Skip to main content

Sewanee Church Music Conference, July 9–15, 2012

Jane Scharding Smedley

Jane Scharding Smedley has served as organist-choirmaster at St. Peter Roman Catholic Church in Memphis, Tennessee since 1980. She earned bachelor’s (Rhodes College) and master’s (Wittenberg University) degrees in sacred music, and holds the Colleague and Choirmaster certificates from the American Guild of Organists. Her teachers included David Ramsey, Tony Lee Garner, Frederick Jackisch, and Richard White. An attendee at the Sewanee Church Music Conference since 1979, she currently serves as secretary of the board of directors.

 
Files
Diap1112p23.pdf (644.81 KB)
Default

This year’s conference, directed by Keith Shafer, immediately followed the national AGO convention just up the road in Nashville. What a fine experience it was for those fortunate to attend both, with their wide range of performances and learning opportunities. At Sewanee, however, the emphasis is on music within worship, taught through actual “doing.” Daily choral rehearsals provide a teaching laboratory, as well as preparing repertoire for the Friday Evensong and the Sunday Eucharist that concludes the week. 

Huw Lewis and Bruce Neswick, long-time favorites of this conference, returned as music faculty. Dr. Lewis, organist at Hope College in Holland, Michigan, is director of music at St. John’s Church in Detroit. Mr. Neswick, well known in AGO and AAM circles from past cathedral positions, is associate professor of organ and sacred music at the Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University. Both masters on the bench and the podium, they showed seamless teamwork and sterling professionalism. They shared the bench at the Tuesday evening recital, now named in memory of long-time conference leader Gerre Hancock. In homage to his teacher, Neswick performed his works (Air, Variations on tunes Ora Labora and Palm Springs), ending his half of the concert with an improvisation. Lewis balanced the program with skillful renderings of works from past masters: Bach (Fugue in E-flat Major), Brahms (Chorale Prelude and Fugue on “O Sorrow Deep”), and Franck (Chorale in A Minor). Both in recital and later in the worship services, the resources of the large Casavant organ in All Saints Chapel at the University of the South were fully explored. 

In the nearby Chapel of the Apostles, a newer two-manual Casavant instrument was used for a masterclass led jointly by Neswick and Lewis. Ten performers, representing a range of ages and backgrounds, received individualized coaching and guidance. Special mention is made of those present who represented the next generation—two in their teens and eight of college age or under thirty. Board member Alvin Blount coordinated this event; he also led a reading session of organ repertoire based on hymntunes useful for worship. Other workshops on hymn-playing techniques and improvisation were offered by Neswick on this smaller instrument, a nice gesture towards those present who may not be blessed with four manuals and en chamade on Sunday mornings.

Other sessions offered throughout the week included handbells, Episcopal basics, computer notation systems, and reading sessions. Bradley Almquist presented excellent workshops on “Conducting Skills” and “Music Theory for the Singer.”

Huw Lewis’s choral skills were fully evident in the daily rehearsals, demonstrating various techniques and a few ‘tricks of the trade’. To illustrate the importance of posture and how to efficiently communicate this to singers, Lewis shared a simple system that came to be named “Position 1, 2, 3.” It gave attendees a useful technique to take home—and provided much humorous fodder at the Annual Frolic later!

The daily Eucharists in the Dubose Conference Center’s chapel gave Neswick more opportunity to incorporate creative service-playing and improvisations.

To complement the rehearsals, workshops and performances, Lois Fyfe Music brought its excellent display of choral and organ music, along with related items. In spite of this conference following a very busy week at the Nashville AGO convention, Elizabeth Smith cheerfully shared her expert advice as browsers delighted in a shopping spree.

Repertoire for Evensong included the Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis in B-flat by Henry Smart and Preces and Responses by Robert Lehman. The anthem was Bairstow’s gorgeous setting of The King of Love, using the beloved St. Columba melody. Anglican chants by Walmisley and S. S. Wesley added variety to the many verses of Psalm 18 appointed for the evening. Under his sensitive guidance, with superb accompaniment by Neswick, Lewis enabled the beauty of Anglican chant to meld 145 voices into true sung prayer. A prelude improvisation on Mighty Savior was offered by Neswick to undergird the solemn procession of 145 vested singers, then seamlessly flowed into the hymn itself.

The liturgical and musical climax of the week was the Sunday Eucharist. Neswick’s preludes were on tunes to be sung: Nettleton by Hancock, Leoni by Seth Bingham and Richard Proulx. Hancock’s Houston Mass (also sung at daily Eucharist) was used.

This year’s commissioned anthem— Hymn of Praise by Gary Davison—used a text from Revelations and the Psalms. Its shifting meters and dynamic contrasts were well performed by the singers under Lewis’s precise musical direction; Neswick had the very challenging accompaniment, punctuated by dramatic silences, well in hand.

Deeply appreciated by this writer, Neswick demonstrated throughout both liturgies the role of the organist in connecting the parts of the liturgy. When silence was needed, it was there—when a musical thread could serve the flow, he wove it with sensitivity and art. His free accompaniment to In Babilone (“Hail, Thou Once-Despised Jesus”) was classic, with twists of key and registration, but never straying from its purpose to lead and support congregational song. Later at Communion, he used motifs from the anthem to come. He sensitively bound the flow of worship, leading into Davison’s lovely setting of My Soul Shall Be Alway, followed by Nettleton (“Come, Thou Fount”). All followed his musical cues to bring the hymn to a gentle close. “Praise to the Living God” (Leoni) closed the liturgy, then continued as seed for a final improvisation: a postlude of flourishes, calm mid-section, then fugal ending—a marvelous musical coda to a wonderful week. 

Father Matthew Moretz served as the conference chaplain. A member of the clergy of St. Bartholomew’s Church, New York City, Fr. Moretz is an advocate of Internet resources as a means of evangelization; he spoke to the conferees about ways he thought they might enhance their ministries through electronic media.

This year’s gala banquet honored two long-time board members. Keith Shafer is stepping down as conference co-director. Janet Perkins, registrar for many years, provided a friendly face and concerned ear to all who have been part of the Sewanee ‘family’. Gifts were bestowed along with much applause to show appreciation for their dedicated service. 

The sense of community at the conference is further supported by delicious culinary offerings issuing from the kitchen at the Dubose Center under Kim Agee, director, advised by board member Nancy Whitmer, hostess extraordinaire. In spite of a packed schedule, no one loses weight during their week on the ‘holy mountain’. 

The faculty for 2013 will be Richard Webster (Trinity Church, Boston) and Maxine Thevenot (St. John’s Cathedral, Albuquerque). The Reverend Barbara Cawthorn Crafton, who served as chaplain in 2011, will again share her spiritual gifts.

 

 

Related Content

Sewanee Church Music Conference, July 13-19, 2015

Jane Scharding Smedley

Jane Scharding Smedley has served as organist-choirmaster at St. Peter Catholic Church in Memphis, Tennessee, since 1980. She earned bachelor’s (Southwestern at Memphis/Rhodes College) and master’s (Wittenberg University) degrees in sacred music and holds Colleague and Choirmaster certificates from the American Guild of Organists. Her teachers included David Ramsey, Tony Lee Garner, Frederick Jackisch, and Richard White. An attendee at the Sewanee Church Music Conference since 1979, she followed her teachers Ramsey and White on the conference board; she has been secretary since 1996.

 
Default

The 65th Sewanee Church Music Conference offered attendees a packed week under the leadership of new director Todd Wilson. A stellar music faculty—Robert Simpson and Kevin Kwan—were joined by the Reverend Dr. David B. Lowry as chaplain to lead a week of challenging repertoire and inspiring liturgies. Bob Simpson returned to the conference as choral conductor after a too-long absence. Canon for music at Christ Church Cathedral, Houston, he is founder and artistic director of the Houston Chamber Choir and lecturer on church music at Rice University. Kevin Kwan, organist and director of music at Christ and St. Luke’s in Norfolk, Virginia, admirably filled the role of organist for the week, playing the Friday Evensong, Sunday Eucharist, daily liturgies, and performing in recital. 

