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Maxine Thevenot Appointed Organist/Choir Director

Maxine Thevenot, ARCCO, has been appointed associate organist/choir director at the Cathedral of the Incarnation, Garden City, New York. She will direct the Schola Cantorum and assist Canon Musician Larry Tremsky with the Cathedral Girls Choir and the Cathedral Choir of Men and Boys.

Ms. Thevenot is currently a DMA scholarship student of McNeil Robinson at the Manhattan School of Music. As part of her fellowship there, she is associate conductor of the Undergraduate Choral program (100+ singers).

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Organist and composer Michel Boulnois died on November 30, 2008, at the age of 101. He was buried at the Villemomble cemetery (near Paris). He was born in Paris on October 31, 1907. When Michel was 11 years old, his father Joseph Boulnois, also an organist and composer, died during the First World War at Chalaines par Vaucouleurs (Meuse). Michel Boulnois studied music at the Paris Conservatory (notably with Noël Gallon, Georges Caussade, Marcel Dupré and Henri Busser) and was awarded a First Prize in Organ in 1937. He also studied composition and harmonic analysis with Nadia Boulanger.
Inspector of Music Education for the City of Paris, he served as titular of the Grand Orgue at Saint-Philippe-du-Roule Church in Paris from 1937 to 1990. His wife, Suzanne Sohet, also taught music harmony at the Cours Normal of the city of Paris and directed the choir at the French Radio. She also wrote several educational methods.
Among his works for organ, Michel Boulnois composed a Symphony in 1944 (published in Paris by Lemoine in 1949), Variations and Fugue on the “Veni Creator” (1974, Orgue et Liturgie), Three Pieces for the Feast of the Blessed Sacrament (1952, published by Schola Cantorum in 1953), a Mass for the Feast of the Annunciation (1959–63, Orgue et Liturgie nos. 48, 52, 57, 62), and an Elegie for violin and organ (1976, Lemoine) as well as several piano pieces (Aria, Lullaby of the Young Negro, Lemoine). He also transcribed Three Pieces by his father for the organ (Fugue, All Saints’ Day, Chorale, Lemoine).
Michel Boulnois remained faithful to the memory of the life and work of his father and deeply admired his teacher Marcel Dupré; at the age of 94, Michel Boulnois so kindly came from Paris to attend my concert at the Rouen Cathedral on March 4, 2001, in homage to organists who gave their lives during the two world wars (I had performed Dupré’s Fugue in G minor, dedicated to his father).
—Carolyn Shuster Fournier
Paris, France

Thomas B. Dunn died October 26 in Bloomington, Indiana. He was 82. Born in Aberdeen, South Dakota, in 1925, and reared in Baltimore, Dunn began as an assistant organist at the Third Lutheran Church in Baltimore at age 11; at age 16 he became organist, later organist-choirmaster, at Episcopal Cathedral of the Incarnation. He studied organ and conducting at the Peabody Conservatory with Charles Courboin, E. Power Biggs, Virgil Fox, Ernest White, Renée Longy, and Ifor Jones. He earned a bachelor’s degree from Johns Hopkins University and a master’s from Harvard, where he studied choral arranging with Archibald Davison and fugue with Walter Piston; he received a Fulbright grant and studied at the Amsterdam Conservatory with Gustav Leonhardt and Anthon van der Horst.
In 1957 Dunn became music director at the Church of the Incarnation in New York City, and in 1959 was appointed conductor of the Cantata Singers, with whom he organized a series of summer concerts in Avery Fisher Hall that later was to become the Mostly Mozart Festival. An influential pioneer during the early music revival in the mid-20th century, Dunn became the artistic director of Boston’s Handel and Haydn Society in 1967, during which time he became chief editor of E. C. Schirmer Music, where he worked to bring the catalog of compositions up to modern editorial standards. He taught at many universities and music schools, including Peabody, Ithaca College, Stanford, Westminster Choir College, Boston University, and Indiana University. His work as a conductor can be heard on the Decca, Deutsche Grammophon, and Sine Qua Non labels. Thomas Dunn is survived by his partner, David Manuel Villanueva, a nephew, and three nieces.

Ruth Milliken, age 86, died October 19 in Wilton, Connecticut. She began piano studies at age three and was a graduate of the Juilliard School in New York City, with degrees in choral conducting. She also studied choral conducting with Nadia Boulanger at the American Conservatory in Fontainebleau, France, and organ with Vernon deTar. Milliken served Wilton Congregational Church from 1960 to 1987, as organist-choir director and later as director of music; there she developed a graded choir program and a choral concert series with orchestra and soloists. She taught organ, piano, voice, and choirs for over 65 years, and served as a substitute organist while in retirement. The first woman to serve on the national executive board of the American Guild of Organists, Milliken was registrar, secretary, and then vice president, and a member of the editorial supervisory board of MUSIC/The AGO-RCCO Magazine. She was also the executive secretary for the World Health Organization mission to the United Nations for many years. The Ruth Milliken Scholarship Fund, a part of the AGO’s New Organist Fund, was established in her honor in 2003 by her students and friends. Ruth Milliken is survived by her brother, Francis, two nieces, and a nephew.

Cees van Oostenbrugge, director of Flentrop Orgelbouw of Zaandam, the Netherlands, died unexpectedly on December 10, 2008. Cees (pronounced “case”) was born in Gouda, the Netherlands, on July 25, 1947. After graduating Technical College, he worked for the organ builder Slooff in nearby Ouderkerk aan de Ijssel for two years, moving on to Flentrop in 1969. He became associate director of the firm in 1989 and in 1998 was appointed its director as successor of Hans Steketee, who in turn had succeeded D. A. Flentrop in 1976.
Under Cees’s leadership, the firm completed projects as diverse as the restoration of the 1511 van Covelens organ in Alkmaar (2000); the reconstruction of the 1875 Cavaillé-Coll organ in Haarlem (2005); and the restoration of the 1762 Bätz organ in The Hague (2007). In 2008 alone, Flentrop built a new organ (II/28) in a Romantic idiom in Foldnes, Norway; moved a typical Neo-Baroque Flentrop (1962, II/9) from Ijmuiden, the Netherlands, to Wellington, New Zealand; and all but completed the first phase—a Rückpositiv with 13 stops—of what would have been Cees’s magnum opus: the restoration/reconstruction of the large organ (IV/58) in the St. Katharinenkirche in Hamburg, Germany. The Hamburg organ will be a reconstruction based on the specification of Mattheson (1720).
Cees played organ, but enjoyed playing the piano more. He played both instruments in church services and was proud of a compliment he earned for his qualities as piano accompanist from a well-known professional singer he had the privilege to play for. He quietly enjoyed smoking his pipe and had a nice, somewhat understated, sense of humor. As director of Flentrop, Cees felt responsible for his employees in a very real way: when business was low for a while, he voluntarily took a 25% salary cut in order to keep things going.
I had the pleasure of working closely with Cees on Flentrop’s refurbishment in 2006 of the 1991 Bedient at Queens College of the City University of New York. All of us at Queens College’s Copland School of Music were much impressed with the remarkable mix of professionalism and friendliness of all the Flentrop employees involved, which was largely attributed to Cees’s leadership style.
A service of thanksgiving took place at Zaandam on December 16. Cees is survived by Francien, his wife of 38 years; their children and grandchildren; and his brother. At Flentrop, Cees is being succeeded by Frits Elshout, who has been with the firm since 1971. Responsible for the firm’s voicing for many years, Frits has been associate director since 1998.
—Jan-Piet Knijff

