Skip to main content

Barbara Harbach named Curators’ Professor

 

Barbara Harbach has been named a Curators’ Professor, the highest and most prestigious academic rank awarded by the Board of Curators of the University of Missouri System to recognize truly outstanding scholars. In March Dr. Harbach was named National Arts Associate Distinguished Member of Sigma Alpha Iota, SAI, nominated by the Buffalo SAI Chapter, New York. 

Harbach is featured on a 2-CD box set of The Art of Fugue by Bach with organ selections by Pachelbel, including the famous Canon (MSR 1442). Audiophile Audition wrote, “Art of Fugue on the organ—always the best bet, and Harbach brings it home.” For information: http://tinyurl.com/kr9ylry.

Related Content

Nunc Dimittis

Default

Philip Hahn, the immediate past president of the American Guild of Organists, died peacefully at his home in San Francisco, California on April 13, 2003, from complications of myelofibrosis, a disease of the bone marrow. From 1992 to 2002, he was a member of the AGO National Council and served as president from 1998 to 2002.

Hahn received bachelor and master of music degrees from the University of Michigan where he studied with Marilyn Mason and Robert Noehren, and earned a DMA in composition and organ performance from the American Conservatory of Music, Chicago, studying with Stella Roberts and Robert Lodine. He received certificates in organ, composition, and solfeggio from the Conservatoire Americain, Fontainebleau, France, where he studied with Nadia Boulanger and André Marchal, and held the AAGO certificate.

During his career, he was an associate professor of music at the University of Northern Iowa, where he oversaw the installation of a large four-manual organ built by Robert Noehren, and was director of music at Waterloo's First United Methodist Church. After moving to California, Hahn served as director of music at the First Presbyterian Church in Palo Alto for several years before being appointed artistic director of the San Francisco Boys Chorus. He played many recitals on notable instruments and was a featured recitalist, workshop leader, and adjudicator at many AGO conventions.

Philip Hahn was also a professional chef, holding the position of sous chef at the Clift Hotel in San Francisco, later running his own restaurant, Fanny's, in San Francisco. For several years Hahn ran the restaurant and served as organist at the First Presbyterian Church of San Anselmo, returning exclusively to church music in 1980. From 1990 until his death, Hahn served as organist-choirmaster at St. John's Episcopal Church in Ross, California.

Dr. Hahn's compositions include sacred anthems, pieces for trumpet and organ including The Trumpet Sings Thanksgiving; Spiritual; Fanfare for Five Trumpets and Organ; and two large concerted works: Fantasy for Orchestra and Acclamations! A Fanfare for Concert Band. For the organ, he wrote several short hymn-based compositions plus larger works including Sonata for Organ; Songs from the Forest: A Suite for Organ and Synthesizer; and Suite for Organ Celesta, Vibraharp, and Timpani. His Sonata for Violin and Piano was the recipient of a Sigma Alpha Iota Prize. His short ballet The Dance in the Desert was fully staged at both the First Presbyterian Church, Palo Alto, and at St. John's Episcopal Church in Ross.

He is survived by his partner of 29 years Norman Nagao, two sisters, and a number of nephews and nieces. A memorial service was held at St. John's Episcopal Church in Ross, California, on May 4.

Richard L. Johnson, 61, of Buffalo, New York, and East Longmeadow, Massachusetts, died on December 6, 2002, in Buffalo. Dr. Johnson was professor of humanities at Medaille College, Buffalo, joining the faculty in 1984. An accomplished musician and dedicated educator, he was known for his innovative theatre and music classes. He also directed numerous stage productions and was named the college's Professor of the Year for 2000-2001.

Dr. Johnson was born on May 17, 1941, in San Antonio, Texas. Upon receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree in music from Trinity University of San Antonio in 1963, he went on to earn his Master of Music degree from Yale University in 1965. He spent 1966-67 in Copenhagen, Denmark, on a Fulbright Scholarship, studying organ with Finn Viderø. Returning to the United States, he held faculty positions at Wake Forest University, Amherst College, Smith College, and the University of Maine. In 1973, he graduated from the University of Michigan with a Doctor of Musical Arts degree. In 1992, he received a National Endowment for the Humanities award to study theatre at Columbia University, and at the time of his death he was pursuing a post-doctoral Master's degree in Theatre at SUNY-Buffalo.

