About usKegg Pipe Organ Builders is located in
Hartville, Ohio which is in
the Northeast part of the state, close to Canton. It was establish in
1985 by Charles Kegg to address the needs of those institutions that
desire an electric action instrument of high quality design and
construction, coupled with the tonal skill and care that can only be
accomplished with proper training. Mr. Kegg trained for eleven years
with Schantz, Casavant, and A.R. Schopp's Sons, and is responsible for
the final voicing of many Schantz and Casavant instruments ranging in
size from 4 to 132 ranks. It became clear to him that there was a need
in the industry for a builder of electric action instruments that were
intelligently designed to bring careful chest design, pipe scaling, and
voicing to a segment of the industry that frequently neglected these
important steps. The goal of the company is to continue to offer
uncompromising instruments at fair and reasonable costs to those
organizations that desire a truly musical instrument.
Tonal
Philosophy
The primary duty of a pipe organ used in worship is to support congregational singing. The second duty is to accompany soloists and ensembles. The third duty is to play organ literature. A well-designed instrument, even a modest one, should be able to do all three.
A Kegg Pipe Organ is designed to play American worship services. It is not copied from a notable builder of the past, for no great artist becomes great by dogmatically copying another's work. Rather, the past must be drawn upon for inspiration, and balanced with the requirements of contemporary worship needs and American acoustical environments. A fine Cavaille-Coll organ sounds splendid in a reverberant French room, but the same organ would be quite overbearing in a typical small, dry American space. Therefore, one must strive to duplicate the effect of such instruments, rather than the instruments themselves. This requires an understanding of scaling and voicing which only time and experience can provide.
The Kegg Pipe Organ relies on foundation
stops to provide volume and
support. Upperwork provides color to this support. Drawing a Great
Mixture
does not double the volume of the chorus. It adds sparkling color. The
Great Principal has a nobility that only a fine Diapason can possess.
It
is rich and full without being muddy. Principals are never bearded.
Flutes
and strings add allure. Chorus reeds blaze with rich, balanced fire.
Tapered
shallots are used frequently. Color reeds pique the ear to delight.
Above all, a Kegg Pipe Organ blends.
All stops come together
to weave the musical fabric. The result is a sound that surrounds and
lifts
the congregation in support throughout the dynamic range. A Kegg Pipe
Organ provides an expressive, attractve, and worshipful
sound.
"Combination" instruments where electronic voices play a significant role are not built by the Kegg company.