Your cart is empty.
![M.P. Möller was the largest organ company in the world and built more pipe organs than any other organ builder in history. Documenting such an enterprise is a formidable task that has been admirably achieved by Bynum Petty, the OHS’s former archivist. This revised and enlarged second edition of his original study of the company, An Organ a Day, traces its beginning in 1854 to its eventual sale in January,1993. A wealth of archival photographs illustrates every facet of the company, including its most important instruments. Many detailed stoplists of the largest organs, a transcript of M.P. Möller’s 1921 diary, and a complete catalogue of Möller Artiste player organ rolls are included. The last of 24 appendixes is a complete Geographical Index of the company’s 11,850 organs.
OHS Press, 2023; 402 pgs. hardcover M.P. Möller was the largest organ company in the world and built more pipe organs than any other organ builder in history. Documenting such an enterprise is a formidable task that has been admirably achieved by Bynum Petty, the OHS’s former archivist. This revised and enlarged second edition of his original study of the company, An Organ a Day, traces its beginning in 1854 to its eventual sale in January,1993. A wealth of archival photographs illustrates every facet of the company, including its most important instruments. Many detailed stoplists of the largest organs, a transcript of M.P. Möller’s 1921 diary, and a complete catalogue of Möller Artiste player organ rolls are included. The last of 24 appendixes is a complete Geographical Index of the company’s 11,850 organs.
OHS Press, 2023; 402 pgs. hardcover](https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-4mjh4t/images/stencil/300w/products/5808/12031/thumbnail_Moller-Cover-V4__68479.1707161567.jpg?c=2)
By Louis Luberoff - Introduction by Bynum Petty Louis Luberoff was M.P. Möller’s East Coast sales representative and super salesman. In the late 1920s, he developed a systematic plan to monopolize American organbuilding through a large holding company. His notebook, now in the American Organ Archives, contains his candid, informed assessment of the organ industry with an evaluation and recommendation of 44 companies and a complete financial report for each. A fascinating glimpse into the industry at its height.