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==The Rainbow Carillon==
==The Rainbow Carillon==


The Rainbow Tower houses a [[carillon]] -- a [[musical instrument]] consisting of a baton [[keyboard]] that controls a series of bells. The '''Rainbow Carillon''' is sounded four times a day, 365 days a year. It features 55 bells with a total weight of over 43 tons. The instrument is controlled via a series of 55 oak batons and 30 foot pedals. The largest bell, called a [[bourdon]], is 8 feet in diameter and 6.5 feet tall, weighing in at 10 tons. The smallest bell in the instrument weighs less than 9 pounds and has a circumference of 5.75 inches. Musically the pitch of this bell is E. [http://www.gcna.org/data/ONNIFARB.HTM]
The Rainbow Tower houses a [[carillon]] -- a [[musical instrument]] consisting of a baton [[keyboard]] that controls a series of bells. The '''Rainbow Carillon''' is sounded four times a day, 365 days a year. It features 55 bells with a total weight of over 43 tons. The instrument is controlled via a series of 55 oak batons and 30 foot pedals. The largest bell, called a [[bourdon]], is 8 feet in diameter and 6.5 feet tall, weighing in at 10 tons. Musically the pitch of this bell is E. [http://www.gcna.org/data/ONNIFARB.HTM] The smallest bell in the instrument weighs less than 9 pounds and has a circumference of 5.75 inches.


The bell castings for the Rainbow Carillon were begun in [[1941]] by the [http://www.taylorbells.co.uk/ John Taylor Bell Founders] of [[Loughborough]], [[England]], but interrupted by the onset of [[World War II]]. Work on the instrument resumed in [[1945]] and was completed by [[1947]].
The bell castings for the Rainbow Carillon were begun in [[1941]] by the [http://www.taylorbells.co.uk/ John Taylor Bell Founders] of [[Loughborough]], [[England]], but interrupted by the onset of [[World War II]]. Work on the instrument resumed in [[1945]] and was completed by [[1947]].

Revision as of 15:59, 20 July 2006

The Rainbow Tower is a 50.3 meter (165 foot) tower located at the Rainbow Plaza Canadian border station of the Rainbow Bridge in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Construction on the tower was completed in 1947.

The Rainbow Carillon

The Rainbow Tower houses a carillon -- a musical instrument consisting of a baton keyboard that controls a series of bells. The Rainbow Carillon is sounded four times a day, 365 days a year. It features 55 bells with a total weight of over 43 tons. The instrument is controlled via a series of 55 oak batons and 30 foot pedals. The largest bell, called a bourdon, is 8 feet in diameter and 6.5 feet tall, weighing in at 10 tons. Musically the pitch of this bell is E. [1] The smallest bell in the instrument weighs less than 9 pounds and has a circumference of 5.75 inches.

The bell castings for the Rainbow Carillon were begun in 1941 by the John Taylor Bell Founders of Loughborough, England, but interrupted by the onset of World War II. Work on the instrument resumed in 1945 and was completed by 1947.

When the tower was built it contained a small apartment for the resident musician (the carilloneur). By the mid 1990s the Bridge Commission had replaced the resident carilloneur with a fully automated system. The instrument can still be played manually, but is mostly automated to allow for frequent playing. In the past June Hamilton, Robert Donnell, and Leland Richardson have served as carillonneurs at the tower. [2]

In Film

The Rainbow Tower was featured in the 1953 Marilyn Monroe thriller Niagara. Scenes were filmed outside the base of the tower, combined with sound stage footage.

Sources

  • "The bells of Niagara have historic ring; REDISCOVERING NIAGARA". Niagara Falls Review. Retrieved 20 July. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)