London Chats #1

Michael McCarthy

Gordon and Barbara Betenbaugh

Gordon and Barbara Betenbaugh are organist/choirmasters at First Presbyterian Church in Lynchburg, Virginia. They have recently returned from a 13-week sabbatical in the UK. They also direct Cantate, the Children's Choir of Central Virginia, and Mrs. Betenbaugh is chapel organist and assistant choral director at Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg.

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Michael McCarthy has recently been appointed director of
music at Washington National Cathedral. We had occasion to speak with him on June
25, 2003, at the London Oratory School where he is currently director of The
Schola of the school, a choir of boys. We attended an 8:00 a.m. rehearsal of
the Beethoven Mass in C and the daily Psalm. Then we had coffee in the lounge
and adjourned to the garden for an interview. We spoke on a variety of topics.

GB: Michael, you said earlier over coffee that you were
going to do a lot of  polyphonic
music when you get to Washington Cathedral.

MM: Yes, I hope it will feature highly in the musical
program. Whilst the composers of the polyphonic era were organists they were in
fact singers first and foremost. They progressed through the choirs to direct,
so they had a distinct understanding of vocal phraseology. I believe that
understanding polyphonic music texturally and structurally is terribly
important to articulating and understanding musical phraseology in general.

GB: What are your plans for the Psalter at Washington
Cathedral?

MM: In Washington the Psalter must do two things. Firstly,
it must reflect the wealth of great chant writing throughout the world, but
secondly and significantly it must reflect the history of the place in which it
has evolved and composers associated with that particular place, either locally
or regionally. The heritage of the cathedral needs to be at the heart of such a
book.

GB: Well, what are your hopes and dreams for Washington?

MM: Well, I don't know. I'm not going on a crusade either
for my own self or for the sake of Washington. I'm just going to do a job and
to do it to the best of my ability. It is easy to want to aspire to be like
other famous cathedral choirs. Whilst ambition is, of course, positive in
nature, it can be damaging. There is much work to do in Washington. Rather than
try necessarily to emulate the great cathedral choirs such as Westminster or
St. Paul's, it is important to identify our own unique strengths and
characteristics and build on those. At the end of the day our central role is
to help enhance the work of the cathedral by uplifting prayer.

GB: The crux of good choir training is first of all
knowledge of the voice. I think it's important to note that they were wise
enough to get a vocal culturist instead of just an organist that was a skilled
trainer.

MM: Yes, I think that the heart of good choral singing is
good choral technique. I really believe that my strength in this post will be
an understanding of essential technique. There are a lot of services to get
through and if the children are having vocal trouble because they haven't been
taught how to use the instrument it slows things down. If you can get to grass
roots and teach them about vocal production, then they will have some grasp
about how they can fix their own technical questions. It will speed the process
through, you'll get more music done and to a higher level.

BB: Will you do girls choirs as well?

MM: Yes, I'm there to do all the choral music basically.

GB: Several times during my time at Washington Cathedral as
a Fellow in music during Evensong with just the boys singing, there were a couple
of "train wrecks." Things didn't go too well. However, it would be
fixed the next time around.

MM: I think you have to expect that if you're going to be
the train driver. Occasionally the train will come off the rails and that will
be the case whatever. It happens even with the best choirs. There is no
foolproof way of avoiding this. However, by investing heavily in the
choristers' musical and vocal education you can reduce the level of risk.

BB: What system does Washington Cathedral have in place for
teaching the probationers?

MM: The probationers will train for about two years. Part of
their weekly routine would be to attend Evensong. They will also be given a
fairly intensive course in music theory and sight-reading as well as vocal
instruction. Gradually they will come up to speed at which point that up so
that they can slipstream into the main choir.

GB: Jim Litton, the "Man for All Seasons," interim
choirmaster, has certainly made your job much easier.

MM:  I got to
know Jim well over the past six months. He is a real gentleman and a man of
great integrity. In a very short space of time I appear to have acquired a very
good friend. He's retiring now, but I'm not entirely sure he's quite worked out
the definition of retirement yet! I understand he's going to Princeton to look
after one of their choirs for a term.

GB: Four of our choristers from Cantate, the Children's
Choir of Central Virginia, auditioned and were accepted into The American
Boychoir. We've worked with Jim there through the years and have great respect
for his abilities.

MM: He's a real gem!

GB: Tell us about your work singing in professional choirs.

MM: I have sung for about 15 years now with The Sixteen.
They are a choir I have been with for most of my working life. Sadly, that came
to an end two nights ago with a fairly big party following a concert in the
northernmost island of Scotland--that was fun. I'm still recovering! The other
well-known choir would be the Monteverdi Choir. I have been involved with them
for about five or six years now. The last three of them I've been the choir
manager, so I deal with the contract booking of all the singers, and work
closely with John Eliot Gardiner, personnel and a little bit of programming.
Along with that there are a few other London-based choirs, the English Consort,
the Gabrieli Consort, for whom I have done occasional work. One other newish
choir I sing for is the Cardinall's Musick. Andrew Carwood is the director. We
went to school together, were at Christ Church Oxford as lay clerks for a time
together, and are life-long friends. When we were at Christ Church he formed
the choir which is a now well established and well known touring group. I
suppose those are my main singing groups.

BB: Tell us about your film and TV projects with The Schola.

MM: Through my singing contacts I've been able to nurture a
relationship with the film companies for the possibility of bringing the boys
in to record. Harry Potter has been a little bit of our lives, but certainly
Lord of the Rings the last two years has been the bulk of it. It's a very
unpredictable business. The phone rings, and they'll want something next week.
It could be Lord of the Rings, it could be a documentary about driving safely
on the right hand side of the road (laughter). It could be anything really.

BB: Do you normally have to put in extra hours for prep?

MM: Yes, with the film stuff it always comes at short
notice, so you can't just manipulate their time in school. Their education
comes first. With the concert work you'll see it coming up six months ahead,
and you'll just work it in to the schedule. I think it's only fair to try and
make sure that you achieve what you want to achieve in the time you've got. If
you go asking for extra time it needs to be for something really quite important.