In addition to teaching, Dr. Johnson performed organ recitals at venues across the country, including the National Cathedral in Washington, DC, and St. Thomas Church in New York City. Several of his recordings aired on National Public Radio stations throughout the country. He is survived by his parents, a sister, brother, nieces and nephews, and his long-time partner, Richard LaBorde of East Longmeadow.

Richard Eugene Livesay died on February 24 at the age of 87. A resident of Alexandria, Virginia, he was organist at Cherrydale United Methodist Church in Arlington from 1947 to 1988, when he was named organist emeritus. At that church he had played for more than 2,000 Sunday services, 600 weddings, and countless funerals, and helped design the church's Wicks pipe organ of 37 ranks. He was a former Dean of the Alexandria AGO chapter and was a guest organist at Washington National Cathedral. Born in Tulsa, he began piano study at age 12 and organ at age 16, and he attended Blackburn College in Illinois, Park College in Missouri, and American University. In the late 1930s, he worked for Jenkins Music Co. and demonstrated Hammond organs at churches around Tulsa. Mr. Livesay was also a Defense Department official from 1940 until retiring in 1973 as staff secretary to the secretary of defense. He is survived by his wife of 64 years Veradell Elliott Livesay, two children, and five grandchildren.

Dale Wood died on April 13 after a valiant battle against esophageal and lung cancer, at his Sea Ranch, California home. A renowned composer, organist and choral director, he was known for his numerous published choral works and hymn tunes, and his compositions for handbells, harp, and organ. He was for many years organist and choirmaster in San Francisco at the Episcopal Church of St. Mary the Virgin and served in a similar capacity in Lutheran churches in Hollywood and Riverside, California. He had published numerous articles on worship, liturgy, and church music, and was a contributing editor to the Journal of Church Music for over a decade. His monthly column appeared in the Methodist journal Music Ministry for three years. Wood headed the publications committee of Choristers Guild from 1970-74. After serving as music director of the Grace Cathedral School for Boys in San Francisco (1973-74), he was appointed executive director for The Sacred Music Press, a position he held from 1975-96, and was editor emeritus 1996-2001. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) honored Dale Wood annually since 1967 for his "very important contribution towards the creation and development of contemporary American Music." The Board of Regents of California Lutheran University awarded Dale Wood the title of "Exemplar of the University," citing him as "an example of excellence in service and a worthy model of a good and useful life."

Nunc Dimittis

Files
11_Diap0214.pdf (748.78 KB)
Default

Clyde Holloway died December 18, 2013, in Houston, Texas. He was 77 years old. The Herbert S. Autrey Professor Emeritus of Organ at Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music in Houston, Holloway earned B.Mus. (1957) and M.Mus. (1959) degrees from the University of Oklahoma, studying with Mildred Andrews, and the S.M.D. degree in 1974 from Union Theological Seminary, studying with Robert Baker.

Holloway’s concert career began in 1964 when he won the National Young Artists Competition of the American Guild of Organists (AGO) in Philadelphia. He performed under the auspices of Karen McFarlane Artists, and was a featured artist at numerous AGO conventions, also appearing in recital in Mexico City, the West Indies, and Europe.

His doctoral dissertation, The Organ Works of Olivier Messiaen and Their Importance in His Total Oeuvre, remains an important monograph concerning this music. Holloway worked with the composer on several occasions, examined his works at the organ of the Church of the Holy Trinity in Paris, and performed under his supervision. As a Fulbright Scholar at the Amsterdam Conservatory, he worked with Gustav Leonhardt in the study of organ, harpsichord, and chamber music.