On Tuesday, the Gerre Hancock Memorial Concert showed a team approach with Kwan and Wilson joined by Robert Delcamp (conference board president). Each presented selections ranging from John Cook’s Fanfare to pieces by David Conte, George Shearing, C. V. Stanford, and Widor (first movements from Symphony No. 5 and Symphony No. 6). Hancock was recalled with his Fancy for Two to Play and his Maundy Thursday duet from Holy Week. For these, Kevin Kwan shared the bench of the Casavant in All Saints Chapel, University of the South, with Todd Wilson (his former teacher). Delcamp and Wilson rendered the grand finale: the Clarence Dickinson/Charlotte Lockwood transcription of Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyries, showcasing Kwan’s talent on the cymbals!

The Reverend Lowry’s daily lectures and homilies bore titles he integrated into the conference week: “The Changing Role of Religion and Spirituality in the World Today,” “Liturgy and Music in a Hyper-Media Age,” and “Clergy and Church Musicians: Why is it so hard to work together in harmony?”

Masterclasses for organists and choral conductors offered valuable feedback from Kwan, Simpson, and Delcamp. Michael Petrosh, David von Behren, Jared Fenske, Matt Endahl, Paul Miller, and Stephen White performed on the Casavants in All Saints Chapel and in the Chapel of the Apostles.

Simpson endeared himself to choristers by his collegial approach in rehearsal, teaching service repertoire in an organized and timely manner. Evensong featured Preces and Responses by Thomas Ebdon, canticles by Peter Ashton, Anglican chant by T. A. Walmisley (prayerfully and pristinely rendered under Simpson’s training). The eight-part anthem, Pilgrim’s Hymn by Stephen Paulus, was the choral challenge of the week, allowing the 120 voices an opportunity to experience beautiful tone clusters sung well. Kwan led off with a voluntary by Paulus—A Refined Reflection from Baronian Suite and concluded the service with Stanford’s Postlude in D Minor, op. 105. The hymn text “Christ Is Made the Sure Foundation” was sung to the tune Lowry, composed by McNeil Robinson in honor of this year’s chaplain, a friend and colleague of the recently deceased musician.

On Sunday, the musical and spiritual high point was reached during the Eucharist in All Saints Chapel. Kwan’s prelude (Master Tallis’s Testament by Howells) and postlude (Recessional by William Mathias) beautifully bookended the liturgy. Craig Phillips’s 2006 Festival Eucharist, O Sacrum Convivium by Peter Mathews, and Let This Mind Be In You by Lee Hoiby elicited riveting sounds from the ensemble, paired with Kwan’s electrifying accompaniment on the last-named anthem.

This conference has reached an age rarely attained by similar associations. Reasons for this longevity include a tested format not averse to change, reflecting the needs of attendees, and a thoughtful balance between musical skills and spiritual nourishment, with worship that blends these two. But at its root is the sense of ‘family’ felt by many who return every July to its ‘home’—the Dubose Conference Center. Since 1951, this quiet, historic setting has welcomed thousands to the Sewanee Church Music Conference.

In 2016, Dale Adelmann and Tom Trenney will be music faculty, and the Reverend Erika Takacs will serve as chaplain. For more details: www.sewaneeconference.org.

American Guild of Organists National Convention 2012: Confessions of a Puritan

Kudos to the AGO planning committees and everyone involved for balanced programming with plenty to enjoy for both organ music lovers and connoisseurs

Robert August
Default

During my doctoral studies at Boston’s New England Conservatory, I had the privilege of serving as organ scholar and assistant university organist and choirmaster at Harvard University’s Memorial Church. I fell in love with the city and thoroughly enjoyed its many riches. Balancing work and academics was trying, though, and I often felt like an underachiever, never having enough time to do everything as well as I would have liked to do. Simply put, I was busy, and I could not possibly imagine a busier life. It was around that time that one of my teachers said: “If you think you are busy now . . . just wait till you get out of school.” 

Fast forward to the spring of 2012. Just as my teacher had predicted, life was more than busy, and I was tired from a hectic year, looking forward for things to slow down during the summer. When the time came to register for the 2012 AGO National Convention in Nashville I was reluctant to do so. Just thinking of all the masterclasses, services, and concerts made me tired, wanting to curl up in a ball and go to sleep. To make matters worse, the convention’s programming included a number of Greatest Hits concerts—some performed on electronic organs! 

Indeed, the puritan in me rebelled against all this nonsense. But reminding myself of the very successful 2010 national convention softened my spirit, so I went ahead and registered—reluctantly though—for this year’s convention. Because of scheduling conflicts I was unable to attend the weekend programming, but I hit the ground running on Monday, July 2. With my carry-on still in hand I arrived at the Nashville Convention Center to hear Jayne Latva’s presentation on Schumann’s Six Fugues on B-A-C-H, Op. 60. Dr. Latva’s lecture was refreshing and inspiring. She introduced several new and insightful angles on the matter, and her piano background was instrumental in connecting some missing dots regarding Schumann as composer, organist, and pianist. At the conclusion of this presentation I felt recharged; I was glad to be at the convention and was eagerly anticipating the upcoming week. To say that my expectations were met would be an understatement. 

Several of Nashville’s own were featured at a collaborative pre-convention recital at beautiful West End United Methodist Church. Wilma Jensen played Vierne’s Étoile du Soir, Tournemire’s Choral-Improvisation on “Victimae paschali,” Fugue by Honegger, and Thierry Escaich’s Five Versets on “Victimae paschali.” Conductor Don Marler, Andrew Risinger (Grand Orgue), Gregg Bunn (Petit Orgue), and the West End United Methodist Church Chancel Choir performed Vierne’s Messe Solennelle and Widor’s Messe à deux choeurs et deux orgues—a program well suited for the 1983 V/136 Möller organ.

Matthew Dirst presented a masterclass on performance issues in the Baroque repertoire. Dirst used several samples of Handel and Monteverdi scores to demonstrate solutions to commonly encountered problems in this music. This kind of problem solving was very interesting and served as a medium towards critical thinking in future performance issues. 

Spanish organist Raúl Prieto Ramírez played with great flair at St. Henry Catholic Church. The program included Saint-Saëns’ Danse Macabre and Liszt’s Mephisto Waltz, sandwiched by Bach’s Prelude and Fugue in G Major, BWV 541, and Guilmant’s Sonata No. 1 in D Major, Op. 42. Mr. Ramirez’s positive, energetic style was quite infectious and his arrangement of Liszt’s Mephisto Waltz was very well received. 

Cherry Rhodes’s recital at Nashville First Baptist Church included the American premiere of Yuankai Bao’s Young Girl Carrying Water on a Shoulder Pole. Originally written for piano in 1963, Bao arranged the piece for strings, added an allegro section, and included it as a movement in his China Sight and Sounds Orchestral Suite. The work was transcribed by organist Weicheng Zhao, a former composition student with Bao, and currently an organ student with Cherry Rhodes.

A special feature of this year’s convention was the Choir of Trinity College, Cambridge, conducted (with a pencil) by Stephen Layton. The choir—its appearance made possible through a generous gift by Peter and Lois Fyfe—presented an exquisite program with impeccable precision and clarity. The first set of anthems (Arvo Pärt’s Bogoróditse Djévo and John Tavener’s Mother of God, here I stand) was performed without conductor (!), and one could hear a pin drop in the capacity-filled sanctuary. Next was a chilling rendition of Robert Parsons’ Ave Maria, with its unsurpassed, elongated Amen. It was amazing to see how the choir handled a long, taxing program, without the slightest sign of fatigue. 

Sophie-Véronique Cauchefer-Choplin played a recital in the beautiful new sanctuary of Covenant Presbyterian Church, with its stunning 2009 Fisk organ. Her program included a variety of well-known pieces, including toccatas by Renaud and Bélier, Franck’s Choral No. 3, and, as expected, an improvisation on a given theme. Later that week she presented an improvisation workshop, during which she used a simple melody to demonstrate how to expound on melodic lines and rhythmic cells while exploring modes and tonal centers. 

