Your Setup Fee Is Lying To You
Tuning a pipe organ is an exercise in listening for what isn’t there. Pearl M.-C., a woman who spends her Tuesday mornings crawling through the wooden ribcage of a Casavant, once told me that the most difficult part of her job isn’t the mechanics; it’s the air.
You can have the pipes polished until they gleam like a mirror, and you can have the trackers balanced to the milligram, but if the wind-chest has a microscopic leak, the music will always sound like it’s gasping for breath. She approaches a four-story-tall instrument with a tiny brass hammer and a sense of profound patience, making adjustments so small they are invisible to the eye, yet they change the resonance of an entire cathedral.
I thought about Pearl last week when I walked into a municipal building and tried to pull open a door that was clearly marked “PUSH.” There is a specific kind of internal thud that happens when your body expects movement and hits a literal wall instead. It’s the feeling of being out of sync with the physical world.
The “Greater” Fairview Transition
I was there to meet a clerk named Sarah, who was dealing with a similar, albeit more bureaucratic,