Clyde Holloway began his teaching career in 1965 as the youngest member of the Indiana University School of Music faculty. In 1977, he joined the faculty of Rice University’s Shepherd School of Music, where he established the organ program and served as Chairman of the Keyboard Department and Director of Graduate Studies. The school’s widely acclaimed Fisk-Rosales organ embodies his unique understanding of how numerous organ-building traditions and tonal designs are manifested in organ literature and will be considered his most profound contribution to Rice University, Houston, and the larger musical world. He also served as organist and choirmaster of Christ Church Cathedral in Houston for many years; in 1993, he was named Honorary Lay Canon and Organist and Choirmaster Emeritus.

Renowned as a gifted pedagogue, Dr. Holloway served on the AGO’s Committee for Professional Education, addressed two conferences of the National Conference on Organ Pedagogy, led workshops and masterclasses, and served as a member of the jury for numerous competitions, including the Concours de Europe, the Fort Wayne Competition, the Music Teachers National Association Competition, the National Young Artists Competition of the American Guild of Organists, and the Grand Prix de Chartres. In 1994 he was invited to perform for the Bicentennial Festival of the celebrated Clicquot organ in the Cathedral of Poitiers, France, and served as a member of the jury for the international competition held at the end of the ten-day festival. 

Sylvie Poirier, 65 years old, passed away December 21, 2013 in Montréal of cancer. Born in Montréal on February 15, 1948 into a family of artists, her father was a goldsmith jeweller, and her mother, a painter and sculptor, was a pupil of the renowned painter Paul-Emile Borduas. Influenced by her parents, she began drawing and painting, and studied piano from an early age and later studied organ at l’Ecole de Musique Vincent d’Indy, Montréal. In 1970 she gained her baccalaureat in the class of Françoise Aubut and went on to study at the Conservatoire de Musique de Montréal with Bernard Lagacé, with whom she obtained her Premier Prix in 1975. In 1976 Poirier studied at l’Université de Montréal with the blind French organist Antoine Reboulot. From 1977–1983 she was professeur affilié at l’Ecole de Musique Vincent d’Indy, presenting private music and drawing courses around Montréal.

In 1983 she became the Founding President of “Unimusica Inc.” whose objective was to bring together the art forms of music, painting, enamels, as well as poetry and photography. At the invitation of the oncologist founder of “Vie nouvelle” at Hôtel-Dieu Hospital, Montréal, Poirier taught a course specifically designed for cancer patients entitled “Psychology of Life through Drawing” in the 1980s. 

She gave recitals in North America and Europe and broadcast many times for Radio Canada. Her organ duet career with her husband Philip Crozier spanned eighteen years, with eight commissioned and premièred works, numerous concerts in many countries, several broadcasts at home and abroad, and three CDs of original organ duets.

Sylvie Poirier also recorded Jean Langlais’ Première Symphonie, and Petr Eben’s Job and The Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of the Heart; she gave the latter work’s North American première of the published version in Montréal in 2005. Poirier was also an accomplished painter and portraitist; examples of her work can be found at sylviepoirier.com.

She was predeceased by her only son Frédéric (30) in 2007. Sylvie Poirier is survived by her husband, Philip Crozier.

Phares L. Steiner died in Louisville, Kentucky, on September 14, 2013 at age 85. Born in Lima, Ohio, Steiner earned a bachelor’s degree in organ at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, and a master’s degree in organ performance at the University of Michigan in 1952, where he studied with Robert Noehren and where he began his career as an organ builder, at first working with Noehren. In 1953 with Noehren as consultant, Steiner designed the prototype of an electric-action slider chest. After service in the Army he worked with Fouser Associates in Birmingham, Michigan from 1955 to 1957. He established Steiner Organs Inc. in 1959 in Cincinnati, Ohio, and in 1962 relocated to Louisville, where he was joined in 1966 by Gottfried Reck from Kleuker in Germany. They incorporated in 1968 as Steiner Reck Inc.; Steiner was responsible for tonal matters of more than 90 organs, many of which were mechanical action. 