GB: Do you have another rehearsal at the oratory besides the
40 minutes?

MM: No, that's it, Monday to Friday, and then an hour before
Saturday mass. There are occasions when we are putting on concerts where we have
to get professional singers in, so we rehearse in class time, but this is only
once or twice a term. The discipline is to use the time as well as you can and
not intrude into any other time. It's important for the choristers to get away
from music as well and to be children. That is really important. Take someone
like James O'Donnell (Westminster Abbey) who's fantastic with the kids. Never
for one moment does he forget that he has 8 to 13-year olds in front of him,
but yet he treats them like adults when they are working. The boys really
respond to it--they respect him and he respects them and the results show.

GB: Do you have anything specific about Washington that
you'd like to share?

MM: Accepting that job has been a huge decision personally
to give up a singing career that has taken me all over the place and provided
some wonderful music making experiences. The job at Washington is huge, but the
potential there goes beyond any other place I have seen. You can work with
children from age four and put together a program at a junior level. At the
other end of the scale you could then have a student choir of 16-18 year olds
who will have had a considerable amount of experience with sight reading, and
vocal pedagogy. I have not seen any other program anywhere that has that sort
of opportunities that are there.

I'm very lucky to be able to have the task of taking this
program forward. If it works it could be spectacularly successful. I hope so,
if not for my sake then for the next person. I'm conscious, as I've been
conscious of both the choirs I've built in the past ten years, that the person
who really cuts their teeth with the choir probably at the end of the day
doesn't get to enjoy the benefits of their labours. It would be my hope that
the next director of music 10 years, 20 years, 100 years down the line will
inherit a strong program and will then be able to take the choir on to another
level. We'll see.

GB: Well put!

MM: In the UK if you drove around every church that had a
professional sung service on Sunday morning in London you'd be counting 20 or
25 cathedrals and churches. This is music sung by essentially professional (or
thereabouts) quality singers. In Washington there isn't really that depth in
numbers so the pool of excellent choral singers is quite small. A wonderful
thing to be able to do in Washington would be to nurture and widen the net of
teenage singers as a way of investing in the future, possibly through advanced
choral courses to prepare potential choral singers.

BB: The RSCM is having their first course for handpicked
older youth at the cathedral this summer.

GB: One of our sopranos (a 17-year old) is in it.

MM: It may be through the RSCM that the cathedral can offer
real support. This is something that I look forward to exploring with Ben
Hutto. In England there is a well-known and well organized choral course for
16-18 year olds at Eton College near Windsor. It does excellent work in
providing a focus for young singers. To be able to invest in the musical
education of the choristers at the cathedral and see them return one day as
professional singers or as professional people for whom singing is a big part
of their lives would be truly rewarding.

GB: We need that really badly. I hope it can happen. It will
be exciting.

MM: For every ten singers that we will have trained I hope
that at least one or two of them might go on to be singers/directors
themselves. As I prepare to start my work at Washington this particular aim has
to be somewhere well down on the list, but it's something to work towards. I
look forward to the challenge very much.

Our interview ended with the burning question of the day as
to whether Michael's 1-year old daughter would speak American English or the
Queen's English. There was much laughter as this point was debated. The results
remain to be seen. We wish Michael well in his new post and welcome him to our
side of "the pond." We feel confident he will be very successful in
Washington. As we left the oratory school, he was on his way to a rehearsal of
the Stravinsky Mass.

Several weeks later, Michael conducted his last service at
the oratory. Gordon sang with the boys plus professional men in the Beethoven
Mass in C. The performance was exciting in that wonderful room. At the
conclusion of Mass the choir parents hosted a going away party for Michael in
the garden.  

Karen McFarlane Retirement

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Karen McFarlane has announced her retirement from twenty-four years of active concert management, effective January 1 of this coming year. Karen McFarlane Artists, Inc., which in 2001 will mark its 80th anniversary, was originally founded by Bernard R. LaBerge. In 1962, his long-time secretary, Lilian Murtagh, took over the agency, which was transferred to Ms. McFarlane shortly before Mrs. Murtagh's death in 1976.

 

Under Karen McFarlane's tenure, the management has continued to represent many of the world's finest concert organists, and in addition has ventured into two new areas. In 1982, Ms. McFarlane became the first concert manager for organists to officially promote the winner of a major national competition, and since that time has volunteered her assistance to 10 NYACOP winners, working with each for a two-year period. She agreed in 1990 to represent the gold medal winners of the Calgary International Organ Festival, and, although she has been invited to represent winners of other major international organ competitions, she has chosen to work with competitions which are based in North America. In 1985 her management began to import select collegiate and cathedral choirs of men and boys from England to North America, starting a trend of tours by English choirs that has continued. During the past fifteen years she has toured the choirs of St. Thomas Church, New York City; Canterbury Cathedral; Salisbury Cathedral; Winchester Cathedral; King's College and St. John's College, Cambridge; Westminster Abbey and Westminster Cathedral, London; and The Cambridge Singers (John Rutter, director).

Karen McFarlane holds a bachelor's degree from Lindenwood College, St. Charles, Missouri, where she studied organ with Franklin Perkins. She also attended Washington University and Union Theological Seminary, and studied with Claire Coci. In 1966 she moved to New York City to assist Frederick Swann at The Riverside Church. She has also served as Director of Music/Organist at St. Mark's Episcopal Church in San Marcos, Texas, and as Director of Music/Organist at Park Avenue Christian Church, New York City. She took over the Lilian Murtagh Concert Management in 1976, has served as Associate Choirmaster at The Church of the Covenant, Cleveland, since 1988, and has been married to Walter Holtkamp, Jr. since 1982. Karen McFarlane is listed in Who's Who in America, Who's Who in Entertainment, the International Who's Who in Music, and The World Who's Who of Women. She received the Avis H. Blewett Award from the St. Louis AGO, and was one of two recipients of the national AGO's first Edward A. Hansen Leadership Award in 2000.

The new president of Karen McFarlane Artists will be John McElliott, who is currently Booking Director for the management. Mr. McElliott grew up in Akron, Ohio, where he was introduced to church music as a boy chorister in the Men and Boys Choir at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, under the direction of Robert Quade. He then went on to study organ and voice at The University of Akron, and later was a choral scholar with the Choir of Winchester Cathedral in England. He has had a great deal of performance experience as a singer with early music groups such as Apollo's Fire, and has a solid knowledge of organ repertoire as well. He is married to organist Yuri Sato.

