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Building
organs today
Hennef-Bödingen Zur schmerzhaften Mutter
III/24 / 1997
Köln-Porz St. Josef
III/41 / 1992
Langenfeld-Reusrath St. Barbara
II/26 / 2003
Köln-Vingst St. Theodor
II/26 / 2001
We can fall back on over
30-years wealth of experience in organ-building. Despite the drastically
reduced number of new organs being built in Germany, we can not only
continue to actively use this know-how but can continue to build on it
thanks to our reconstruction process of Anglo-American instruments, some
even with a large newly built section.
Schulte organs are organs
of today, far from ideological transfiguration/blindness. We are
open-minded; willing to learn from the century-old tradition of
organ-building and to adapt what has been learned to the present day.
Furthermore, we have an eye for sensible alterations in all areas. Our goal
is the maximum possible production depth and thus a high added value.
What we don’t make
ourselves (e.g. metal pipes), is manufactured by high-quality German
suppliers according to our specifications. For international projects, we
also work together with companies in the respective countries (e.g. for
restorations of Anglo-American organs).
Schulte organs also speak the
language of the rest of the world. The design is made by Oliver Schulte,
often in cooperation with architecture firms. There are no constructions
from the drawer. Every Schulte organ is one-of-a-kind.
The sound concept is chosen
individually, from instrument to instrument. There is no “Schulte”
sound. Here too, it is our goal to create individual pieces and we
love to model after existing, historical sounds, which again are placed in a
modern context.
Kerpen St. Maurinus
III/19+24 / 1995+1998
Bergisch-Gladbach - Hebborn Zum Heilsbrunnen
II/17 / 1996
Bergisch-Gladbach - Schildgen Herz Jesu
II/25 / 1991
Neuss Heilig-Geist-Kirche
II/20 / 1994
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