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I uploaded a video of my machine playing this song a few months ago, but I've disassembled it to fix some of the issues and I think this recording came out much better. Enjoy! If you're curious, here's some details on this instrument. You can build one, too! The plans are available for sale at http://www.johnsmithbusker.co.uk/ -- sadly John Smith isn't among us anymore, but he devoted decades of his life to make portable organ building accessible. Not all of his methods are traditional, but you can't deny the results! Using those plans, I built all 78 of the wooden pipes by hand. The metal pipes are (probably) from a church organ -- I have all five ranks of those pipes and I'll try to use them in a future project. The previous version the metal pipes were from an actual retired church organ (I have its history!). There's a set of bellows that provide air pressure; at this point I have the crank driven by a windshield wiper motor and that's why it's so noisy. All the pipes sit on a pressurized box. Air valves use electromagnets to open and close. There's a driver board that converts midi notes into signals that are used to drive the magnets; the board is capable of driving most of the magnets directly. Driver board is from: https://j-omega.co.uk/ There's a register board that grabs midi signals and drives special functions -- such as turning the glockenspiel on and off, turning the metal pipes on and off, and actuating a damper bar to close off the back row of melody pipes. I got that and the midi file reader from Bill Klinger: http://www.klingerorgan.com/index.html