While his French counterpart provided insight in the exploration of modes etc., Tom Trenney took a practical approach to hymn improvisation. He skillfully demonstrated how hymn motifs can be used in hymn improvisation. Improvisation masterclasses can at times be intimidating, to say the least. Kudos to Tom Trenney for his personable approach and his ability to break the music down into very practical building blocks. Trenney played a nicely varied program at beautiful West End United Methodist Church, which featured, among other works, Ives’s Variations on ‘America’, Alain’s Deuxième Fantaisie, Bach’s Passacaglia, and several improvisations, including an improvisation on Ora Labora, offered in memory of Dr. Gerre Hancock (1934–2012). 

George Stauffer, general editor of the Leupold edition of the complete organ works of J. S. Bach, lectured about performance issues in Bach’s organ works. His presentation complemented his earlier masterclass (co-presented with Wayne Leupold), which dealt with editorial problems in J. S. Bach’s organ works. Discrepancies in surviving texts pose numerous problems, and both presenters explained the how-and-why process of their editorial efforts. The combined efforts of the research team resulted in more than interesting findings and performance possibilities, as is evident in the new Leupold Bach editions. 

Leo H. Davis, Jr. offered a glimpse into the realm of lesser-known organ repertoire: organ music by composers of African descent (including but not limited to African-American composers). Davis negated the general misconception that most African organ music is based on the Negro spiritual, and through various samples introduced a wealth of organ repertoire that remains virtually unknown. His extensive illustrations included compositions based on spirituals, plainchant, original themes, Protestant hymnody, German chorales, music from the Jewish liturgical tradition, and African-tribal tunes, as well as civil rights themes.

Vance and Peggy Wolverton took a similar approach in their presentation of Baltic organ music. Vance Wolverton discussed the works of chiefly unknown composers, while his wife accompanied his remarks with excerpts of Baltic organ literature. With the possible exception of Estonian Arvo Pärt, the majority of Baltic composers remains unknown, primarily as a result of more than 50 years of Soviet occupation. 

Organized Rhythm blew the crowd away with their rendition of Gustav Holst’s The Planets. Organist Clive Driskill-Smith and percussionist Joseph Gramley treated the audience to a shortened version, which included the Mars, Venus, and Jupiter movements, with an added Pluto, newly composed by Stephen Eddins. Ironically, Holst disliked shortened versions of this work, especially ones ending with the jolly Jupiter1. Nobody except for Gustav seemed to mind, though. The duo ended their program with a performance of Saint-Saëns’ Carnival of the Animals, interspersed with short, witty poems by Ogden Nash. This program was incredibly appealing and can serve as a vehicle to pique youngsters’ interest in the organ and classical music—highly recommended! 

The Thursday afternoon program at Belmont University Hall started with two new choral works, sung by the Nashville Chamber Singers. First we heard Alan Smith’s There Is a Flow’r (AGO/ECS Publishing Award in Choral Composition), followed by Rosephanye Powell’s multi-movement work The Cry of Jeremiah (commissioned for the 2012 convention). After a brief pause the recital proceeded with Matthew Dirst, harpsichord; Colin St. Martin, traverso; and Mary Springfels, viola da gamba. The trio played a nice variety of works by François Couperin, Jean-Marie Leclair, C.P.E. Bach (harpsichord solo), and J.S. Bach.

Thomas Trotter’s appearance was made possible through a generous gift by Marianne Webb, Professor of Music and Distinguished University Organist at Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. As stated in the program, “Miss Webb’s endowment, established in perpetuity, will present world-renowned concert organists in recital during the biennial National Conventions of the American Guild of Organists.” The diverse program perfectly suited the Schoenstein organ at the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, and Thomas Trotter—Birmingham City Organist (U.K.), among other things—was right at home at the console of this orchestral instrument. Handel’s Organ Concerto Op. 4 No. 2 sounded surprisingly well on the Schoenstein, and Schumann would have been very pleased with the performance of two of his Canonic Studies. The audience was clearly amazed at Trotter’s technical and musical abilities and the lengthy standing ovation at the conclusion of the program (Rossini’s William Tell Overture) was more than deserved. 

Friday evening’s program featured organists Nathan Laube and Todd Wilson in a spectacular program with the Nashville Symphony Orchestra. This concert was made possible through the generous gifts of Murray and Hazel Somerville, and Hank Woerner. The program included Brahms’s Academic Festival Overture, Mendelssohn’s Variations Sérieuses (transcribed by N. Laube), Dvorák’s Carnival Overture, and Wagner’s Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg. In addition, the audience was treated to organ concertos by two living composers: Puerto Rican-born composer Roberto Sierra’s Organ Concerto, which was commissioned for the 2012 convention, and Stephen Paulus’s Grand Organ Concerto. Since the majority of organs are found in houses of worship, these works have the ability to reach a crowd that might ordinarily not be exposed to organ music on a regular basis. Indeed a great outreach opportunity for the AGO!

And then there was Hector Olivera. What can I say? I have to admit that I was reluctant to go hear Mr. Olivera’s recital. All these transcriptions on electronic organs—how could it possibly be any good? How ironic that a pipe organ builder encouraged me to go. Well, the whole show was electrifying (no pun intended). Mr. Olivera, or Hector, is ever as much a showman as an organist. Here we were in the large, non-resonant hotel ballroom, listening to transcriptions played on an electronic organ. Yet, somehow it didn’t matter. It was exhilarating, witty—fun! Hector’s ability to combine technique, musicality, and personality simply brought the house down, and he surely gained numerous fans, including yours truly. 

All in all, Nashville had much more to offer than I had expected. In addition to the many fine restaurants there was a plethora of exciting live performances in the many clubs and bars for those who needed a break from pedals and pipes. The many worship services were uplifting, combining standard choral repertoire with some stellar new compositions. A sincere thank you to the many contributors, who through their financial gifts enabled the many fabulous performances. And kudos to the AGO planning committees and everyone involved for balanced programming with plenty to enjoy for both organ music lovers and connoisseurs. Congratulations on a wonderful convention. Goodbye Nashville and hello Boston. I will see you in 2014!

 

Notes

1. Imogen Holst, A Thematic Catalogue of Gustav Holst’s Music (London: Faber and Faber, 1974), p. 73.

 

 

 

United Church of Christ Musicians Association Conference July 12–15, 2015

Jo Deen Blaine Davis
Default

The United Church of Christ Musicians Association presented its tenth national conference at Elmhurst College (a UCC four-year college) in Elmhurst, Illinois, on July 12–15, 2015. The conference provided choral concerts, an organ recital, a handbell concert, creative worship services, workshops, exhibits, and time for conversation with colleagues. There was a good representation of age groups, a balance of women and men for the conference choir, and attendees from many denominations, although most registrants serve UCC churches. This conference reached many types of musicians: the experienced choir director and/or organist, the beginner keyboardist, the handbell novice, the beginner children’s choir director, and the choir tour director. 

The conference, whose theme was “Crossroads: Connecting Music, Faith, Worship, and Community,” emphasized inspiration, collaboration, and fellowship when musicians are in community with one another, and it identified unique gifts that can be woven into a tapestry of beauty and grace. Chaired by Michele Hecht, director of music at First Congregational Church in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, the local committee comprised members who serve UCC churches in Illinois: Michael Surratt, First Church, Oak Park; Larry Dieffenbach, The Little Home Church from the Wayside, Wayne; Megan Murray, The Congregational Church, Arlington Heights; Ann Tucker, First Congregational Church of Crystal Lake; and Jim Winfield, Union Church of Hinsdale. Also on the committee were Jackie McCarthy and Sharon Wussow, both of Glen Ellyn. 

