San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Organ fixers get music flowing post-flood

- By Ed White

GROSSE POINTE FARMS, Mich. — David Hufford learned that an extreme storm had flooded a suburban Detroit church with more than 7 feet of water, striking the boiler, electrical system, elevator and more.

“Just astounding,” he said, thumbing through photos on his phone.

But this repairman wasn’t called to fix anything ordinary at St. Paul Evangelica­l Lutheran in Grosse Pointe Farms. Hufford’s mission: get the music flowing again from the church’s 63-year-old pipe organ.

A flash flood in southeaste­rn Michigan ruined basements in thousands of homes when a regional pump system didn’t keep up with the June 25-26 disaster. It also created urgent business for a small band of experts who specialize in pipe organs, a cherished instrument of worship in churches.

“You might think that the pipe organ that sits high in the loft would be spared,” said the Rev. Tim Pelc of St. Ambrose Catholic Church in Grosse Pointe Park, “but the blower

system, which supplies air to the bellows, is located in the basement.”

The system at St. Ambrose was “wiped out” by water, Pelc reported in the church bulletin, and won’t be restored for weeks. A piano now leads the hymns.

Indeed, other churches in the Detroit area had similar challenges. Meanwhile, the nearly centuryold Senate Theater in Detroit, home of a Mighty Wurlitzer organ, is recovering after several feet of water flooded the basement.

Hufford, whose business, Renaissanc­e Pipe Organ in Ann Arbor, services

the instrument, explained that a blower and other intricate parts commonly installed in lower levels serve as the “lungs of the organ.”

As he made his rounds at St. Paul, Hufford found that the organ’s wind reservoir, a critical box made of wood, had been completely soaked.

“It’s going to the dump, it’s done. There is no way to salvage it,” he said. “But we’ll keep it around and use it for a pattern.”

The blower motor might only need to be rebuilt, a cheaper option than a full replacemen­t, said Eric Miller, St. Paul’s music director. The cost to fix the organ was estimated at $12,000.

“I’m hoping to have it back by Thanksgivi­ng,” he said.

“It’s a real specialize­d area of work,” Miller added. “Once you find somebody who’s good, you want to stick with them. They know the instrument, the peculiarit­ies of it.”

Renaissanc­e Pipe Organ was able to get the wind reservoir running again at Peace Lutheran Church in Detroit, a result that was celebrated by the church with a brief Facebook video of a rising bellow.

Another organ technician, Stephen Warner, was needed at two Detroit churches, Zion Evangelica­l Lutheran and St. Matthew’s-St. Joseph’s Episcopal. He said emergency calls aren’t typical.

Warner understand­s why organs are revered, especially in churches.

“The pipes themselves are singing. You have a sense of majesty,” he said. “The sound of the organ seems like it came from a long time ago, and it’s going to be here after we’re gone. It can go from an absolute roar to a whisper — and everything in between.”

 ?? Ed White / Associated Press ?? David Hufford of Renaissanc­e Pipe Organ in Ann Arbor, Mich., is working to get the organ running again at St. Paul Evangelica­l Lutheran Church.
Ed White / Associated Press David Hufford of Renaissanc­e Pipe Organ in Ann Arbor, Mich., is working to get the organ running again at St. Paul Evangelica­l Lutheran Church.

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