Britain's largest organ concerts website - click here to advertise your recitals... for free!
www.organrecitals.com
WEEKLY E-MAIL BULLETINS
Sent on Thursday night/Friday morning, these plain-text e-mail messages are a convenient way of getting advance notice of concerts.

Each message contains a basic list of recitals for the week (Saturday to Friday), together with links to the website's "Next 7 Days" pages. Some also include further information about concerts and/or news from the organ world. Additional messages are sent occasionally.

The list of recipients is not disclosed - i.e. no one sees your e-mail address, and neither will it be passed-on to any other individual or organisation. You can unsubscribe at any time (details of how to do so are included in each message).

To see a sample Weekly Bulletin, click here - opens a new window.
To subscribe to this free service, click here - opens a new window.

Be alert to spam! Once you have signed-up to receive weekly bulletins from organrecitals.com you will have to confirm your subscription. Thereafter, you will never be asked about your subscription status or asked to re-confirm your membership. If you receive a message that seems to come from organrecitals.com but doubt its authenticity, please forward it to spam@organrecitals.com for clarification. Under no circumstances should you click on any link(s) contained in such a message, as doing so may be harmful to your computer.
Random pages: Recitals in The West Midlands Recitals at Westminster Abbey Recitals by Martin Baker
About the owner/webmaster: Stephen D. Smith maintains organrecitals.com - which gets over half-a-million "hits" annually - with technical advice and support from Stephen Walmsley and Calum Mackay [more info]. He has served as President of the Atlantic City Convention Hall Organ Society [www.acchos.org] for 12 years and, in 2008, was appointed lifetime Honorary Curator of the building's two organs - one of which is the world's largest, having 449 ranks and 33,000-plus pipes [stop list]. His two published books about this colossal instrument run to more than 600 pages [more info] and he has written numerous articles about it for various periodicals and websites.