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===Modern development=== [[File:Dülmen, St.-Viktor-Kirche, Innenansicht -- 2018 -- 0661.jpg|thumb|The pipe organ in the St Viktor Church, Dülmen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, exhibits a modern façade.]] The development of pneumatic and electro-pneumatic key actions in the late 19th century made it possible to locate the console independently of the pipes, greatly expanding the possibilities in organ design. Electric stop actions were also developed, which allowed sophisticated combination actions to be created.<ref>Thistlethwaite, 14–15.</ref> Beginning in the early 20th century in Germany and in the mid-20th century in the United States, organ builders began to build [[Historically informed performance|historically inspired]] instruments modeled on Baroque organs. They returned to building mechanical key actions, voicing with lower wind pressures and thinner pipe scales, and designing specifications with more mixture stops.<ref>Bicknell "Organ building today", 82ff.</ref> This became known as the [[Organ Reform Movement]]. In the late 20th century, organ builders began to incorporate digital components into their key, stop, and combination actions. Besides making these mechanisms simpler and more reliable, this also makes it possible to record and play back an organist's performance using the [[MIDI]] protocol.<ref>Retrieved on 7 July 2009.</ref> In addition, some organ builders have incorporated digital (electronic) stops into their pipe organs. The [[electronic organ]] developed throughout the 20th century. Some pipe organs were replaced by digital organs because of their lower purchase price, smaller physical size, and minimal maintenance requirements. In the early 1970s, [[Rodgers Instruments]] pioneered the ''hybrid'' organ, an electronic instrument that incorporates real pipes; other builders such as [[Allen Organs]] and [[Johannus Orgelbouw]] have since built hybrid organs. Allen Organs first introduced the electronic organ in 1937 and in 1971 created the first digital organ using CMOS technology borrowed from NASA which created the digital pipe organ using sound recorded from actual speaking pipes and incorporating the sounds electronically within the memory of the digital organ thus having real pipe organ sound without the actual organ pipes.
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