This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Ernst Palandt" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (February 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Ernst Palandt (7 March 1907 – 6 July 1979) was a German organ builder.

Life

Born in Bochum,[1] Palandt worked as an organ builder in Halberstadt and Hildesheim between 1933 and 1969. He initially entered into a partnership with Wilhelm Sohnle and operated under the name E. Palandt & Sohnle KG.[1] In 1952, the two separated and Palandt continued to work alone as the owner of the Hildesheim organ building workshop. In 1970, long-time employee Dieter Kollibay took over the company.[1]

His estate is of particular importance because Palandt conducted intensive historical research on the organs he restored and maintained before the Destruction of Hildesheim and left behind extracts of files. He also built up an extensive photographic archive. Even if Palandt's work on historic organs no longer corresponds to the current state of restorative organ building, he nevertheless preserved essential substance and preserved many organs.

Accordingly, Palandt saw himself stylistically committed to the organ-building tradition of the North German Baroque.

Palandt died in Hildesheim at the age of 72.

List of works (selection)

Year Location Building Picture Manual Stops Notes
1939 Halberstadt St.-Johannes-Kirche III/P 37 Behind historical casing of Elias (1605); destroyed in 1945
1940–1944 Aschersleben St.-Stephani-Kirche III/P 51 Extension reconstruction of the organ by Ernst Röver (1907) behind facade by Edmund Schulze (1855)
1953 Hildesheim St. Lamberti, Hildesheim III/P 29 Technical new construction in historic baroque casing using historic pipe material, main work by Johann Conrad Müller (1765), Rückpositiv [de] from the beginning of the 18th century; removal of a Brustwerk prepared.
1958 Braunschweig Brüdernkirche, Chororgel I/P 9 In baroque casing, today integrated as Rückpositiv of the Steinmann organ, separately playable
1958 Braunschweig Heilig-Geist-Kirche II/P 25 The disposition goes back to the organ of the St. Mauritius Church.
1965 Bartolfelde [de] St.-Bartholdi-Kirche II/P 13
1965 Katlenburg-Lindau Ev. Kirche II/P 14

Publications

Also:

References

  1. ^ a b c Pape, Uwe (2011). Norddeutsche Orgelbauer und ihre Werke 8: Ernst Palandt, E. Palandt & Sohnle, Hildesheimer Orgelbauwerkstatt. Vol. 8. Berlin: Pape. ISBN 978-3-921140-89-5.