On September 8 of this year, in recognition of her forthcoming retirement, Karen McFarlane was honored by her entire roster of artists at a musical event held at the Peabody Conservatory of Music in Baltimore. The event, which was secretly planned for more than a year, was a program of "Musical Gifts," in which each artist on the roster either composed or commissioned a piece for organ, solo voice, or choir. A total of 30 new works were composed, of which 26 were performed that evening.

 

Organ:

George Baker: Chorale-prelude, If Thou But Suffer God to Guide Thee

Guy Bovet: Tango de setimo tono (a modo de Habanera)

Petr Eben: Preludium I (commissioned by Susan Landale)

Ann Gebur: Meditation on "Schmücke dich" (commissioned by Clyde Holloway)

William Harvey: Vocalissimus (commissioned by Christopher Young)

Martin Haselböck: Birthday Card with Signature

Marilyn Keiser: Variations on "Good Christian Friends, Rejoice"

Olivier Latry: Arabesque on the Name of Karen McFarlane

William McVicker: Six Variations über una tema de Vincent Youmans (commissioned by David Goode, James O'Donnell, Jane Parker-Smith, Simon Preston, Ann Elise Smoot and Gillian Weir)

Craig Phillips: Tribute—A Lullaby for Organ (commissioned by David Craighead)

Daniel Pinkham: The Salutation of Gabriel (French horn/organ)(commissioned by Joan Lippincott)

Myron Roberts: Fantasy for Organ (shared dedication with Robert Baker)

Daniel Roth: from Livre d'orgue pour le Magnificat

Robert Sirota: Fanfare for Many Members (commissioned by Donald and Phyllis Sutherland)

Frederick Swann: Meditation on "Repton"

Thomas Trotter, arr. from Vivaldi: Alla Rustica

 

Hymns:

Gerre Hancock: A Hymn for Karen (hymn-tune: Karen)

Todd Wilson: He Comes to Us as One Unknown (hymn-tune: Cedar Hill)

 

Solo Voice:

Diane Meredith Belcher: Lutebook Lullaby

Stephen Kennedy: St. Theresa's Bookmark (commissioned by David Higgs)

Thomas Murray: Earth with Her Ten-Thousand Flowers

Anne Wilson: May There Always

       

Choir:

Marie-Claire Alain: Two Early French Noëls for Choir

Stephen Cleobury: Founder's Prayer

David Hill: Sing Lullaby                                                   

Alan Morrison: The Lord Bless You and Keep You

Peter Planyavsky: Choral arrangement of Lasst uns erfreuen

Stephen Tharp: O Sacred Feast

 

In addition, a humorous group sing-along piece entitled "A Ditty for Karen," by Peter Hurford, was performed. John Weaver, who has over the years become the management's "Poet Laureate," read a Special Recitation. Performances of the above new works were by many of the roster organists, Phyllis Bryn-Julson, soprano; John McElliott and David Hoffman, baritone; Larry Williams, French horn; and a choir composed of Peabody voice students. The welcome was given by Robert Sirota, Director of the Peabody Conservatory. A benediction by Victoria Sirota closed the evening. It was the largest number of new works premiered at any event in memory, many of which are being published.

As of January 1, Karen McFarlane Artists will have a new address: 2385 Fenwood Road, Cleveland OH 44118. Toll-free telephone: 866/721-9095; Fax: 216/397-7716; E-mail: [email protected]. The web-site for the management is www.concertorganists.com. Karen McFarlane ([email protected]) will continue, on a part-time basis, to expand performance opportunities for the management's competition winners and young organists, as well as handle the planning for the yearly choir tours. David Hoffman, who has been with the management for many years, will continue as Office Manager.

London Chats #2: Patrick Russill

Gordon and Barbara Betenbaugh

Gordon and Barbara Betenbaugh are organists/choirmasters at First Presbyterian Church in Lynchburg, Virginia, as well as directors of Cantate, the Children's Choir of Central Virginia. Mrs. Betenbaugh is also chapel organist and assistant choral director at Virginia Episcopal School in Lynchburg. Last summer they completed a 13-week sabbatical in the UK, visiting Cambridge, Oxford, London and Salisbury. See previous articles from their sabbatical: "London Chats #1: Michael McCarthy," October, 2003, p. 18; "John Tavener's The Veil of the Temple," November, 2003, p. 17; and "Cambridge Chats #1: Timothy Byram-Wigfield," December, 2003, pp. 16-19.

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We had a delightful interview with the charming Patrick Russill on June 24, 2003, in his office at the Royal Academy of Music, where he is Head of Choral Direction and Church Music, following a weekend of attending services and rehearsals of his choir at the London Oratory. The Oratory's weekend schedule was one of the busiest we had seen on our trip. The professional all-adult London Oratory Choir supports the Latin services (Mass and Vespers) while the Oratory Junior Choir (boys and girls aged 8 and upwards) serves the English Family Mass. In addition, the Oratory School Schola sings for the Saturday Mass. The newly released CD of Patrick's choir has recently received a favorable review in the August 2003 issue of The Diapason. Our chat began with a discussion of the various types of music programs in the UK, more specifically the Church Music program now available at the Royal Academy.

 

PR: You've seen for yourselves that there is now a wide range of different choirs in English church music: all-professional; adult central London church choirs (like the Oratory); the traditional, historic boys and men's choirs (in the cathedrals and at Oxford and Cambridge); and the all-choral-scholar choirs with young women and men (at Cambridge colleges such as Trinity and Clare in particular). These different types are all central to the current state of professional choral culture in this country.

 

GB: What about church music in the Royal Academy of Music?

 

PR: Well, historically, the London conservatoires always trained church musicians very often either in a gap year or a couple of gap years before students went to university or sometimes at post graduate level after university. This was nearly always through the medium of their organ courses. There would be choir training classes as well. But there was no specific vocational training, nothing in a liturgical context or with theological understanding at all. There was nothing which had a real church music label in any of the British conservatoires until 1987 when the Principal here, who had been my tutor in Oxford at New College, Sir David Lumsden, decided that he was going to have a church music course here in the Academy--and he asked me to set it up. It was to be a contextual, supporting course, predominantly for organists, but also for singers and composers, taking a broader view of church music issues and to fill in gaps. I didn't have church music students as such, and students didn't actually graduate as church music students. They'd graduate as composers, singers, organists or whatever. That was the situation for ten years. No other conservatoire was offering anything like this at all. Of course, at Oxbridge the sort of training you get in church music is entirely based on the liturgical experience of the chapel in which you're working--very often, a rather narrow perspective. I was giving students the experience of going to the local synagogue, of Orthodox music, and giving them an understanding of Catholic church music, and from that basis the European tradition in particular--in addition to the traditional Anglican experience. I was very much aided in that by the Academy's head of organ, Nicholas Danby, who'd been my organ professor when I was at Oxford. He was also organ professor at the Royal College of Music. He, like me, was Catholic but he had great love for and insight into the real essentials of the English tradition.

