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Rodgers Instruments
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==Touring organs== Organist [[Virgil Fox]] helped bring Rodgers organs into the limelight in the late 1960s and early 1970s when he used a Rodgers Touring Organ, built in 1966 and known as "Black Beauty," for his "Heavy Organ" concerts, including a 1970 all [[Bach]] performance that included a light show at the [[Fillmore East]] Auditorium in [[New York City]]. On October 1, 1974, Rodgers’ five manual [[Carnegie Hall]] organ, designed by Virgil Fox, debuted in a sold-out Fox concert. The organ and Fox were praised by [[Time (magazine)|Time]], [[United Press International]], Ron Eyer in the New York [[Daily News (New York)|Daily News]], [[New York Post]] and by noted critic [[Harold Schonberg]] in [[The New York Times]]. Carnegie Hall’s International Organ Series for the Inaugural 1974-1975 Season included Fox, [[Pierre Cochereau]], Claire Coci, Fernando Germani, Herman Berlinski, [[George Thalben-Ball]] and Richard Morris. This was the world’s first five manual and most powerful{{Clarify|date=February 2011}} [[electronic organ]] at the time and was listed as such for a number of years in the [[Guinness Book of World Records]]. A sister five manual instrument to the Carnegie Hall Organ, named by Fox the "Royal V", served as Fox's touring organ for the 1975-76 concert season, but proved unwieldy to tour with. The Royal V was used at Fox's funeral in the [[Crystal Cathedral]] after he died on October 25, 1980. A second black Rodgers touring organ was active in the 1970s. The "American Beauty" was based on Rodgers's then premium three manual model, the "American Classic". Concert organists who played on this instrument or "Black Beauty" (which continued touring under Roberta Bailey Artists International well into the 80s) included [[Ted Alan Worth]], Joyce Jones, Pierre Cochereau, Herman Berlinski, Richard Morris, Keith Chapman, Douglas Marshall, John Grady, Frederick Geoghan, William S. Wrenn, Jr., and [[Diane Bish]]. The Royal V was, in 1983, refinished from black to white and permanently installed in the Meishusama Hall of the [[Shinji Shumeikai]] in Minsono, Japan. In mid-2004, this same organ was updated to newer Rodgers technology. Dan Miller and McNeill Robinson, consultants on the project, revised and updated the organ's tonal specification during the update to Trillium level Parallel Digital Imaging technology. The current Rodgers touring organ is Hector Olivera's "The King", a black four manual organ featuring a custom French specification that Olivera plays in various concert venues nationally.
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