Sunday, July 12

The conference began with an informal choral reading session provided by UCCMA board members Diana Cohen (Plymouth, Massachusetts), Flora Major (Norwalk, Connecticut), Jim Larrabee (Omaha, Nebraska), and Peter Stickney (Newfield, Maine). The varied repertoire included anthems for the entire church year and works for choirs ranging from the very small to large. After dinner, the Chicago Community Chorus, directed by Keith Hampton, presented a concert. It began with classical works, but the chorus’s specialties were gospel and spiritual works. By the close of the concert, the audience was standing and joining in with their energy and joyful singing. 

The opening worship service followed with a variety of music. Particularly interesting was Fiat Lux by Jeffrey A. Haeger, associate for music ministry at First Congregational Church of Glen Ellyn. This anthem was sung by a massed choir from Congregational United Church of Christ of Arlington Heights, First Congregational Church of Crystal Lake, First Congregational Church of Glen Ellyn, the Little Home Church by the Wayside, and the Union Church of Hinsdale, all in the Chicago area. Michele Hecht directed. The sermon was “The Mantel of the Prophetic,” given by Rev. JoAnne M. Terrell, associate professor of ethics, theology, and the arts at Chicago Theological Seminary. A champagne reception made for a great ending to the day.

 

Monday through Wednesday, July 13–15

Each morning, Rev. H. Scott Matheney, conference chaplain and Elmhurst College’s chaplain and dean of religious life, offered short and contemplative matins. The Monday and Tuesday morning plenary sessions were given by the keynote speaker, Rev. John H. Thomas, visiting professor in church ministries at Chicago Theological Seminary. Rev. Thomas has served in several UCC congregations and was also the general minister and president of the United Church of Christ. His lectures, “Building Church Community, Our Song as Call and Celebration” and “Building Human Community, Our Song as Resistance and Imagination,” were very well received. 

Wednesday morning’s plenary session was a pastor/musician panel with Rev. Thomas, Rev. Scott Oberle, senior minister at First Congregational United Church of Christ in Downers Grove, and Jim Molina, First Congregational’s minister of music and media. This panel discussed the importance of communication between musician and minister and invited responses from the audience. This proved very enlightening and seemed too short for the topic. 

Conference choir rehearsals filled the mornings. The conference choir of over 80 people was directed by Jeffrey Hunt, director of St. Charles Singers, faculty member at Elgin Community College, and director of music at Baker Memorial United Methodist Church. Hunt’s knowledge of the voice and his conducting skills were sublime. The conference handbell choir was directed by David Weck, founder of the Agape Ringers and music editor for Hope Publishing Company. Each afternoon workshops were offered on choral conducting, early childhood music, developing the young singing voice, the mature adult voice, copyright and Internet solutions, organ masterclasses, organ maintenance, choir touring, handbell techniques, the Alexander Technique, new music, blended worship suggestions, a composer’s forum, and reading sessions. Clearly, there was something for everybody! Many of those mentioned above were conference clinicians, as were Mark Bowman, Jill Burlingame, Dean Christian, Larry Dieffenbach, Emily Ellsworth, David Hecht, Joel Raney, Robin Restrepo, David Schrader, Michael Surratt, Ann Tucker, and Jim Winfield. 

Monday evening’s concert offered contrasts at First Congregational Church of Glen Ellyn. Organist David Schrader showed his command of the instrument with de Grigny’s Veni Creator Spiritus, Franck’s Prelude, Fugue, et Variation, Alain’s Première and Deuxième Fantaisies and Litanies. The Agape Ringers, directed by David Weck, performed Sherman’s Procession of Praise, Elisabeth Judd’s arrangement of Bizet’s Gypsy Song, and Joel Raney’s arrangement of America, the Beautiful. Raney’s arrangement of William Walton’s Coronation March was played by Jane Holstein, organ, Raney at the piano, and the Agape Ringers—an unusual timbre, beautifully done. The evening concluded with a reception hosted by the church.

Tuesday evening was a time to relax. A bus trip to Chicago included an architectural boat tour of the city and/or time at Navy Pier. 

At Wednesday evening’s concert and worship service in Hammerschmidt Chapel, the Chicago Gargoyle Brass and Organ Ensemble thrilled everyone with their expertise and musicality. Selections included Prelude, Elegy, and Scherzo by Carlyle Sharpe, Earthscape by David Marlatt, and Saint-Saëns’ “Maestoso” from Symphony No. 3. Jim Winfield, former music director and organist at First Congregational Church of Western Springs and First Congregational United Church of Christ in Elmhurst, joined the ensemble and played the work arranged by Craig Garner. 

The concluding service of the conference began with beautiful hymn singing, with scores of musicians in a wonderful room singing “God is Here!(Abbott’s Leigh) and “Rejoice, Ye Pure in Heart (Vineyard Haven). Anthems included Raney’s “Bless the Lord, O My Soulfor choral and handbell choirs and Winfield’s Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God Almighty, a choral setting that was an adaptation of “Nimrod” from Elgar’s Enigma Variations. Rev. Matheney gave the meditation on “Serving the Lord through Music.” During Holy Communion and Blessing of Hands, Kevin McChesney’s Transformations for Handbell Choir was played. At the service’s conclusion, organist Mark Sudeith played Simon Preston’s Alleluyas. The conference ended on the campus patio with ice
cream sundaes. 

For over twenty years the United Church of Christ has had two musicians’ organizations, the United Church of Christ National Network and United Church of Christ Musicians Association (UCCMA). After serving UCC musicians for many years, offering conferences and workshops, the Network was unable to continue. All Network musicians are invited to unite as one with UCCMA. For more information: www.uccma.org.

Watch for future UCCMA regional workshops and the next national conference at the United Parish Church in Brookline (Boston), Massachusetts, July 9–12, 2017.

Sacred Music Intensive Workshop, Jacobs School of Music, Indiana University, Bloomington

Noel Morse Beck

Noel Morse Beck has spent many years serving as organist and director of children, youth, and adult choirs in Presbyterian, Methodist, and Episcopal churches in the Muscle Shoals area of northwest Alabama. Through this experience, she has learned the inspiration and practical value of continuing education at events such as the Sacred Music Intensive Workshop, in order to develop and maintain excellence in music programs of small-to-medium size congregations. She had the good fortune of spending a year studying privately with Janette Fishell. Currently, Noel Beck is organist and choir director at Trinity Episcopal Church in Florence, Alabama.

Default

Church musicians representing all regions of the United States, the Bahamas, and Canada gathered on the campus of Indiana University in Bloomington for this year’s Sacred Music Intensive Workshop, June 5–9. There were more than 40 participants; the number was limited by design, so that each could receive personal attention, and all could develop camaraderie through learning and sharing ideas in both planned and informal settings. Some attendees had participated in prior years’ workshops; others experienced this inspiring and delightful event for the first time. All were attracted by the opportunity to study with the outstanding organ and choral faculty of the Jacobs School of Music.

This annual event was created by Janette Fishell, organ department chair, and Walter Huff, choral arts professor, both seasoned church musicians. Participants were allowed to design their own schedules throughout the week, choosing from lessons and lectures pertaining to organ, choral music, voice, and carillon. 

Experienced organists were given the opportunity to have two or more private lessons with Janette Fishell, Christopher Young, and Marilyn Keiser. Beginning organists studied with doctoral student Yukima Tatsuta. All of these master teachers were most generous with their time, making this feature a very popular part of the week’s activities. Available for practice and lessons were the C. B. Fisk, Inc., organs in Auer Hall and Alumni Hall, as well as numerous organs in the practice rooms of the Music Building. 

There was an outstanding opening concert, presented by the organ faculty. The program included works by Johann Sebastian Bach, William Albright, Dan Locklair, Louis Vierne, Gabriel Pierné, Henri Mulet, Benjamin Britten, Hisaishi/Wasaki, and César Franck. 