 

BB: So how did your church music career start?

 

PR: Well, that was thanks to Nicholas Danby. He insisted I make myself known at the London Oratory (which was where he thought I ought to work). The organist there was Nicholas's own old organ teacher, the legendary Ralph Downes, who designed the organs both at the Oratory and at the Royal Festival Hall. Downes showed interest in me and engineered that I became his assistant. He wanted to retire and shortly after I arrived he nominated me to be his successor as organist--a kind of apostolic succession! I have to say I felt very ill prepared. In retrospect I think I should've studied a year or two abroad before going into that job. I did a lot of learning on the job, and I think a lot of my work there initially was very callow.

 

GB: We can all say that, can't we? (laughter)

 

PR: Yes, true, but at age 23 going into a job like that without hardly any previous experience is quite tough. That was in 1977. I then started teaching harmony and counterpoint here at the Academy in 1982 and did some history classes. And then in 1987 I initiated the Church Music program. In 1995 the current Principal, Dr. Curtis Price, who is an American and a former professor of music at King's College, London, was appointed. He felt that we couldn't keep on running a Church Music Course without first-study students, without majors. So, we decided what we had to do was to fill a real gap in British conservatoires: choral direction. Incredibly we were the first Choral Directing Department in an English conservatoire. Things are now beginning to change. The Royal College of Music now has a Master's course for choral conducting. And I understand that there are developments at the Birmingham Conservatoire, which may well be linked with the Royal College of Organists' move to Birmingham. Paul Spicer, conductor of the Finzi Singers, is in the driving seat for this.

 

GB: We heard his concert at the Royal College of Music with the all-volunteer Whitehall Choir and the Brandenburg Sinfonia.

 

PR: We decided at the Academy that we would have to have a primary stylistic focus. So I decided to hang on to the church music context so I could define the repertoire, the stylistic base we're working from--that is, the English experience of the repertoire in English and Latin in a fairly broad-minded view, not peddling any one particular viewpoint. That understanding of style--the importance of ensemble, tuning, clarity, also the function of church music--has really got to be heard in the daily service, because that is where the culture of corporate discipline and style springs from. But even if you take church music out into the concert hall or onto CD, you need an understanding of what that's about. Rather than "church music with some choir training" the course became "choral direction, contexted within church music." Most of my students end up with a Master's degree.

 

GB: Is there usually a problem with an American transferring here?

 

PR: No. They can't bring any accreditation, but they don't need to. In the Academy as a whole we have a lot of Americans--and even an American Principal!

 

GB: Dr. Price studied at Southern Illinois and Harvard?

 

PR: Correct. He said to me, "Can you get the students?" I said, "Yes, fine. How many can I have?" They said, "two a year." Two! Actually this exactly matches the intake of the Academy's Orchestral Conducting course, which is highly sought-after and has a tremendous record. In addition to the choral direction specialists, I also work with the organists. The Head of Organ, David Titterington, and I have a very good, close working relationship. The Academy now has organ courses not just at the bachelor's level and postgraduate level, but we also have a foundation course which doesn't have large numbers, but significant individuals coming on who may be headed for an Oxford organ scholarship. They come here for a year's conservatoire experience of London professional standards, intensive solo organ training which you typically don't get at Oxbridge. The organ scholars there often haven't the time for it since they have to be so focused on the accompanimental arts. Here they get "choir training" training, which at the moment they still don't get at Cambridge, though influential figures in Cambridge such as David Hill and Timothy Byram-Wigfield (at Jesus College, and shortly to move to St. George's, Windsor) are hoping to start building a choir training course. GB: Some of the well known English choir trainers and conductors would not pass the first year conducting course at Westminster Choir College. (laughter)

 

PR: Was that your alma mater?

 

GB: Yes, I also went to Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore. With many English conductors the musicianship is there, the skill and knowledge is there, but they can't communicate with their hands. The American way is big on conducting technique. PR: This is a major issue. I only started thinking about conducting technique when I started teaching the choir training class here. I learned on the job, because there had been no tradition of courses in the UK.

 

GB: The Choir College had 3 years of conducting classes at the undergraduate level.

 

PR: I was a singer for a while as a male alto. The physical contact between singing and the conducting technique was something that interested me from watching my Oratory predecessor John Hoban who also was a singer. Also from watching other people work like John Eliot Gardiner. That I found interesting, so then I started to try and quantify what I thought and felt, in terms of relating conducting to breathing and relaxation--actually opening a door for singers rather than putting them in a constricting box. New students who come here are often quite surprised by the emphasis on gestural technique-- though the Americans not so much! One of my important contacts is with the Leipzig Hochschule and their head of choral direction Roland Börger, who is a good friend. We have an ongoing formal professorial exchange arrangement. I was fascinated to see his work. His whole training had been through gestural command. He is a very elegant, economical conductor indeed. He does great work with my students here. Though we very much speak the same musical language, our strengths lie in different areas. When I've gone to work with the Leipzig students, I've had to deal much more with handling singers' morale within a group dynamic and with visual technique: mimicry, questions of enunciation, verbal color, reinforcing pulse and phrasing through the face.

 

GB: I worked with Helmut Rilling many years ago. Of course, he's not a choral man as such, but a wonderful conducting scholar. Basically the Germans, at least the ones I know, are not vocal colorists, are they?

 

PR: It depends where you look. I think they would say they are, but they use a different area of the spectrum, a darker one. My German visitors seem to find the English choirs, the boy choirs, somewhat underdeveloped as regards vocal color. There are exceptions of course. They always seem to respond to the current New College, Oxford choir. Edward Higginbottom there gets a great sense of color and relaxation. There's a wonderful freedom of not just interpretive expression but actual technical expression from the boys. He's had a great record of encouraging young men as well.

 

BB: Of the three different places we were in Oxford, the camaraderie between him and his boys was the best--talking back and forth, chatting with the boys about what they did that day, whereas the other two places were pretty much straightforward.

 

PR: Yes, he clearly has a really interesting mind. The reason why he gets such response from the boys is because he engages them intellectually. Nevertheless, in England we need a greater emphasis on the old adage: "What they (the singers) see is what you (the choral director) get."

 

BB: Yes, exactly.

 

PR: Now in the London professional church situation you actually don't have to show everything. You've got to come to an assessment of how much your singers are able to absorb visually, because they are working under severe time restrictions, very often with music they are seeing for the first time. The singers are always very helpful. The two most commonly asked questions are 1) breathing and 2) dynamics. They want to know that you've got a unified idea and can communicate the simple general shape of a piece. Once they are happy with the essentials, then the more sophisticated aspects can be conveyed by visual and eye contact once you come to the performance--there generally isn't time in the rehearsal to do more.

