Upgrading the Wersi Organ to Three Manuals: Why Playability Matters as Much as Sound
Introduction: When an Instrument Becomes a Studio
A musical instrument is never just a piece of equipment. It becomes part of the way we think, compose, practise, experiment and create. At Philip M Russell Ltd, music is not separate from the rest of the company’s work. It supports film production, educational videos, sailing films, science demonstrations, restoration updates and creative projects that need more than generic background music.
The Wersi OAX 800 is already a remarkable instrument, but the next stage of the project is to improve its playability and expand what it can do. This means upgrading to a three manual OAX 1000 Pergamon. The aim is to upgrade the setup to three manuals and integrate a wider range of software instruments, including organ modelling, sampled organs, modular synthesis and cinematic sound libraries.
On paper, this sounds simple: add another keyboard, connect some software and play.
In practice, it is much more interesting than that.
This is a project about music, technology, workflow, sound design and problem-solving.
Why Upgrade to Three Manuals?
For anyone who does not play organ, three manuals may look excessive. Why would one player need three keyboards?
The answer becomes obvious once you start arranging music properly.
A traditional organist often uses different manuals for different sounds, textures and musical roles. One manual might carry the main melody, another might provide a softer accompaniment, while a third might be used for a contrasting solo voice, strings, choir, brass or a dramatic organ registration. Add pedals into the mix, and the organ becomes almost orchestral.
With only two manuals, it is still possible to play complex arrangements, but compromises quickly appear. Stops have to be changed more often. Sounds have to be layered rather than separated. Musical lines can become crowded. A third manual gives the player more freedom and makes performance feel less like operating a machine and more like playing an instrument.
For film music, that extra manual is even more useful. One keyboard can hold a pipe organ registration, another can control strings or pads, and a third can trigger choir, brass, synths or sound effects. It becomes possible to move between musical worlds without stopping the performance.
The upgrade is not about showing off. It is about reducing friction.
The Organ as a Film Music Workstation
One of the main reasons for developing the Wersi setup is to support original music for company films.
A sailing restoration video needs a different atmosphere from a GCSE science practical. A macro photography sequence of insects in the garden needs a different sound world from a dramatic A-Rater restoration update. A video showing a laboratory experiment may need gentle rhythmic movement, while a film about Champagne, the Thames A-Rater, may need something more expansive, nautical and emotional.
Using original music means the sound can be shaped around the film rather than forced underneath it. Themes can be created for recurring projects. Short motifs can identify the Champagne restoration series, science videos, sailing films or behind-the-scenes company updates.
The organ is a particularly powerful tool for this because it is already a hybrid instrument. It can be grand, delicate, mechanical, atmospheric, traditional or experimental. With VST instruments added, it becomes a complete music production system.
Why VST Instruments Are Not “Just Plug and Play”
Adding software instruments sounds easy until you start doing it properly.
There are several different types of software involved in this project. Organteq is described by Modartt as a physically modelled virtual pipe organ that can run on a computer in standalone mode or as a plug-in. Hauptwerk takes a different approach, allowing a MIDI organ or keyboard to play virtual pipe organs and third-party instruments based on sampled organs.
Those two alone raise important questions. Should a particular piece use modelled pipes or sampled pipes? Should the sound be immediate and flexible, or should it recreate a specific historic organ? How much memory will a sample set require? How should stops, manuals, pistons and expression pedals be mapped?
Then there are other tools. VCV Rack is a virtual Eurorack modular synthesizer environment, useful for experimental textures, drones, pulses and sound-design ideas. HALion is Steinberg’s professional synth and sample platform, while Kontakt is widely used as a platform for sample-based instruments and third-party libraries.
Each of these programs has its own assumptions. Each wants MIDI input, audio output, plug-in hosting, routing, licensing, memory, storage and configuration. The difficult part is not installing one program. The difficult part is making several of them behave as one musical instrument.
The Real Challenge: Configuration
The exciting part of this upgrade is the sound. The less glamorous part is the configuration.
A three-manual setup means deciding what each manual should control. For example:
Manual 1 might control the main organ sound.
Manual 2 might control strings, choir or a second organ division.
Manual 3 might control solo instruments, synthesizers or cinematic effects.
Pedals might control bass stops, orchestral basses or low synth textures.
Expression pedals might control volume, swell, filters or dynamics.
That means MIDI channels must be assigned sensibly. Software instruments must respond only to the manual intended for them. Stops and controls need mapping. Pistons need testing. Some sounds must be layered, while others must remain separate.
This is where the project becomes very similar to designing a science experiment or building a computer system. The idea may be simple, but the reliability comes from careful setup.
If one MIDI channel is wrong, the wrong instrument plays.
If the audio buffer is too large, the sound arrives late.
If it is too small, the audio may click or break up.
If sample libraries are stored badly, loading times become frustrating.
If the sound system is not good enough, all the software improvements are wasted.
A successful upgrade is not just about adding more sound. It is about making the system playable.
Latency: The Hidden Enemy of Musical Performance
Latency is one of the most important issues in any software-based musical setup.
Latency is the delay between pressing a key and hearing the sound. A tiny delay may not matter when editing a video, but it matters enormously when playing live. If the response feels slow, the player starts compensating unconsciously. Rhythm becomes less natural. Fast passages become harder. The instrument stops feeling connected to the hands.
