Far from being dusty and dreary, harmoniums, or pump organs, were grand instruments that took their place at the heart of 19th-century French music, says Andrew Green

By Andrew Green

Published: Thursday, 10 August 2023 at 08:53 AM


I have to own up. Like many of you, I’m sure, I had a blank spot as far as harmoniums are concerned. It’s that image in the mind of ageing players hunched at the keyboard, pedalling away for dear life to work the bellows, yet only managing to produce wheeze and weediness from those ugly little beasts that surely now are little more than historical curiosities.

So the first sight of Phil and Pam Fluke’s Reed Organ and Harmonium Museum at Saltaire in West Yorkshire was a shock – the jumbled landscape of a hundred or so often vastly different working examples must have transfixed every visitor. 

Alas, the museum is no more, leaving barely another of its kind. However, the Flukes continue to make instruments available for use by the likes of the Hallé, Royal Philharmonic, Scottish Chamber orchestras and more. The passion to spread the word remains, fired long ago when Phil, as he explains, ‘popped out to buy Pam the piano she wanted for her birthday and came back with a little harmonium I’d found.’

What is a harmonium?

Also known as a ‘reed organ’ or ‘pump organ’, a harmonium is a type of keyboard that functions much like a small organ. It creates sound by blowing air through metal reeds – these are tuned to different pitches to make musical notes.

How do harmoniums work?

That air is blown through those reeds by pumps that can be operated either by the hands or feet. Much like the instrument’s larger cousin the organ, a  typical foot-pumped harmonium will feature two pedals which are connected to a bellows: the latter sends air into the reeds. This leaves the performer’s hands free to play the keyboard.

Conversely, a hand-pumped harmonium requires the performer to push and pull a handle back and forth: this is connected to those all-important bellows. That leaves just one hand to play the keyboard.

‘It’s simplest to call all such instruments “harmoniums” as they do on the Continent,’ says Pam, ‘but the suction instruments are frequently known as American Organs.’ For the purposes of this feature, harmonium it will be.

Most significantly, though, we all need to think beyond that stereotypical image of harmoniums pumping out Cwm Rhondda in rain-ravaged Methodist chapels down in the Welsh valleys, breathing must and mothballs as their players pedal with fury to maintain the supply of air.

Sure, it’s an accurate enough picture in itself, but the range of harmoniums manufactured in the instruments’ heyday is mind-boggling: from cheap mass-produced puffers to self-important instruments in elaborate cases for well-to-do homes; from crowd-pleasers built to conjure music for the silent screen to the noble ‘art harmoniums’.