For those whose special interest was choral music, there were daily presentations by Walter Huff organized around the central theme: “Are we creating the ideal rehearsal/performance environment for our choristers?” Lecture and discussion sessions covered such topics as getting started rehearsing a new anthem; creating the optimum sound (pitch, tone, vowels); transforming a hymn into an anthem; effective choral warm-ups; implementing the Robert Shaw’s Count-Sing rehearsal technique; preparation of Handel’s Messiah, including the “Hallelujah Chorus.” There were also conducting practicums, a conducting masterclass, and choral reading sessions. Voice classes were offered, taught by IU graduate student Rachel Mikol.

All participants were invited to participate in Huff’s daily two-hour choir rehearsals, culminating in a closing concert on Friday evening. The program included the soaring lines of A Hymn to St. Cecilia, with music by Herbert Howells and text by Ursula Vaughan Williams; Earlene Rentz’s exuberant setting of On Jordan’s Stormy Banks; Stephen Paulus’s intimate The Road Home; a lyrical Jesus Christ, the Apple Tree by K. Lee Scott; Howells’s “Nunc Dimittis” (from the Collegium Regale service); and John Rutter’s Let all mortal flesh keep silence, which begins mysteriously and ends with majestic Alleluias. Participating organists were invited to accompany the anthems and the two congregational hymns. The closing concert also included organ selections performed by several of the week’s attendees, including works by Helmut Walcha, Dan Locklair, Raymond H. Haan, and Jehan Alain. One participant played his own composition. 

The intensive week also included presentations by the organ faculty. Christopher Young offered a lecture/demonstration dealing with styles of registration for the church organist. Janette Fishell, who cleverly titled her presentation “Achilles Heels and All Thumbs? Mastering technical problems and finding musical answers,” invited attendees to bring organ repertoire trouble spots, and demonstrated how to improve technique to solve challenging problems. Marilyn Keiser presented a most useful list of organ repertoire selections appropriate for both service and concert playing. There was also an informative presentation about understanding and maintaining the health of the pipe organ, presented by Patrick Fischer, Jacobs School of Music organ curator. 

Amy Hamburg Mead offered participants the opportunity to learn to play the school carillon. At week’s end, participants gave a charming noonday concert of hymn arrangements and other selections played on the carillon, enjoyed in the open air of the school amphitheater and the surrounding area. 

There were daily sessions on topics such as: Body/Mind/Spirit, focusing on maintaining the musician’s inner physical and spiritual health, including yoga practice, led by Beth Lazarus; and spiritual insights, led by Reverend Andy Cort. 

Lois Fyfe Music, of Nashville, Tennessee, provided an excellent “pop-up shop,” including organ music and resources useful to church musicians. The music shop also conducted a most useful anthem reading session.

The university campus provided great natural and architectural beauty. The city of Bloomington offered delectable eateries—from coffee and sandwich shops only a few steps from the music building, to restaurants and fine dining within a short walking distance, featuring farm-to-table, continental, Mid-Eastern, and Asian menus. Participants had a varied choice of housing: college dormitory, local hotels, and inns.

This was truly an excellent way to spend a week of continuing education. Many of those attending plan to make it an annual event.

Sewanee Church Music Conference: July 14–21, 2013

New faculty members, choral reading sessions, fellowship and more at this year's conference

Jane Scharding Smedley
Default

The 63rd annual Sewanee Church Music Conference, directed by Robert Delcamp, president of the board and university organist at the University of the South, welcomed three ‘first-timers’ as music faculty this year: Richard Webster, Maxine Thévenot, and Edmund Connolly. The Reverend Barbara Cawthorne Crafton returned as chaplain, to the great delight of those privileged to hear her in 2011. Webster is director of music and organist at Trinity Church, Copley Square, Boston. Thévenot and Connelly, in addition to their extensive performing and re-cording careers, serve as organist-choir director and assistant organist-choir director, respectively, at the Cathedral of St. John’s in Albuquerque. Reverend Crafton, author, counselor, and spiritual director, has served several churches. She heads the Geranium Farm, an institute for the promotion of spiritual growth.

The scope of the conference allows for many essentials: learning, worship, fellowship, spiritual enrichment, and the proverbial “re-charging of batteries.” This year’s gathering accomplished all this and more. In the first rehearsal, Webster took the 138 singers through all the music to give them a taste of what was in store, while getting acquainted with the ensemble at his disposal.

On Tuesday evening, the annual Gerre Hancock Concert was presented by Thévenot and Connolly in All Saints Chapel. Thévenot played Marcel Dupré’s Placare Christe Servulis from Le Tombeau de Titelouze, op. 38, Sweelinck’s variations on Ballo del Granduca, and selections by Bruhns, Hampton, Messiaen, McNeil Robinson (Homage to Messiaen), and Phillip Moore. The inclusion of Gerre Hancock’s Air was most fitting, as many of those present personally knew of his long-time relationship with the conference. Thévenot showed sensitive accompanying skills on three songs by Hugo Wolf offered by Connolly; Vaughan Williams’s beloved “The Call” was a perfect match for his expressive baritone voice. Thévenot concluded with Vierne’s Carillon—the pulse of the piece could have set the carillon in the Shapard Tower above tolling.  

Choral reading sessions were spaced throughout the week: Richard Webster, Alvin Blount, and Peggy Lyden shared proven winners from their own church programs, with anthem packets provided by Elizabeth Smith of Lois Fyfe Music. A highlight of the conference is the presence of this store on campus all week for browsing, professional advice, and conviviality of shoppers. Mark Schweizer of St. James Press previewed its latest collection, and Maxine Thévenot presented organ music from her native Canada.

Long-time attendee Richard Moore offered two workshops on the use of computer programs especially geared towards the work of church musicians. To judge from the overflow crowd he drew, this was obviously filling a need for many.

The popular and invaluable “Episcopal Basics” class offered by School of Theology faculty member Susan Rupert now includes “Singing the Altar Book” and “Liturgical Planning”—pertinent topics whether one is serving a small parish or a cathedral.

While the primary focus of the music faculty is the rehearsal and performance of literature at the two main liturgies, each offered sessions on various topics. Thévenot gave a thorough and excellent overview of hymn-playing skills, demonstrating such with attendees Bill Bane, Parks Greene, and Richard Mangiagli. In her organ masterclass, coordinated by Alvin Blount, players Tim Hall, Bill Bane, Jeffrey Ford, and Stanley Workman, Jr. were each allotted 30 minutes; this allowed in-depth observations by the clinician that could be beneficial to all. She shared background tidbits to illustrate reasons for approaching a piece in a certain way. 

Edmund Connolly’s well-received classes on vocal techniques were further integrated into the group rehearsals: at Webster’s invitation, Connelly oversaw warm-ups and made suggestions for dealing with specific issues throughout the week. Such displays of teamwork were noted positively by colleagues.

Choristers from St. George’s Episcopal Church in Nashville assisted Webster in his presentation entitled “The Joy of Doing REAL Music with Children.” The topic of composing and arranging drew about 35 who read through submissions conducted by attendees Mark Janus, Stephen Schalchin, Brennan Szafron, Stephen Casurella, and Kirby Colson. Webster facilitated feedback from the observers, with each composer receiving positive and insightful suggestions on their work. A workshop on choral conducting offered Eric Vinciguerra, Jennifer Stammers, Susan Yoe, and Mark Janus (all expertly accompanied by Dory Light) the chance to show their interpretation of Howells’s Like As the Hart. In addition to Webster’s comments, others made positive and useful observations, further showcasing the collegial aspect of this conference.  

Each year one looks to bring back some pearls of wisdom to share with one’s choir: a vocal warm-up, a conducting gesture for the clean release of a final ‘s,’ a catchy phrase to drive home a point—even a good joke! Webster’s rehearsals contained many such gems, generously and respectfully shared. Later in the week, on a more personal note, he told his story of being present at the Boston Marathon when the bombings occurred, only two months previously (see The Diapason, October 2013, pp. 20–21).