 

GB: Phrasing?

 

PR: If the singers know how long the breath is then they'll take the phrasing, the actual shaping, from you. They are generally extraordinarily responsive, because, let's face it, most of them are highly experienced interpretative artists in their own right. If there is a fault here, it's that the restrictions on rehearsal time can lead to a very generalized approach to interpretation--favoring choral regimentation and the development of one choral sound over interpretation. But that is the fault of the directors rather than the singers. I'm sure you've come to your own conclusions about those choirs that generally have developed one interpretation, which essentially is the unvarying choir sound, where every piece is made to fit that concept.

 

GB: Yes, several of the top American college choirs work that way. More choirs back in the 1960s used the technique first and then the music superimposed on the technique. However, these days more American college choirs are into correct performance practice and trying to achieve different sounds for the different periods of repertoire, especially in the last 15 to 20 years.

 

PR: I'm glad to hear it. In my teaching I try to encourage the students to be as creative and as quick as they can about developing appropriate sound both through gesture, using their own voices and by the different sounds that they hear from choirs in this country.

 

GB: What sort of students do you take at the Academy?

 

PR: Well, you have to bear in mind I only take postgraduates for a two-year course with two students in each year. Currently I have two Americans, one who is already active as a period instrument orchestral and choral conductor, and the other from a Midwest Lutheran college background--both men. And then there are two women, one English (she's from Oxford) and one Irish (from Dublin). And only the English student is a church musician.

 

GB: When your students graduate, are they going to be able to get a position or positions in this country that equals a full-time wage?

 

PR: It varies. Unless you are working in a cathedral you won't get a full-time post. But most students gradually build up a portfolio of freelance casual work and regular work, often combining church, secular choral and academic teaching work. Even I'm doing something similar--I'm working for the Academy in a half-time post and also working at the Oratory half-time. That suits me fine.

 

GB: The English church choral system seems male-dominated, at least as far as directors are concerned. Do you see that changing in our lifetime?

 

PR: I don't know--it'll certainly take time. But because of the expansion of opportunities for girls in the cathedral and college choirs there will inevitably be more girls coming through the choirs who have ambitions to be directors. One major factor is--how vital is the linkage between organ playing and choral directing? I am a choral director and I'm an organist, but I'm not necessarily the choral director that I am because I am an organist. And the same can also be said for so many English choral directors (though on the other hand there are English organists who direct choirs because they are organists and not because they have a gift with singers!). At the moment there are a handful of women working in the English cathedrals: Louise Marsh at Guildford (a former student of mine), Rosemary Field at Portsmouth for example, but only one director of music, and that at a small Catholic cathedral at Arundel.

 

GB: Patrick, I'm interested that you're holding an influential teaching post here in the English tradition but you are a Catholic. Would you comment on the ecumenical climate for church musicians in the UK?

 

PR: I think the students find me quite an interesting animal, because my education was certainly through the Anglican system, but my background as a child and my working venue now is Catholic. I can happily conduct an Anglican Choral Evensong if I want. The same is true of James O'Donnell (a Catholic) and David Hill (an Anglican). They will find their way around the Latin Mass with Gregorian propers and a Victoria setting as easily as an Anglican Evensong with Smith responses, a Walford Davies Psalm and Dyson in D.

 

BB: Sounds like what we love!

 

PR: That is very much the English culture at the moment--in church music at least there's a very good inter-denominational understanding. I think the thing about Catholic centers like Westminster Cathedral and the Oratory is that they are seen as being just as much part of the London church music as the Anglican places. We're regarded as quite central, largely because of the international repertoire that we perform and because there's an improved perception of Latin as part of European culture rather than as a Roman Catholic emblem. And the recovery of the Latin tradition by the Anglican choirs has had a liberating effect on choral sound, from George Guest's choir at St. John's College, Cambridge in the early 1960s onwards. There is far more emphasis now on the color of choral sound than on perfection of ensemble. Though of course a better understanding of vocal technique by conductors actually makes it easier to achieve a natural musical ensemble of course. Nevertheless, that's not a quality you will hear and see in all choral directors in England.

 

GB: No. At many of the places we visited there were ragged entrances, just from the fact that the culture here is not to breathe for the choir. In first year conducting at Westminster Choir College, if you couldn't breathe and bring the choir in on the downbeat, you got an F. That was the first thing to do. Of course, that was with the choir right in front of you. In a divided chancel without eye contact it's harder.

 

PR: But even in that situation it still works the same way though. The whole point is one should be able to bring in the choir without doing much at all with the hand. Just breathe and come in. I have to say I've not really seen much of what goes on in the States. By and large in England we're all feeling our way as to how to deliver technical teaching. Here at the Academy I do virtually all the technical teaching. Of course there are masterclasses which can be very valuable for the practicalities of how to rehearse. Stephen Cleobury did a fine class with the BBC Singers (organized by the BBC) a couple of days ago. Stephen was wonderful in saying, "What does the choir need to look at--how do we look at it--do we need to do that once more--or do you think the singers will get it right the next time anyway?"--pragmatic things rather than matters of gestural technique. James O'Donnell is also wonderful, very economical indeed. Getting people who are really expert in teaching gestural command that will always get the result, either the first time or at least the second time, is not so easy. One of the members of staff here, Jeremy Summerly (director of the Oxford Camerata), has one of the most vestigial gestural techniques I've ever seen. It's extremely small, yet, coupled with what goes on with the face and diaphragm it's totally explicit, very relaxed, very vocal, very disciplined.

 

GB: That's the way I was taught.

 

PR: Exactly--it's all done on the breath. And then you can control the horizontal melodic line at the same time as the vertical pulse. And that's essential in the polyphonic music which is the heart of the English tradition. Polyphony seems to be one area where I'm conscious of a cultural difference between the Americans and the Brits. There seems to be a different way of analyzing the score. I find that American students find it very difficult to absorb polyphonic scores, to see the wood from the trees. All the entrances are marked, they try to give every single entrance. So, of course, the gestural preparation tends to be too late. Other problems then follow on: how do I indicate the character of the lead? If many leads, which one should I give? Do I mouth each one? But the English tradition is based on the conductor presuming that his singers (even youngsters) already have an informed understanding of the polyphonic concept. People like James O'Donnell and David are very good at that: leading the singers through and trusting the singers to do it.