After retiring from Steiner Reck in 1988, he continued pipe organ work on a freelance basis, including working at Webber & Borne Organ Builders, and R.A. Daffer in the Washington, D.C. area while living in Columbia, Maryland. Phares Steiner returned to Louisville in 2003 with his family, where they became members of the Cathedral of the Assumption, home to one of his largest instruments.  

A charter member of the American Institute of Organbuilders, Steiner was also an active member of APOBA at Steiner Reck and a member of Phi Mu Alpha music fraternity. He also served as organist at several churches, including St. Louis Catholic Church in Clarkesville, Maryland, and Trinity Catholic Church, Louisville. 

Phares L. Steiner is survived by his wife Ellen Heineman Steiner, daughter Adrienne, son Paul, and brother, Donald F. Steiner M.D.

Marianne Webb, 77, of Carbondale, Illinois, died December 7, 2013, at Parkway Manor in Marion, Illinois, from metastatic breast cancer, which she had for the past 20 years. She enjoyed a lengthy and distinguished career as a recitalist and professor of music at Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC).

Miss Webb was born on October 4, 1936, in Topeka, Kansas where she exhibited an early passion for organ music. While in Topeka, she began her studies with Richard M. Gayhart and continued with Jerald Hamilton at Washburn University, where she earned her Bachelor of Music degree, summa cum laude, in 1958. She obtained the Master of Music degree, with highest distinction, from the University of Michigan (1959), as a scholarship student of Marilyn Mason. Further study was with Max Miller of Boston University and Robert Noehren at the University of Michigan.

After teaching organ and piano at Iowa State University for two years, she continued her studies in Paris as a Fulbright scholar with André Marchal. Further graduate study was with Arthur Poister at Syracuse University and Russell Saunders at the Eastman School of Music.

Marianne Webb taught organ and music theory and served as university organist at Southern Illinois University Carbondale from 1965 until her retirement in 2001 as professor emerita of music. She continued to serve as visiting professor and distinguished university organist for an additional 11 years. During her tenure, she built a thriving organ department and established, organized, and directed the nationally acclaimed SIUC Organ Festivals (1966–1980), the first of their kind in the country. The school’s 58-rank Reuter pipe organ she sought funding for and designed was named in her honor.

Miss Webb married David N. Bateman on October 3, 1970, in Carbondale. Together they gave the endowment that established in perpetuity the Marianne Webb and David N. Bateman Distinguished Organ Recital Series that presents each year outstanding, well-established concert organists in recital for the residents of southern Illinois.

As a concert artist, Marianne Webb toured extensively throughout the United States, performing for American Guild of Organists (AGO) chapters, churches, colleges and universities. In addition, she maintained an active schedule of workshops, master classes, and seminars for church music conferences. A member of the AGO, she served the guild as a member of the national committees on Educational Resources, Chapter Development, and Membership Development and Chapter Support. Locally, she re-established the Southern Illinois Chapter of the AGO in 1983 and served as its dean for six years. She performed recitals and presented workshops at numerous AGO national and regional conventions. For many years she concertized under the auspices of the Phillip Truckenbrod Concert Artists. She recorded on the ProOrgano and Pleiades labels and was featured on the nationally syndicated American Public Media program “Pipedreams.” 

Miss Webb maintained a balanced career as both performer and teacher. Her students have distinguished themselves by winning local, area, and national competitions. A sought-after adjudicator, Miss Webb was a member of the jury for many of the country’s most prestigious competitions. She also served as an organ consultant to numerous churches in the Midwest.

A special collection, which bears her name, is housed in the University Archives of Morris Library on the SIUC campus. Upon completion, this collection will include all of her professional books, music, recordings, and papers. Her “Collection of Sacred Music” has been appraised as “one of the largest private gatherings of sacred music in the world with a particular emphasis on the pipe organ.”

Among numerous honors during her long and distinguished career, Miss Webb has received the Distinguished Service Award from Southern Illinois University Carbondale, life membership in the Fulbright Association, the AGO’s Edward A. Hansen Leadership Award recognizing her outstanding leadership in the Guild, and the St. Louis AGO Chapter’s Avis Blewett Award, given for outstanding contributions to the field of organ and/or sacred music. From the Theta Chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota at Washburn University she received the Sword of Honor and the Honor Certificate.