The Reverend Barbara Crafton was back as chaplain—truly by popular demand! Besides deeply spiritual insights, her talents in theater and music, among others, showed forth in her profound messages—choices of words, their delivery, timing, pacing, punctuated with delightful humor. Daily morning homilies were scripture-based, with everyday examples woven throughout. Glimpses of personal stories and musical knowledge obviously resonated with her listeners, including her image of the choir as a model for the world in its blend, ensemble, unity, harmony. In addition to using her voice as a preacher, she very capably served as Precentor at Evensong. Her presence at daily choral rehearsals was further evidence of her appreciation of the conference’s focus on liturgy. It was notable that, unlike some years, attendance at morning Mass did not decrease as the week went on! The titles of her four lectures alone enticed listeners to come and hear: The Music of the Spheres; A Tree Falls in the Forest; Nude Descending Staircase; The Also-Life.

The Missa Dorica by Webster was sung at daily Eucharists, with the Durham Mass by Daniel Gawthrop used once. Organ selections provided by Dr. Thévenot on the Rodgers organ in the small Dubose Chapel ranged from Buxtehude and Bach to Boëllmann, Langlais, and Messiaen. 

This year’s commissioned organ work—Variations on ‘Ubi Caritas’ by French-Canadian composer Denis Bédard—served as the prelude one morning, with the chant later sung at the Offertory. The work consists of three statements of the chant in contrasting styles and lasts six minutes—a useful and accessible setting. Thévenot also played it during Communion at the Sunday Eucharist in All Saints Chapel.

A carillon concert by John Bordley and the Reverend Raymond Gotko beckoned worshipers to Friday’s Evensong. Both retired college professors, each took up the field of campanology as a second career in recent years. 

Canticles by Edwardian composer Charles Wood (Collegium Regale in F) were complemented by Webster’s Anglican chant for Psalm 85 and his Preces and Responses in Mixolydian Mode (nicknamed “Web in Mix” by his own singers). The musical centerpiece of the liturgy was S. S. Wesley’s major work Ascribe Unto the Lord, an amalgamation of Psalm 96 and 115 written in 1851. Webster crafted descants for Bromley and St. Clement. His drilling of the singers on diction, precise rhythms, and tuning was rewarded. Thévenot concluded the service with Victor Togni’s exuberant Alleluia! (Five Liturgical Improvisations).

The use of modal tonality in Webster’s Missa Dorica brings a fresh element to music written with a congregation also in mind. As done in many places this year, Benjamin Britten’s centenary was acknowledged; his Festival Te Deum served as the Offertory anthem. Jennifer Stammers’s soprano soared over the chorus into one of the most beautiful endings in modern choral repertoire. George Herbert’s text “The Call” was heard this time in a sweet and accessible SATB setting by Harold Friedell. This further showed the range of difficulty presented each year in choral choices. Some, like the Britten, provide a venue for clinicians to teach techniques, while letting singers experience repertoire most could not otherwise perform. John Whitmer’s professional recordings of the liturgies not only serve archival purposes, but allow the musical experiences shared by the attendees to be heard by a much wider audience.

Special note is made of the various tasks—many behind the scenes—shared by attendees: John Hobbs and the Reverend Thomas Williams at the altar, Frolic producer Jennifer Stammers, among others. Bill Bane now joins the board of directors who oversee the planning and execution of the conference. Kim Terry Agee, director of the Dubose Center, announced her retirement after 25 years. Her presence will be greatly missed.

Faculty for the 2014 conference (July 14–20) will be Todd Wilson and Peter Conte, with Bishop J. Neil Alexander as chaplain. It was announced that Todd Wilson will become the conference director beginning in 2015, the 65th anniversary of the conference. Information can be found at www.sewaneeconference.org. 

2012 East Texas Pipe Organ Festival: Kilgore, Longview, and Nacogdoches, Texas

Neal Campbell

Neal Campbell has been director of music and organist of St. Luke’s Parish, Darien, Connecticut, since 2006. Prior to that he held church, synagogue, and college positions in Washington, Philadelphia, New York, New Jersey, and Virginia. Growing up in Washington as a student of William Watkins, he first met Roy Perry in 1972 when he was a finalist in the AGO National Organ Playing Competition in Dallas. He continued his association with Perry during the years Perry presided over the work at Washington National Cathedral and he played and recorded on the Kilgore organ several times. For a fuller account of the festival, including complete programs and stoplists, the reader is referred to Neal’s blog at http://nealfcampbell.wordpress.com.

Files
Default

Background

For the second time in as many years, I attended the East Texas Pipe Organ Festival held November 12–15, 2012, honoring the life and work of Roy Perry (1906–1978), featuring four organs built by Aeolian-Skinner that Perry designed and finished. The rationale for such an event is best summed up in Roy Perry’s own words in a brochure he wrote in 1952, shortly after the organs in First Presbyterian Church and St. Luke’s Methodist Church in Kilgore, and First Baptist Church in Longview were built:

 

A decade and a half ago the tonal designs of G. Donald Harrison were considered revolutionary, mostly because of the considerable publicity given a few of his organs built in the so-called Baroque style. At the present time, when tastes range all the way from extreme Romanticism . . . to the bleak austerities of the Baroque, his tonal ideas represent a temperate middle-of-the-road. The flexibility of his thinking is well demonstrated in the three organs considered in this booklet. None of these organs is extreme in any direction. They are alike only by way of family resemblance, but each in its way is a work of art. They provide a generous education in contemporary organ building as interpreted by this great artist, and are happily concentrated in a small geographical area.

 

It is clear from his own words that Roy considered G. Donald Harrison, and not himself, to be the designer of these organs. This raises the question: did Perry design these (or any other) A-S organs? Roy himself would have been the first to say it was GDH, whom he revered during their association. But it is also true that Roy had a lot of design control over the organs he sold for A-S and that GDH relied heavily on Perry’s knowledge in setting parameters. In the last fifteen years of A-S’s existence following Harrison’s death, Roy’s influence over “his” organs was even greater, sometimes even surreptitiously so!

However, the real signature that manifests itself in each of Roy Perry’s organs is the result of the finishing process in which he and the Williams family of technicians brought the factory-completed instruments to their full flower through installing and tonal finishing on site. (See Lorenz Maycher, “The Williams Family of New Orleans: Installing and Maintaining Aeolian-Skinner Organs,” The Diapason, May 2006.) This, multiplied over the span of his 20-plus-year career with A-S, puts a musical imprimatur on Roy’s organs that is hard to miss, although difficult to quantify by means of scientific measurement. Writing to Henry Willis III in 1955, Donald Harrison says that Roy 

 

. . . has supervised, with the aid of Jack Williams [sometimes known as T. J.] and his son [Jim or J. C.], most of our important installations in Texas. He is an accomplished organist and has a wonderful ear. He is a top notch finisher and during my periodic visits to Texas I cannot remember a time when I have had to suggest that something might have been done a little differently. He just has that kind of organ sense.

 

Festival itinerary

Unlike AGO conventions and denominational conferences with which I personally have been involved, these festivals were my first experiences with a topic-specific conference, and the rewards for those who love these organs were enormous. All of the playing was memorable and the organs were in excellent condition, which made for an exhilarating week. [For an account of last year’s festival, readers are referred to Michael Fox’s review in the February 2012 issue of The Diapason.] 

My complete participation was somewhat compromised by having to play services in Connecticut on Sunday morning, so I missed the pre-festival recital by Bradley Welch on Sunday evening in Longview. Further, part of my mission in attending was to provide transportation and note-holding for organ technician Stephen Emery. But I did attend all of the recitals on the four Aeolian-Skinner organs—the three in Kilgore and Longview, and one in Nacogdoches.

In addition to honoring the legacy of Roy Perry, this year the life and career of Alexander Boggs Ryan, noted teacher and performer from Longview, was commemorated in the Wednesday afternoon and evening sessions in Longview when the program departed from its A-S-centric (and even its organ-centric) scheme in an organ recital and a program of harpsichord music in Trinity Episcopal Church, the Ryan family church and organ. There was also a display of memorabilia on the lives of Perry and Ryan at the Gregg County Historical Museum.

