

The Starbrite, Starmaker, Strummer and 3-manual theatre Model 653 were the Conn models introduced by Kimball to the You can tell a Conn organ made by Kimball because the thumb pistons on Conn were Kimball bought the organ corporationĪlmost immediately and manufactured organs under both the Kimball and Conn names. In 1979, the Conn Organ Corporation went out of business, but Conn still continues to make band instruments to this day. The Entertainer was a division of stops that included one-finger chords, Swinger-Bass, Solo Chord and other Easy-Play features. The built-in Leslie gave the tibias a true theatre The mainstream tonesĬould have been voiced better and the diapason was terrible (several home organ manufactures missed the boat on that one). The instruments had good sounding flutes or tibias,Ī very realistic reed section, very articulate percussion stops and was one of the first to develop the symphonic-type string tones with built in celesting. You can tell a Conn organ made by Kimball because the thumb pistons on Conn were. almost immediately and manufactured organs under both the Kimball and Conn names.
#KIMBALL ORGAN MUSIC FULL#
Kimball carried a full line of organs from the small one-manual Swinger 80 to the full-featured console Xanadu. In 1979, the Conn Organ Corporation went out of business, but Conn still continues to make band instruments to this day. The tone was deplorable! A few years later, they went to all transistor technology and made a mark in the home market.
#KIMBALL ORGAN MUSIC GENERATOR#
These instruments used a photo-electric cell generator amplified with vacuum tubes,Īnd were not successful.

In 1961, Kimball came out with its first electronic, or rather electric, organs. In 1959, Kimball was purchased by the Jasper Corporation and moved to Jasper, Indiana. Of course, we all know Kimball for its line of fine pianos and they also manufactureįurniture. In the silentįilm era, Kimball built many theatre pipe organs and they may still be heard across the land. Kimball also did one of the rebuildings of the great Mormon Tabernacle organ in Salt Lake City, Utah. Three ranks of free reeds to replace the longer pedal pipes.

He developed portable pipe organs that used William Wallace Kimball founded the Kimball Organ Company in Chicago in 1857, manufacturing reed and pipe organs.