Miss Webb is survived by her twin sister, Peggy Westlund; a niece, Allison Langford; a nephew, Todd Westlund; a godson, R. Kurt Barnhardt, PhD; and her former husband, Dr. David N. Bateman.

Throughout her lifetime Miss Webb was confronted with great adversities, which she overcame to become a nationally recognized organ teacher and recitalist. She leaves an impressive legacy of students holding positions of prominence in colleges and churches throughout the United States. She will be remembered not only for her musical artistry and excellence in teaching, but as a woman of quiet strength, courage, and abiding faith. In gratitude to God for her lifelong career, she established the St. Cecilia Recital Endowment in 2007 to present world-renowned concert organists in recital during the biennial national conventions of the American Guild of Organists.

At a later date, a memorial organ recital played by Paul Jacobs will take place in Shryock Auditorium, Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Memorials may be sent to SIU Foundation to benefit the Distinguished Organ Recital Series Endowment. 

—Dennis C. Wendell

Lloyd Pfautsch Remembered

Kenneth Hart

Kenneth Hart is Director of the Graduate Program in Sacred Music at Southern Methodist University.

Default

Lloyd Pfautsch died on October 3, 2003. See “Nunc Dimittis,” The Diapason, March 2003, p. 8.

I first met Lloyd Pfautsch when I came to Southern Methodist University to audition for my current position. He quickly invited me to attend his University Chorale rehearsal and then to chat afterwards. When I entered rehearsal he had just finished warm-ups and stopped to introduce me to the choir. They proceeded on cue to give a single handclap, which he called “an applau,” the imagined singular form of the word applause. This must have been a frequent trick, but the choir still enjoyed doing it and I was highly amused. Here was a conductor who practiced what he preached in his books. He valued human relations, his choral gestures were expressive, but disciplined and clear, and he most certainly made regular use of humor in rehearsals.

Pfautsch was born September 21, 1921 in Washington, Missouri (near St. Louis). He received a bachelor’s degree from Elmhurst College in 1943. Planning to follow his parents’ hopes, he anticipated becoming a minister in the Evangelical and Reform tradition when he entered New York City’s Union Theological Seminary that fall. His musical career flourished. He was soloist at Brick Presbyterian Church under Clarence and Helen Dickinson and sang in Toscanini’s NBC Symphony Chorus. He made several recordings and also met his future wife, Edith Herseth, who also sang under Toscanini at that time. The year 1946 was significant for Pfautsch. He graduated from Union with a Bachelor of Divinity, he decided he wanted a musical career instead of a ministerial one and entered the Master of Sacred Music program at Union, and he also married Edith Herseth! All of the above changed his life for the better. He remained grateful for all of these important events until his death on October 3, 2003.

No matter how you look at it, the word “prolific” describes Lloyd Pfautsch. He published nearly 300 compositions (72 of which were commissions) with 34 different publishers; he was guest lecturer at more than 50 colleges and universities in the U.S. and abroad; he graduated 154 students with the MM in Choral Conducting, 35 of whom also received doctorates; and he conducted countless All-State Honor Choruses and multi-church festival choirs throughout the country. His impact on choral music in the U.S. and beyond was pervasive for the second half of the 20th century. It persists today as dozens of his graduates hold important academic and church choral positions around the world. That influence also continues in the performance of his music throughout much of the Western world. When the repertoire for the All-State Choruses in the U.S. appear each spring in The Choral Journal, there are always Pfautsch pieces on the lists.

