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Martin OttOpus 43Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Lafayette, Indiana
Editorial pipe-organ study accompanying Martin Ott Opus 43
Editorial study of mechanical organ action. It is not a photograph of this installation.
Opus
43
Year
1986
Stops
18
Ranks
23

The record for Martin Ott Opus 43 leaves much unanswered, yet it preserves one useful detail: it was placed on a balcony. It also lists 18 stops, 23 ranks, and mechanical action at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church.

01 / 07

How Opus 43 entered the history of Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Martin Ott Opus 43 was an 18-stop, 23-rank mechanical organ built in 1986 for Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Lafayette, Indiana. The free-standing red-oak case stands on the sanctuary balcony and includes an attached keydesk.

The surviving account pairs Opus 43 with 1986. In the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church account from Lafayette, Indiana, without an event label, that pair is best read as catalogue chronology. The named place, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Lafayette, Indiana, gives the date its context; a programme or invoice could distinguish order from completion. No present-state conclusion follows.

02 / 07

What the Lafayette location tells us, and what it does not: Opus 43

Opus 43 is documented at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Lafayette, Indiana. The church name establishes who stood behind the Lafayette project, but it does not reveal the room's size, materials, or acoustic behaviour. Within the documented Lafayette chapter, claims about worship use or public recital belong here only when a dated local source supplies them.

03 / 07

What the numerical overview actually establishes for Opus 43

The Opus 43 overview lists 18 stop controls alongside 23 ranks. For the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church project in Lafayette, Indiana, a rank follows the keyboard compass at a given pitch and tone, whereas a stop may engage one rank or several. A difference of 5 separates the rank and stop counts for Opus 43. Within the documented Lafayette chapter, several pipe rows may answer one control, but the exact arrangement remains undocumented here. At Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in Lafayette, Indiana, names and pitches remain missing, so the musical reading stays deliberately limited.

A complete disposition would turn the short Opus 43 overview into a much clearer technical portrait. In the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church account from Lafayette, Indiana, it could show how the recorded totals were distributed and which controls drew more than one pipe row. For Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, such a document would also make later alterations easier to recognize. The current evidence stops with 18 stops | 23 ranks Mechanical action, so the missing detail remains a research question rather than an invitation to guess.

04 / 07

The action named for Opus 43

For Opus 43 at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, the project summary uses the term mechanical action. In the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church account from Lafayette, Indiana, in practice, that means the key movement reaches a wind valve through physical linkage rather than an electric-only command. The page for Holy Trinity Lutheran Church does not diagram that linkage or report its later maintenance.

05 / 07

A cautious musical reading for Holy Trinity Lutheran Church: Opus 43

The source adds a human and physical dimension to Opus 43: it was placed on a balcony and it has a free-standing red-oak case. For the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church project in Lafayette, Indiana, a church organ can carry several musical duties, but this evidence supports only the features and events it names. In the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church account from Lafayette, Indiana, it does not reveal a normal registration practice or the balance between organ, choir, and congregation. Within the documented Lafayette chapter, the stop list and parish programmes would answer those questions separately. The listed 18-stop, 23-rank scale remains the numerical boundary for this reading.

06 / 07

Where the chronology for Opus 43 falls quiet

Ruth Ann Ostergren is named as music director. The extract gives no dedicatory recital, consultant, relocation, later alteration, or additional chronology. Its surviving record is a concise description of a balcony installation, with Ostergren the only named person attached to the project. Nothing in the page identifies a previous instrument or explains how Holy Trinity introduced this organ in public performance. The specification names no extension.

07 / 07

The photograph trail and the limits of the evidence: Opus 43

Opus 43 has 1 archived image reference that agree with the project number. The first is images/043/043_m.jpg. Before an image is placed beside the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church article, its subject, date, photographer, and reuse terms need verification. For the Holy Trinity Lutheran Church project in Lafayette, Indiana, no complete attribution or permission statement survives in the extracted page.

For Opus 43, the available place description is Lafayette, Indiana. The unanswered questions are practical: is the listed specification complete, and does the instrument still occupy the named place? The surviving Opus 43 account cannot answer them, so present status remains open.