Just as no discussion of these organs in their earlier generation would be complete without mention of the Williams family of organ technicians from New Orleans who installed and maintained them, so the work of Steve Emery was central to the success of this festival. For a week prior to the festival itself, and throughout the week of events, Steve gave these four organs the type of careful, knowledgeable, sympathetic attention that has earned him his reputation as an expert on the maintenance and restoration of these types of organs. 

This circuit-rider approach to organ maintenance is not unlike what took place in the years following these organs’ initial installations and on other A-S installations throughout the region: the Williamses—T. J. and Sally, Jim and Nora, or some combination—would arrive on site, check into a motel and stay for a week or ten days once a year at the most! to do a thorough tuning and some planned repairs. Between these annual visits Roy Perry, assisted by locals, would tune and make minor repairs. 

 

Monday

Before the festival officially opened, there was an opportunity in the afternoon to gather in St. Luke’s United Methodist Church in Kilgore for a demonstration of the organ and for some reminiscences and conversation with Charles Callahan and Larry Palmer on composers they had known and with whom they had worked. 

Larry offered remembrances of his several commissions from and first performances of the works of Gerald Near, and Charlie told of his encounters with Leo Sowerby, David McK. Williams, and Thomas Matthews. Of particular interest, however, were his remembrances of visiting with Alexander Schreiner, pupil of Widor and Vierne, whom we know primarily as the organist of the Mormon Tabernacle immediately prior to and following the installation of A-S’s legendary five-manual organ. But Schreiner’s Ph.D. degree was in composition and he composed a lot of music, most of which is unknown. 

The opening recital of the festival was given by Thomas Murray at the First Presbyterian Church in Kilgore on Monday evening and was the second annual recital honoring James Lynn Culp, organist emeritus of the church. At the mid-point in the evening a plaque was shown honoring Culp’s thirty years of service to the church, which will be placed in the chancel along with those to Roy Perry and G. Donald Harrison.

Murray’s use of the organ was the most conservative of the week and the organ obliged completely and effectively in replicating a sound more typical of the house of Skinner in its pre-Harrison days, even in his hefty dose of Bach—the Concerto in C after Ernst, and the Passacaglia. The rest of the program, and particularly the Franck Grande pièce symphonique, was informed by a 19th-century aesthetic. In the scherzo of the Franck, in particular, Professor Murray’s solid and assured technique was put to good use. 

 

Tuesday

The morning recital was again at First Presbyterian Church and could not have been in greater contrast to the use of the organ the previous evening. I had not heard Walt Strony previously, although I had known his name and—erroneously, as it turns out—had assumed he was strictly a theatre organist. What I quickly learned was that his approach, technique, and style defies description in typical academic terms; Strony seems completely at home in concert, theatre, and church settings. It must have been this type of all-commanding wizardry put to solid musical principles that led throngs to hear organists Edwin H. Lemare and Archer Gibson in the early 20th century.

He used the organ in all of its permutations and possibilities. The standard groupings of organ tone and registration were clearly evident, but the imaginative exploitative quest for color and drama was also always apparent, and tastefully so. Walt’s biography in the program booklet says that he has written a book on theatre organ registration, which has become a standard reference work for theatre organists. I wish he would write one for classical organists, too. We have a lot to learn from him, especially those who attempt effective transcriptions. 

Walt’s program was an eclectic mix of original works for organ, transcriptions, paraphrases of classical standards, and some dazzling arrangements of his own. His hymn arrangements made me ache for the pre-praise-band days when the organ was still the instrument of choice in evangelical churches. I particularly liked his inclusion of an arrangement of a Fats Waller piece, reminding us that Waller was an organist and knew Dupré! His performance of Lemare’s transcription of the Liebestod easily stood its own with Virgil Fox’s recording at Wanamaker’s. The Carmen Fantasy and closing Kismet suite on music by Borodin were the organist’s counterpart to a standard 19th- and 20th-century piano virtuoso’s staple—the symphonic paraphrase. In this case Walt struck me as being the Horowitz of the organ! Richard Purvis’s music (Capriccio on the Notes of the Cuckoo, and Thanksgiving from Four Prayers in Tone) captured the essence of the Kilgore organ, which was easily the equal of its slightly older and larger cousin, Grace Cathedral, the organ for which it was conceived. 

I was impressed most of all by the fact that Walt Strony seemed comfortable in stepping aside and letting the organ take center stage in its own right. He did not try to mold it into his preconceived notion, or filter it through any established aesthetic. He didn’t attempt to make it sound like a theatre organ, or a so-called symphonic organ, or a classic organ, although elements of each were clearly present. It was simply the modern American organ playing music—and, in a word Roy Perry liked to use in describing this very organ, it was “deluxe!”

Tuesday afternoon the conference moved to Longview, about a ten-minute drive from Kilgore, and was devoted to a visit to Trinity Episcopal Church in Longview, the Ryan family church. Jeremy Bruns demonstrated the Ryan Family Organ built by Ross King, and Larry Palmer played a harpsichord recital featuring several works—modern works by Near, Martinu, Howells, and arrangements of Duke Ellington—which I was particularly sorry not to hear, but Steve Emery and I had our work cut out for us in tuning the large organ in the First Baptist Church. (See “Harpsichord News,” page 20.)

The history and aesthetic of the First Baptist Church in Longview is the stuff of legend. Its complete history is far too rich to adequately tell here. Suffice it to say that it could only have taken place due to three important and independent factors: the oil-rich location in East Texas, the population boom of the post-World War II era, and the visionary leadership of its pastor from 1945–1971, the Rev. Dr. W. Morris Ford. 

Unlike some so-called “high” ecumenical Baptist churches in the South with impressive music programs and facilities to match—such as Myers Park in Charlotte, or River Road in Richmond (or even Riverside in New York)—First Baptist in Longview was always more or less a typical Southern Baptist church. 

Dr. Ford was a cultured man with an earned doctorate, a love of music, and a fine singing and speaking voice. He sang both as soloist and with the church choir, and it was he who infused the church and its services with an innate sense of classical dignity in all things, which was his authentic response to the calling of the Gospel. This he did without diminishing the essential tenets or manifestations of the Baptist tradition. 

When it was decided to build a new church, the vision was big and bold. The local architect B. F. Crain, who trained at Harvard, and built several notable buildings in the area, was selected and the style of the new church was determined to be “Modern Gothic.” To be frank, there is little that is Gothic about it in the textbook sense, but the scale and towering spaciousness—even its domination of its local surroundings—is obviously inspired by the Gothic aesthetic stripped to its essential unadorned lines. It seats 1,700 and was designed with the organ’s success in mind from the beginning. Taken in this light, the 87-rank organ seems modest, at least on paper. But its tonal impact is comprehensive and monumental. Writing in the aforementioned booklet about the organ when it was new, Roy Perry says:

 

Although this organ leans toward the Classic style, it affords five pairs of strings, a Vox Humana, and percussions, not to mention the wonderful flutes and small reeds. It will do justice to any music, even the humblest; in grandeur it holds its own with the great organs of the world.

The organ seems to have suited the needs and vision of the church perfectly; it was appreciated as an asset to the community and was played by the great organists of the day. Virgil Fox inaugurated the organ and ultimately played there several times, and Catharine Crozier made two notable LP recordings on it, which were iconic in publicizing and documenting the organ when new. 

In the ensuing years recitals and concerts took place with regularity in the yearly round of church services and activities, including a performance in 1962 of the Bach St. John Passion sung by the Robert Shaw Chorale, of which by this time Dr. Ford’s son, David, was a member. The church may not have styled itself as anything but a typical Southern Baptist church, but during Dr. Ford’s tenure as pastor there were many opportunities to be presented with world-class music, in nearly perfect acoustical surroundings, by well-known recitalists and ensembles.

