ORGANS OF PARIS © 2026 Vincent Hildebrandt
The Parisian organ landscape
Before the revolution
Organs
in
the
'French
classical'
style
are
rare
in
Paris.
The
revolution
was
like
a
tzunami:
many
monasteries
and
churches
were
destroyed,
including
their
works
of
art
and
their
organs.
In
1789,
there
were
approx.
150
churches
and
50
convents.
Approx.
130
of
them
vanished
in
the
periode
1789-
1860.
In
1789,
there
were
around
100
large
organs
and
30-40
smaller
organs.
In
1795,
only
36
organs
ahd
survived.
Nowadays,
there
are
24
organcases
dating
(at
least
partly)
to
before
the
revolution
and
20
organs
with
stops
dating
to
before
the
revolution
(mostly
18th
century).
Only
3
of
them
still
have
a
French
classical
character
and
5
are
rebuilt
in
a
neo-
classical
style.
The
others
were
rebuilt
in
the
19th
or
20th century.
After the revolution
Most
Parisian
organs
date
from
after
the
revolution.
The
19th
century
was
the
era
of
Cavaillé-Coll,
creator
of
the
symphonic
organ.
In
the
20th
century,
the
romantic
and
symphonic
styles
of
the
19th
century
were
merged
with
the
classic
style
from
before
the
revolution,
creating
a
new
organ
type
on
which
the
repertoire
of
all
periods
could
be
played:
the
neoclassical organ.