 

That leads on to another essential characteristic of the English tradition. There's a really different mind-set between chorus-mastering and choral conducting when you've actually got an instrument that already has a built-in intellectual and physical motor. You don't have to do much actually to call that forth, you've got to do other things. That can be very difficult for inexperienced students when they're presented with musical singers. At Academy auditions many candidates come in and just don't know what to do. They've been used to drumming the music into their choirs and so haven't actually started to think about the essence of interpretation. Questions of appropriate tempo, elegant articulation, verbal color and intensity--very often there has been no background in these considerations at all. Fortunately now we have singers in the Academy who are already expert choralists (many of them already working professionally), so my conducting students can experience the truth of "What they see is what you get"! I place much more emphasis on actually showing what you want and not just rehearsing what you want. The initiative needs be taken by the choral director, rather than the old English way of simply listening to the choir's performance and then making a reactive comment. Even though I only have two students a year here, I think there is a growing feeling in England that choral direction is something which can and should be taught and that naturally gifted young directors still need to learn. Of course, you can't instill talent if there's no talent in the first place, but you can help refine it and hone it with technical training. There's not been a sea-change yet in attitudes towards the choral director's training in England, but things are definitely starting to change.

 

GB: Super! This has been great! Would you chat about the deputy system in London?

 

PR: Yes, all the main London choirs with the exception of the BBC Singers are part-time or are to a greater or lesser extent ad hoc, even though conductors are always going to use their favorite singers. If, for example, you are a lay clerk at Westminster Abbey or Westminster Cathedral the job is permanent, but not full-time, even though actually it is well-paid pro rata. Even in St. Paul's or Westminster Abbey the singers will either need to do solo work or they will do consort work outside. You'll find them working with all the concert groups you've heard on CDs and others as well. The only full-time professional choir working 9 to 5, 5 days a week, is the BBC Singers (24 singers). The London singer needs to have the liberty to take on freelance work, even if he or she has got a base in the church. The work of choirs like The Monteverdi Choir, The Sixteen, The Gabrieli Consort, even the Tallis Scholars, is part-time work, paid pro rata by appearance and by rehearsal session. The only way that you can staff that sort of thing, since you're working around people's diaries, is by working with a pool. The deputy system in London is essentially this pool of professional singers whom you need to ring up to fill the balance. This happens with all choirs, particularly the church choirs since they are at the bottom of the heap because their rates are the lowest.

 

Nevertheless, it's surprising how many singers make great efforts to keep their contact with the church even though the rate of pay is less attractive than working with other choirs. If one of my singers is on a 3-week tour with the Monteverdi Choir or The Sixteen, then I won't see them at the Oratory and they will need to send in an approved deputy; but when they get back it's like the return of the Prodigal Son--personal relationships are very strong, and many of them go back to student days or even further. Most choral directors will have their own list of approved "deps" from which the regular singer must provide a deputy. And many of the "deps" are familiar members of the choir "family". Here's my own current list for the Oratory and you'll see I've also made additional private comments [We were shown the list.]--it's my most important tool as a choral director. If I'm away I may need to get a deputy for myself. And there are deputy organists and directors. And I have an orchestral fixer (contractor) for when we have an orchestral mass (generally 3 times a year).

 

BB: You do get vacation from your position at the Oratory?

 

PR: Theoretically, yes! We sing 52 Sundays a year. There is no actual designated holiday period at the Oratory within the year. I'm entitled to 28 days holiday a year including four Sundays.

 

BB: Do you take it?

 

PR: Just about. I don't always take my Sundays off as holidays, actually. Some of them have been when I'm in Leipzig doing my exchange work, because I have to go there once a year to teach.

 

GB: What are the fees for the singers?

 

PR: The Oratory is near the top, it appears, but it's not right at the very top. For a typical Sunday morning at the moment we pay £45, a typical Sunday afternoon £38.

 

GB: Even with all that outside processing around you did last Sunday afternoon? (laughter)

 

PR: They got £45 for that. Weddings go up to £62. The rates are higher for other major liturgical celebrations, especially over Holy Week, when we do the full Latin schedule consisting of Tenebrae on Wednesday night, Mass of the Lord's Supper on Thursday night, Tenebrae on Friday morning, Afternoon Liturgy on Friday afternoon, Tenebrae on Saturday morning, Easter Vigil on Saturday night, Sunday morning Solemn Mass, and Sunday afternoon Solemn Vespers. Those are very long services. I have to say, actually, I think the program at the Oratory is bigger than anywhere else. Generally, the quality of the music is such that the choristers are prepared to do that. Also they like the fact that the liturgy itself is enduring.

 

GB: Good word!

 

PR: It's not "here today and gone tomorrow." Whatever they may think about it theologically, I think many singers find the service to be very traditional, pastoral, cultic, and essentially eternal. It's a sort of musical and cultural bedrock for them.

 

GB: There was no trouble after Vatican II with the music at the Oratory?

 

PR: Actually the Oratory Fathers always wanted to keep it as pre-Vatican II as they can.

 

BB: That's wonderful!

 

GB: Great!

 

PR: I'm interested you take that view.

 

GB: With the altar on the back wall?

 

PR: Oh, they wouldn't move the altar! Interestingly, in scholarship and re-reading the original Vatican documents, you find this idea of westward-facing celebration is actually not in the original conciliar documents. It was something that was produced much later. The Oratory Fathers have never gone along with that. While they are absolutely loyal to the authority of the Pope in the modern Catholic Church, they're deeply traditional, very retentive, very consistent, quite insulated and deliberately so.

 

GB: That can be a good or bad problem.

 

PR: Well, it can make some problems for me. For example, the approach to music from the modern era is extremely cautious, but the positive aspect is that I am never asked to do anything that is less than a five-star masterpiece. I can do all the Victoria, Palestrina, Gabrieli I want, and the bigger the better. I'm not being asked to do John Rutter-- perhaps I should complain? (laughter)

 

BB: We enjoyed hearing the Latin Mass.

 

PR: Well, what I really value (and so the singers) is that I'm dealing with something that is central to the European tradition, above all at Easter. I think that the Easter services at the Oratory are the finest representation of the classic Latin liturgy you'll find anywhere in the world wherever it's available in the new rite. It's not the Tridentine rite. It's the new rite in Latin, which is actually the normative form of the new rite, though many American bishops, and even some English bishops, don't admit that. At Westminster Cathedral at 10:30 every morning there is a Latin mass. The only mass the Cathedral choir sings which is in Latin from beginning to end is Saturday morning.

 

BB: Martin Baker invited us to come on Saturday.

 

PR: You're probably going to that and then going to the boys rehearsal afterwards. That's the way my students normally dip their toes into that system.

 

GB: Right, this has been great. Thank you so much for visiting with us. We're late for the Mozart Requiem rehearsal.

 

Prior to our interview that day, Patrick gave us a tour of the Royal Academy of Music, where we also had lunch in the dining hall. Following our interview we sat in on a rehearsal with the Academy Choir and Period Instrument Orchestra as they prepared for a concert the following day of the Mozart Requiem (edition--Robert Levin) conducted by Sir Roger Norrington. Patrick had been a kind and gracious host to us for several days, and we were most appreciative of the opportunity to get a first hand peek from an insider's perspective of both the Oratory and the Royal Academy.