This is especially important with organ playing because the performer is already coordinating two hands, feet, stops, expression pedals and sometimes rapid changes in registration. Adding noticeable latency makes the whole experience feel less musical.
The practical work therefore involves choosing sensible audio settings, checking the audio interface, reducing unnecessary background processes, testing different buffer sizes and making sure the computer is powerful enough for the instruments being used.
The goal is simple: when a key is pressed, the sound should feel immediate.
Routing: Getting the Sound Where It Needs to Go
Once the software is working, the next question is where the sound goes.
For practice, the organ may simply need a good local speaker system. For recording, the sound may need to go into a DAW. For film scoring, it may need to be captured cleanly alongside video editing software. For livestreaming or demonstration work, it may need to be routed into the studio system.
This is where the Wersi project connects with the wider company workflow. Philip M Russell Ltd already uses video production, studio cameras, microphones, lighting, editing and teaching technology. The organ upgrade is not an isolated music project; it is part of a larger media-production environment.
A better sound system is therefore essential. There is no point building a rich virtual organ, orchestral or synthesis setup if the final speakers cannot reproduce it properly. Good bass response, clear midrange and controlled high frequencies all matter. So does the physical placement of speakers in the room.
The sound has to be good enough for performance, recording and judgement. If the monitoring is poor, it becomes difficult to make sensible musical decisions.
Sound Libraries: Choice Can Become a Problem
Modern music software offers an astonishing range of sounds. That is both a strength and a danger.
With pipe organs, sampled instruments, orchestral libraries, choirs, synthesizers, modular patches and cinematic textures available, it is very easy to spend more time browsing sounds than writing music. A large library can become a distraction unless it is organised properly.
This is where a practical workflow matters.
The project needs a core set of reliable sounds: a strong organ, a softer organ, strings, choir, brass, piano, atmospheric pads, basses and a few distinctive sound-design patches. Once these are configured and tested, they can become the foundation of future film scores.
The aim is not to own thousands of sounds. The aim is to build a set of sounds that can be reached quickly when a film needs music.
Practical Example: Scoring a Sailing Film
Imagine creating music for a short film about Champagne, the Thames A-Rater restoration project.
The opening shot might show the boat under cover in the boat park. A soft organ pad or gentle string texture could suggest age, memory and potential. As the camera moves across damaged varnish, fittings and rigging, a small repeating motif could begin.
When the film moves to work in the workshop, the music might become more rhythmic, perhaps using a light synth pulse from VCV Rack or a muted percussion texture from a sample library. When the boat eventually returns to the water, the theme could expand into a fuller organ and orchestral sound.
With three manuals, these layers can be performed more naturally. One manual can hold the harmonic bed, another can carry the theme, and the third can add colour or movement. Instead of building everything painfully one track at a time, some of the music can be shaped in real time.
That makes the process more musical and more enjoyable.
Practical Example: Music for Science Videos
Science videos need a different approach.
The music must support the explanation without distracting from it. A video on waves, interference or resonance might use slow pulses, evolving tones or simple harmonic patterns. A biology video might use warmer textures. A chemistry practical might need a subtle, steady background that gives the film pace without making it feel dramatic.
The upgraded organ setup could be especially useful here because it allows quick sketching. A short theme can be created, adjusted and reused across a series. The sound can become part of the identity of the teaching material.
This matters because educational videos are not only about information. They are about attention. Good sound helps hold attention.
The Personal Side: Why This Project Is Worth Doing
There is a personal pleasure in upgrading an instrument rather than simply replacing it.
The Wersi is already a capable and inspiring instrument. Expanding it to three manuals feels like developing its potential rather than discarding what is already there. That fits the wider company philosophy: repair, improve, adapt, experiment and make equipment work harder.
It is the same mindset behind restoring Champagne, designing new mounts for cameras, building science apparatus, improving teaching resources and creating original video content. The question is rarely, “What can we buy?” The better question is often, “What can we make this do?”
There will be frustrating stages. Software will need configuring. Some instruments will not respond as expected. Latency will need testing. Audio routing will need tidying. Manuals and pedals will need mapping. The sound system will need careful thought.
But that is part of the value of the project.
It turns the organ into a working laboratory for music technology.
What Success Will Look Like
A successful upgrade will not simply be measured by the number of manuals or the amount of software installed.
Success will mean the system is comfortable to play.
It will mean sounds load reliably.
It will mean the manuals are mapped logically.
It will mean latency is low enough for real performance.
It will mean the sound system does justice to the instrument.
It will mean film music can be created more quickly and more personally.
Most importantly, success will mean the technology disappears into the background. The player should not be thinking about routing, drivers, MIDI channels or buffers while performing. The player should be thinking about music.
Conclusion: More Than an Organ Upgrade
Upgrading the Wersi OAX 1000 Pergamon to a three-manual setup is not just a technical project. It is a creative investment.
It improves playability. It opens up new possibilities for film music. It connects traditional organ performance with modern VST instruments, sampled sound libraries, modular synthesis and studio production. It also reflects a broader approach to company work: combining practical skills, creative ambition and technical problem-solving.
The final result should be an instrument that is easier to play, richer to record and more useful across many different projects.
For Philip M Russell Ltd, that means the organ becomes more than a musical instrument.
It becomes part of the studio, part of the workshop, part of the film-making process and part of the continuing story of making ideas work.