillon installed in 1956.
*[[New Haven, Connecticut]]: [[Harkness Carillon]] in [[Harkness Tower]] at [[Yale University]]: 10 bells (a chime) installed in 1922, and an additional 44 bells installed in 1964, for a total of 54 bells.
*[[Naperville, Illinois]]: 72-bell Millennium Carillon[http://www.visitnaperville.com/Carillon/]
*[[Naperville, Illinois]]: 72-bell Millennium Carillon[http://www.visitnaperville.com/Carillon/]
*[[New Haven, Connecticut]]: [[Harkness Carillon]] in [[Harkness Tower]] at [[Yale University]]: 10 bells (a chime) installed in 1922, and an additional 44 bells installed in 1964, for a total of 54 bells.
*[[New York City]], 74 bells by Gillett & Johnston and Van Bergen in memory of [[John D. Rockefeller|Laura Celestia Spelman Rockefeller]] in [[Riverside Church]][http://www.theriversidechurchny.org/content.asp?id=305]
*[[Norwood, Massachusetts]]: The Walter F. Tilton Carillon, in the Norwood Memorial Municipal Building. A 51-bell instrument made by [[Gillett & Johnston]], with bells ranging in size from 6½" to 71" (16.5 to 180 cm).
*[[Norwood, Massachusetts]]: The Walter F. Tilton Carillon, in the Norwood Memorial Municipal Building. A 51-bell instrument made by [[Gillett & Johnston]], with bells ranging in size from 6½" to 71" (16.5 to 180 cm).
*[[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]]: The Peace Tower Carillon, in the [[Parliament of Canada|Houses of Parliament]], 53 bells.
*[[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]]: The Peace Tower Carillon, in the [[Parliament of Canada|Houses of Parliament]], 53 bells.

Revision as of 18:31, 29 March 2005

The Netherlands Carillon in Arlington, Virginia, USA

A carillon is a keyboard percussion instrument composed of a range of bells controlled by a keyboard. Carillons are normally housed in towers and are among the largest musical instruments in the world.

Carillons originated in the 15th century in Flanders, when bell-makers perfected their art to the point where bells could be cast with an exact tone. The greatest concentration of antique carillons is still found in Belgium, the Netherlands, and the northern regions of France, Germany and Poland, where they were commonly put in place by rich market towns as tokens of civic pride and status.

They were most often housed in church towers, clock towers, or on municipal buildings, and the same holds true for those carillons that have been installed in other parts of the world since the art of casting precisely tuned bells was rediscovered in the late 19th century. In Germany, such a carillon is also called a glockenspiel.

Since each separate note is produced by an individual bell, a carillon's musical range is determined by the number of bells it has. With fewer than 23 (two octaves), the instrument is considered a chime, not a true carillon. Average instruments have ranges of around four and a half octaves (47 bells), while the largest specimens, with as many as 77, can span six octaves. In comparison, standard grand pianos can play 88 different notes.

Carillon bells

Seated in a cabin beneath the bells, the carillonneur presses down, with a cupped hand or fist, on a series of baton-like keys arranged in the same pattern as a piano keyboard. The keys activate levers and wires that connect directly to the bells' clappers; thus, as with a piano, the carillonneur can vary the intensity of the note according to the force applied to the key. In addition to the manual keys, the heavier bells are also connected to a series of pedals, offering the carillonneur a choice of two ways of playing the lower notes.

Noted carillons

A carillon keyboard

Noted carillons can be found in the following locations:

The Americas

Europe

Australia

Also of note:

  • Frank DellaPenna, founder of Cast in Bronze, is a notable carillon performer. His 35-bell instrument is particularly rare in that it is one of the very few travelling carillons that exist in the world.

External links