Carillons, musical instruments in the
percussion family with at least 23 cast
bells and played with a keyboard, are found throughout the
British Isles as a result of the
First World War. During the
German occupation of Belgium, many of
the country's carillons were silenced or destroyed. This news circulated among the
Allied Powers, who saw it as "the brutal annihilation of a unique democratic music instrument".[1][2] The destruction was romanticized in poetry and music, particularly in England. Poets – often exaggerating reality – wrote that the Belgian carillons were in mourning and awaited to ring out on the day of the country's liberation.
Edward Elgar composed
a work for orchestra which includes motifs of bells and a spoken text anticipating the victory of the Belgian people.[3] He later even composed a work specifically for the carillon.[4] Following the war, countries in the
Anglosphere built their own carillons
to memorialise the lives lost and to promote
world peace,[2] including two in England.[5]
The heaviest carillon is at the
Kirk of St Nicholas in
Aberdeen, Scotland, weighing 25,846 kilograms (56,981 lb); the lightest is at the
Atkinsons Building in
London, weighing 3,194 kilograms (7,041 lb). The carillon of
St Colman's Cathedral in
Cobh has the most bells – 49. The region has several two- and three-octave carillons. The heaviest two-octave carillon in the world – weighing 22,669 kg (49,976 lb) – is located in
Newcastle upon Tyne.[8] The carillons were primarily constructed in the
interwar period by the English bellfounders
Gillett & Johnston and
John Taylor & Co.[6] Almost all of the carillons are
transposing instruments, all of which transpose such that the lowest note on the keyboard is
C.[6]
The
World Carillon Federation [
nl] defines a
carillon as an instrument of at least 23
cast bronze bells hung in fixed suspension, played with a traditional
keyboard of batons, and
tuned in
chromatic order so that they can be sounded
harmoniously together. It may designate instruments of 15 to 22 bells built before 1940 as "historical carillons".[10] Its member organizations – including for example the
Carillon Society of Britain and Ireland – also define a carillon with those restrictions.[11] This list contains only those carillons that meet the definition outlined by these organizations.
^"Carillons". World Carillon Federation.
Archived from the original on 11 January 2021. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
^"Organization". World Carillon Federation.
Archived from the original on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 14 June 2021. The definition of a carillon is fixed as follows: 'A carillon is a musical instrument composed of tuned bronze bells which are played from a baton keyboard'. Only those carillons having at least 23 bells will be taken into consideration.
^"What Is a Carillon?".
Carillon Society of Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 18 May 2023. A Carillon is a musical instrument consisting of 23 or more cast bronze, traditionally shaped bells, which have been precisely tuned so that any bells can be sounded together to produce a harmonious effect.