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Carillon

Carillon is a musical instrument housed in a bell tower, typically comprising at least 23 cast bells. The bells are tuned and hung so they can be rung by a keyboard-operated mechanism. A carillon player uses two fists on the keyboard to lift levers that raise the bells’ clappers; pedals may actuate the lowest bells. The instrument produces melodies and chords by sounding multiple bells in rapid succession, and many towers include automated or semi-automatic systems to perform on a schedule.

Carillons originated in the Low Countries in the 16th and 17th centuries, evolving from earlier bell-ringing

Bells are cast to a chromatic scale to allow full melodic passages; the range and tone depend

Repertoire includes sacred and secular music, folk tunes, classical transcriptions, and contemporary works. Carillon concerts are

practices
in
churches
and
town
halls.
They
spread
to
Europe,
North
America,
and
beyond,
becoming
a
distinctive
civic
feature
in
many
towns.
The
size
varies;
typical
instruments
cover
two
or
more
octaves,
while
larger
towers
reach
four
or
five
octaves
or
more.
on
the
number
and
size
of
bells,
and
their
aging.
Modern
carillons
may
use
electric
drives
or
computer-based
playback
to
supplement
or
replace
live
playing.
common
in
many
communities,
and
towers
often
serve
as
symbols
of
local
heritage.
Regular
maintenance—tuning
and
mechanism
calibration—is
essential
to
preserve
accuracy
and
playability.