Final play for York Minster's organ before major refit
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The final concert by York Minster's grand organ will take place later before it undergoes a two year-long refurbishment.
Most of the Victorian instrument and its its 5,263 pipes will be removed as part of the £2m refit.
It will be transported to a specialist in Durham to be cleaned and have its mechanism renewed.
The minster will use a grand piano and electronic keyboards to provide music for services until the organ returns.
As well as the cleaning of the pipes, a statement from the minster said that refurbishment would restore the organ's original "grander, imposing qualities" which were altered during work in the 1960s.
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Ahead of Saturday evening's farewell concert, Robert Sharpe, director of music, said the grand organ had its last major refit in 1903.
"The organ plays a key part in the Minster's services, providing the heartbeat at the centre of daily worship within the church," he said.
"This once-in-a-century refurbishment will ensure the instrument's reliability for the next 100 years."