Music in the Royal Collection
Many members of the royal family were talented musicians
Prince Consort's Organ Room, Buckingham Palace
1873RCIN 2101748
This photograph depicts Prince Albert’s Organ Room, which contained an organ built by Gray & Davison in 1841. The organ was of an ingenious design, fitting seamlessly into its surroundings. The bellows were kept from sight outside in a passage and made to look like a table. The organ was divided on either side of the fireplace with trackers passing behind a mirror. No pipes were visible and the keyboard and pedals could be slid back into the case. Mendelssohn played this instrument during his five visits to Buckingham Palace. He wrote in a letter to his mother:
"I begged that the Prince would first play me something, so that, as I said, I might boast about it in Germany. He then played a chorale, by heart, with the pedals, so charmingly and clearly and correctly that it would have done credit to any professional; and the queen, having finished her work, came to sit by him and listened, and looked pleased. Then it was my turn, and I began my chorus from, 'St. Paul', 'How lovely are the messengers!' before I had got to the end of the first part they had both joined in the chorus, and all the time Prince Albert managed the stops for me so cleverly – first a flute, at the forte the great organ, and at the D Major section the full organ. Then he made a lovely diminuendo with all the stops, and so on to the end of the piece, and all my heart – that I was really quite enchanted."
Mendelssohn, 19 July 1842