Richard Elliott, organist of the Mormon Tabernacle, played the Alexander Boggs Ryan Memorial Concert at First Baptist Church on Tuesday evening. The recital featured several pieces from various eras and genres, which presented the organ to excellent effect. Ryan had played a recital at the church in 1959 that included three pieces sung by the Rev. Dr. Morris Ford. These three songs (The Heavens Are Telling, op. 48—Beethoven; Panis Angelicus—Franck; and Recessional—Reginald De Koven) were here sung by David Ford, and it was good to hear the organ in its role as accompanist, which was a significant part of the organ’s duty in the normal round of services. 

Richard played the technically demanding program with the ease and confidence audiences are accustomed to from his weekly broadcasts. The concluding work was the familiar Vierne Carillon de Westminster, which was characterized by an intense rhythmic drive throughout, and the gradual building up of dynamic forces, which continued throughout the piece until the very end. Elliott obviously knew how to elicit the most drama out of the organ. Many an organist wouldn’t be able to resist pulling out all the stops too soon; here the various climaxes were gauged and measured, saving something for the final few bars. It reminded me of the old Columbia recording of Alexander Schreiner playing this work at the Tabernacle, and it wouldn’t surprise me if Richard had patterned his scheme on it.

 

Wednesday

The first event of the day was a delightful program by Charles Callahan at St. Luke’s United Methodist Church that consisted of lesser-known gems by Bach, Fiocco, Charles and Samuel Wesley—honoring our host denomination—Peace, Wolstenholme, and three of his own compositions. The program was carefully chosen to highlight the great variety and nuance of this remarkable organ, and were played with charm, elegance, and lyricism. I sat in the back of the full, completely carpeted church and the organ had remarkable presence in the room, which itself was completely devoid of reverberation. This is a testament to the success of the organbuilder’s art.

Before lunch we walked the few blocks to First Presbyterian Church for Ann Frohbieter’s well-chosen program, which, with the exception of Houston composer Michael Horvit’s The Red Sea, consisted of standard, well-known organ repertoire by Reger, Vivaldi-Bach, Ives, Barber, Vierne, and Liszt. But the playing was anything but standard! Each piece was thrillingly played with an obvious affinity and understanding of the inherent resources and beauty of the organ. To me it was the perfect foil to Strony’s program the previous morning, showing the same thrilling approach to the organ via the repertoire. The Red Sea is a programmatic work of eleven sections that depicts the biblical drama of the escape and deliverance of the Israelites from the Egyptians through the Red Sea. 

After lunch we walked back to St. Luke’s for a recital by Christopher Houlihan. The program was heroic for the small organ and room, but consistently well played from memory. Having heard the Bach Passacaglia on Monday evening, it was interesting to hear it again on this organ. Christopher’s interpretation sounded more at home in this setting. Houlihan has made a specialty of the Vierne symphonies, playing all six in marathon sessions around the country. Here he planned three movements (including the Final) from the Sixth, but after practicing at the organ, substituted three movements from the Second, which was a wise move. 

I particularly liked the Bach trio sonata (C major) and his transcription of the slow movement of Debussy’s opus 10 string quartet. Each seemed to capture the chamber-music aspect of the music, which ideally suited this organ and this room. Christopher is certain to have a bright career ahead of him, and it was good to have someone from the younger generation on the festival roster. Incidentally, there were a good number of young people at the festival for individual events, and Joby Bell’s entire studio from Appalachian State University in North Carolina attended the entire week.

Wednesday evening was movie night at First Presbyterian Church as Brett Valliant accompanied the silent classic “The Phantom of the Opera.” Brett’s accompaniment was lyrical and lush and may have been inspired by the theatre organists of the past, but this, like Walt Strony’s program Tuesday morning, was simply the Kilgore organ rising to yet another musical task with satisfying musical results.

 

Thursday

Thursday morning the festival moved to Nacogdoches, where the smallest of the four A-S organs—located in the First Baptist Church—was featured. The worship space here is slightly larger than St. Luke’s in Kilgore and the factors involving the acoustics are much more favorable. The organ is a model of careful voicing, scaling, and finishing, is ideally suited to its surroundings, and is entirely satisfying on its own, in spite of its small size. 

The program began with Scott Davis leading the audience in singing a hymn, with his improvised introduction, an interlude, and concluding stanza. Scott also concluded the program with an extended multi-movement improvisation in the style of his late teacher Gerre Hancock. These—the hymn singing and improvising—were the only nods during the week to the liturgical effectiveness these organs also possess.

The centerpiece of the program was another of Charlie Callahan’s signature programs of interesting, lesser-known works, which were carefully selected and performed to present the organ in its most favorable light—works by Clarence Dickinson, Nathaniel Dett, Joseph Clokey, and Richard Purvis’s Melody in Mauve, a harmonically rich and evocative gem. Charlie also played two recent compositions of his own: Alleluia (an energetic miniature, similar in feel to his more virtuosic Fanfares and Riffs) and Festival Voluntary on “St. Anne” for Horn and Organ, which received its first performance.

Charlie also spoke at some length about Roy Perry and the Williams family, and some of the other Aeolian-Skinner personalities he has known over the years growing up in Boston, particularly Arthur Birchall, for whom as a young man he held notes on tuning and finishing jobs. This was a valuable spoken addition to the otherwise instrumental nature of the week’s events.

Back to Kilgore for the afternoon recital by Christopher Jennings for what was anticipated as a highlight of the week: the complete performance of Clarence Dickinson’s Storm King Symphony at First Presbyterian. We know that Dickinson played individual movements from among the five, but there is no documentation of his (or anyone else’s) ever playing the entire work, and this was one of several times this season when Christopher has played it in its entirety. The program notes told us that the symphony “reflects impressions made on the composer by the varying moods of the stately Storm King mountain, which stands guard over the Highlands of the Hudson” near Dickinson’s home.

It is a pity that in most circles Dickinson’s compositions aren’t taken very seriously today. He wrote so many small works and carol arrangements that are so accessible that the larger forms, which require significant technical prowess, are basically unknown. Taken as a whole, the entire symphony could easily supplant the effect and aura of either the Reubke Sonata or Liszt Ad nos on a recital program.

Christopher’s use of the organ was informed by the early 20th-century organs that Dickinson would have known, but in a commanding and vivid way that did not sound retrospective. The natural power and expressiveness of the organ was entirely satisfying and there was not the impression that he was under-using the organ, even though he elected to leave out most of the upperwork. On occasion he used the famous Trompette-en-Chamade in chorus, Bombarde-wise, and it was very effective. The sound is not as ferocious as it looks, at least out in the church. In fact, it is one of the standard A-S Trompette Harmonique designs mounted horizontally, on reasonable wind pressure, which can in fact function as a chorus reed capping the full ensemble when called upon to do so.

I regretted that I could not attend the second half of the program, consisting of works by New York composers Alec Wyton, Calvin Hampton, and Gerre Hancock, as Steve Emery and I had to get over to Longview to touch up the tuning.

Ken Cowan played the concluding recital at First Baptist Church. In advance publicity on its Facebook page, festival director Lorenz Maycher wrote: “On the questionnaire, where his manager asked what kind of program we’d like, I put HEAVY DUTY. That’s exactly what we got. I love it when that happens!” There’s really not a lot that I can add to that. It was a huge program, played from memory, characterized by effortless technique in the service of the music, and impeccable use of the organ’s vast resources. It was epic and (sorry Virgil Fox) I don’t recall a better organ recital in my life.

When the Kilgore organ was new, one of the first players to present a recital on it was William Watkins, then not 30 years old. He had just won the Young Artist Award of the National Federation of Music Clubs, at the time the most prestigious competition to which any young musician could aspire; it was open to all instrumentalists. Watkins was the first organist to win it, and Roy Perry wisely brought him to play the new organ to a full church. The review in the Kilgore News Herald of February 17, 1950, which Watkins used in his publicity for many years, was written by Roy Perry himself, concluding “This boy is one of the great interpretive artists of the century.” The same can truthfully be said of Ken Cowan in this century. ν

 

 

 

All recent photography is by Bill Leazer and Paul Marchesano.

Current Issue