No one in recent memory has been more dedicated to the choral art that Lloyd Pfautsch. He began singing in public at age 3 and joined ensembles as early as anyone would let him. He was fortunate to make the acquaintance of Robert Shaw as Shaw was rising to the position of the foremost choral conductor in America. He sang on most of the early Shaw recordings, including the best-selling first Christmas album and achieved the status of colleague and friend with the maestro. Shaw remained fiercely loyal to Pfautsch until his own death and continued to help him professionally. It was Shaw who recommended Lloyd as the choral conductor for the 1965 twentieth anniversary celebration of the United Nations in San Francisco. The Convocation of Religion for World Peace was held at the San Francisco Cow Palace on the last night of the anniversary proceedings. The group brought together leaders of seven of the world’s largest religions (Catholic, Protestant, Jew, Hindu, Buddhist, Moslem and Eastern Orthodox) to worship with a common cause: world peace. Secretary-General U Thant spoke at the culminating worship service and so most of the distinguished delegates to the U.N. attended. Pfautsch conducted a large brass ensemble and a choir of 2000, mostly from the Bay area. They rehearsed for three days prior to their public appearance. The event earned Pfautsch much praise and many accolades that continued for months afterwards. It was, to him, a seminal event in his career and one of his fondest memories.

Two universities were fortunate to benefit from many years of Pfautsch’s work and creativity: Illinois Wesleyan (1948-58) and Southern Methodist University (1958-92). At both schools he produced nationally prominent choirs and established published series of commissioned choral works while leaving an indelible impression on the music faculties and the institutions as well. Because his career at SMU was considerably longer he was able to exercise creativity in significantly more ways. He was brought to SMU to establish the Master of Sacred Music program, which he did most successfully. He taught at both the School of Theology and the School of Music, maintaining a faculty load that would overtax any two “normal” faculty members trying to equal it. All the while he also founded the Dallas Civic Chorus and conducted them for 25 years without stipend, found time to compose anthems on a regular basis and made time for his growing family.

After a few years he decided to work full-time in the School of Music and was chosen as the first Associate Dean for Music in the Meadows School of the Arts. While he really did not like administrative work very much he attacked it tenaciously. He was able to establish a new piano pedagogy department, and managed to hire his former student, Robert Anderson, to build a distinguished organ department. As the number of organ students grew he successfully made the case for building several additional organs in the School of the Arts. The organ and choral departments eventually vied for national attention and supported the Sacred Music program very effectively. Pfautsch and Anderson collaborated on many projects through the years, including the well-known annual Christmas Worship Service at Perkins Chapel. The service was created by Pfautsch and continues to be popular with the SMU and Dallas communities today.

One of his greatest innovations was development of one of the first Master of Choral Conducting programs in higher education. He pioneered in videotaping student conductors as a pedagogic device. By the same token he also produced videotapes on conducting. Eventually he wrote three books as well as an important chapter in a fourth one discussing conducting and the development of choirs. Perhaps the most widely used today is his English Diction for the Singer (1971).

Pfautsch received many honors during his distinguished career. He was awarded honorary doctorates from Elmhurst College (Doctor of Music, 1959), Illinois Wesleyan University (Doctor of Humane Letters, 1978) and West Virginia Wesleyan University (Doctor of Humane Letters, 1985). The Board of Higher Education and Ministries of the United Methodist Church designated him their University Scholar/Teacher for 1982. At SMU he received the “M” Award (the highest award given by the university for sustained inspiration to and efforts on its behalf) and was selected the Meadows Distinguished Professor in 1984. He was granted emeritus status in 1992. The Texas Choral Directors Association awarded him the Distinguished Choirmaster accolade in 1991.

Lloyd Pfautsch was an uncommon person. He was kind, modest and pastoral in his dealings with students and colleagues. He was an uncommon parent, as his children and grandchildren testified at his memorial service on October 7, 2003. He was certainly an uncommon musician. He was both a pioneer and a national leader in the teaching of choral conducting. He was also an outstanding singer in his early years and a remarkable conductor for the past half century. Those of us fortunate to have known and worked with Lloyd have been changed for the better by his warmth, his humor, his concern for humanity and his prodigious musical talent. As his daughter, Debbie, put it at the memorial service, “The heavenly choir has a new conductor now, and it’s time to get the diction right!”

--Kenneth Hart, Director

Graduate Program in Sacred Music

Southern Methodist University

Current Issue