Tony Thomas, resident Orpheum house organist (Photo: Courtesy Orpheum Theatre)

The Orpheumโ€™s Mighty Wurlitzer Organ has been a treasure to many a Memphis musician. โ€œEverybody that has any dealings with this organ falls in love with it,โ€ says Tony Thomas, who fell in love with the instrument the moment his fingers touched the keys. โ€œThis is not common anymore. Weโ€™re one of 12 theaters with a theater organ where the organ is in exactly the same place as it always was. โ€ฆ This organ has always been in the Orpheum Theatre, since its first time it ever was ever played [in 1928].โ€

Even as the organ celebrates its 95th birthday, it still has room for โ€œfirsts.โ€ A few years ago it underwent its first rebuild, and this year, the organ was recorded commercially for the first time for the vinyl A Very Mighty Christmas, on which Thomas plays arrangements of beloved holiday classics, from the modern sensation โ€œAll I Want for Christmas Is Youโ€ to โ€œSleigh Rideโ€ to Peanuts classics โ€œChristmas Time Is Hereโ€ and โ€œSkatingโ€ and many more. The album is produced by Orpheum Theatre Group COO Dacquiri Baptiste, Orpheumโ€™s public relations director Kristin Bennett, Christopher Blank of WKNO-FM, and Matt Ross-Spang of Southern Grooves.

โ€œYou feel like youโ€™re in the room when you listen to it on a good stereo system,โ€ Thomas says of the vinyl. โ€œItโ€™s really hard to put in words what the effect is on the organ and the sound, and part of the sound is the room.โ€

To celebrate the album, which is available for purchase at orpheumgiftshop.com, the Orpheum is hosting a Wurlitzer Wonderland concert. Thomas, the resident Orpheum house organist, will play songs from A Very Mighty Christmas with special guests Curtis Jones and Jay Cox. Tickets for the Thursday concert will be sold at the door.

โ€œIโ€™ll just say that music in general, for me, should be an emotional experience,โ€ Thomas says. โ€œSomebody who is not really a musician should still get a feeling from hearing whatever the music theyโ€™re listening to. It doesnโ€™t matter if itโ€™s classical, or anything between that and rap. But, as an emotional experience, it is hard to top the range of expression that the theater organ provides a listener as opposed to any other kind of instrument that you can play singly โ€ฆ the tones and the combinations of sounds and the expression of the instrument. The loud and soft are so dramatic. Itโ€™s a technicolor musical experience, is what it is. And I would just want someone to come away from listening to this record, having been moved in some way and had the music not just be, Oh, thereโ€™s โ€˜Itโ€™s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year,โ€™ but feel a lift in the music that makes them that gives them some joy.โ€

Wurlitzer Wonderland, Orpheum Theatre, 203 S. Main, Thursday, December 21, 7 p.m., $10.