Nunc dimittis

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Nunc Dimittis

Patricia Goodman Booth, 86, died April 17 in Vero Beach, Florida. Born in Yonkers, New York, she showed musical talent as an organist early on, starting her church career at age 14. She studied organ under Arthur Poister at Syracuse University, graduating with a Bachelor of Music degree in 1951.

At Syracuse, she met her future husband, George Lawrence Booth. They were married in 1951 and settled in Fulton, New York. Booth continued her musical career, primarily at the State Street United Methodist Church. After further education at SUNY Oswego she became an elementary school teacher, serving in the Phoenix Central School District, the Nicholasville, Kentucky, schools, and the American School in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In 1979 she and George returned to New York, where she continued teaching and also served as organist and music director at the First Methodist Church in Syracuse.

Pat was active in Rotary, the American Guild of Organists (as Syracuse chapter dean), the Philanthropic Educational Organization, and in the Vero Beach Community Church. She was still serving as an organist up until the time of her death. Her proudest accomplishment there was serving on the committee that selected the new Lively-Fulcher organ for the church, which she played just three and a half weeks before her death.

Patricia Goodman Booth was preceded in death by her parents and her husband of 61 years, George. She is survived by her children and their spouses, Dr. Laura Booth Chan (Raymond), Celia Booth (Thomas McCaffery), Eric Thomas Booth (Kathy), Stephen Roger Booth (Kathy), Dr. Michael Booth (Sue), 18 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, and her companion Ramsey Ludington.

 

Bruce Prince-Joseph, 89, died April 25, in Kansas City, Missouri. During his childhood in Kansas City he began singing in the choir of St. Paul Episcopal Church, where he was first introduced to the pipe organ. In 1943, he moved to New York City and began organ studies with Pietro Yon at St. Patrick Cathedral, where he spent a brief period as chancel organist. He pursued his undergraduate studies at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, where he studied organ with Frank Bozyan and composition with Paul Hindemith. Upon graduation, Prince-Joseph moved to Los Angeles where he completed graduate studies at the University of Southern California and served as organist for St. John the Evangelist Church. He was awarded a Fulbright fellowship to study organ in Europe. He returned to New York City to teach at Hunter College in Manhattan, eventually serving as chair of the music department. In 1953, he became organist and harpsichordist for the New York Philharmonic. He made numerous recordings of organ and harpsichord music.

In 1978, Prince-Joseph moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he pursued work restoring old keyboard instruments, particularly pianos. In 1986, he returned to Kansas City, where he began service at St. Mary Episcopal Church. In 2009, he became organist and music director at St. Therese of the Little Flower Catholic Church, and also served as music director for the John Wornall House Museum and the Alexander Majors House Museum, restoring the 19th-century square pianos of the collection. He also served on the committee for the installation of the Casavant organ at Helzberg Hall in the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.

 

McNeil Robinson II died May 9 in New York City. He was 72. Robinson served as organist and music director in New York City for Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Church, Park Avenue Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), the Church of St. Mary the Virgin, the Church of the Holy Family at the United Nations, and the Trinity Institute of Trinity Church (Wall Street). His tenure at Park Avenue Synagogue spanned five decades. He also had long associations with St. Thomas Church (Fifth Avenue) and the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine.  

Robinson, known for his improvisations, performed throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan, and recorded for the l’Oiseau Lyre, Decca, LIRS, and Musical Heritage Society labels. A proponent for historical performance practice for music from all eras, he conducted the first twentieth-century performances of selected works by Cavalli, Carissimi, Pergolesi, Alessandro Scarlatti, and Zelenka, as well as early works of Mozart and Méhul. He premiered works by such composers as Jacob Druckman, Vladimir Ussachevsky, Robert Starer, David Diamond, Charles Morrow, and Jack Gottlieb. 

As a composer, Robinson received commissions from the Archbishop of Canterbury, the American Guild of Organists, Group for Contemporary Composers, Meet the Composer, and numerous churches throughout the United States. Of his compositions for the organ, he was most proud of his Concerto for Organ and Orchestra, commissioned by the American Guild of Organists and the San Francisco Symphony for the 1984 AGO national convention, and Dismas Variations, which found its way into the required repertoire for the AGO National Young Artists Competition in Organ Performance. His works are published by Theodore Presser, C.F. Peters, and Oxford University Press. 

Robinson joined the faculty of the Manhattan School of Music in 1984 and chaired the organ department there between 1991 and 2015. He also chaired the organ department at the Mannes College of Music and taught at the Hartt School of Music, Queens College, and Yale University. His students included Jason Roberts, Justin Bischof, and Aaron David Miller.

McNeil Robinson was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and at age 14 entered the Birmingham Conservatory as a piano student of Hugh Thomas. By age 17, he had performed as soloist with the Birmingham Symphony (now the Alabama Symphony Orchestra). Robinson attended Birmingham Southern College as a full-scholarship student, and moved to New York City in 1962 to continue his piano studies as a full-scholarship student of Leonard Shure at the Mannes College of Music. He also studied privately with Rosina Lhévinne and Beveridge Webster. In 1966 he entered the Juilliard School and studied organ with Vernon de Tar and Anthony Newman, and composition with Vincent Persichetti. He graduated in 1970, receiving the Juilliard Faculty Award.

Following his study at Juilliard, Robinson continued organ study with George Faxon, Russell Saunders, and Catharine Crozier, and with Guy Bovet and Monserrat Torrent at the University of Salamanca (Spain), and composition with Yehudi Wyner and Jacob Druckman. A significant influence in Robinson’s life was Marcel Dupré, several of whose works became signature pieces for Robinson. 

McNeil Robinson is survived by his wife, Maria Cristina Robinson, a brother, Robert Michael (Janice) Robinson, and many nieces and nephews. His life and career will be celebrated in New York City at a date, time, and location to be announced (see Agohq.org).

 

Robert Tucker, 60, died May 10 in Atlanta, Georgia. He studied organ performance at the University of South Carolina, and after holding a number of church positions in South Carolina moved to Atlanta, where he was well known as a substitute and long-term interim organist, and continued to concertize. Tucker held the American Guild of Organists’ Service Playing Certificate and was active with the local chapter, serving as transportation information chair for the regional convention. He was the creator and caretaker for the Georgia Pipe Organ information link found on the chapter website and assisted in the posting of job opportunities. At the time of his death, Tucker was the office manager at Parkey OrganBuilders in Norcross, Georgia, where his quick wit and cool efficiency earned the profound respect of staff and clients. Robert Tucker is survived by his partner, Jay Ellis. ν

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