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Hank Glass honored

Hank Glass, director of music/organist of St. Michael and All Angels Church on Sanibel Island, Florida, received a special resolution honoring him on sixty years of membership in the St. Louis AGO chapter. Dawn Riske, director of music/organist of Christ the King Parish in University City, Missouri, and dean of the St. Louis chapter, presented the award. Glass is also a member of the Southwest Florida AGO chapter.

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Nancy Jane Blair died November 6, 2010. A native of Knoxville, Tennessee, she graduated from Carson-Newman College in Jefferson City, and earned a master’s degree in church music from Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, where she also received a distinguished service award. Blair served as minister of music at the First Baptist Church of Osceola, Arkansas, from 1961–76, and organist-music associate at Briarlake Baptist Church in Decatur, Georgia, from 1976 until her retirement in 2002. A member of the Atlanta AGO chapter, she prepared the handbell group for the premiere of Alice Parker’s The Wells of Salvation during the 1992 AGO national convention.

Rodney Alan Giles died December 4 at age 63. Born in Kansas City, Missouri, he earned a BMus in organ at the University of Missouri, Kansas City, studying with Bethel Knoche, and an MA in organ from Ohio State University, studying with Gordon Wilson. Giles served as minister of music and organist at the First Baptist Church of Kansas City from 1973–89; as college organist and adjunct instructor at Park College (now University) in Parkville, Missouri; university organist and instructor at Ottawa University in Ottawa, Kansas; as a staff organist at the RLDS (now Community of Christ) Auditorium in Independence, Missouri (1967, and 1973–85); and at the American Institute of Musical Studies in Graz, Austria, for five summers in the 1980s.
A member of the Greater Kansas City AGO chapter since 1962, he served as chapter dean in 1978–79. Giles moved to New York City in 1989 and served as organist-director of music at Hansen Place Central United Methodist Church in Brooklyn and later at West Park Presbyterian Church in Manhattan. From 2001 he spent winters in Florida, where he served as minister of music at First Congregational Church of Fort Lauderdale. Rodney Alan Giles is survived by his mother, two sisters, a brother, and nieces and nephews.

James Noel Grenhart died January 13 in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania. He was 69 years old. A gifted pianist-accompanist, organist, and choir director, Grenhart made his living as a financial analyst. He had played at Holy Comforter Church in Drexel Hill beginning in 2003, and then at the Church of the Redeemer in Springfield. Grenhart was a member of the Philadelphia AGO chapter. James Noel Grenhart is survived by a sister, a brother, and several nieces and nephews.

Hugh Allen Wilson died on December 18 in Lake George, Bolton Landing, New York. He was 85 years old. An organist, harpsichordist, and conductor, his first professional position was at the age of 14, as choir director-organist for St. James’ Episcopal Church in Lake George. He taught at Union College in Schenectady from 1962–96; in 1977, he conducted the glee club in a performance at the White House for Jimmy Carter’s first state dinner. Wilson attended Yale College, where he studied organ with H. Frank Bozyan, theory with Paul Hindemith, and musicology with Leo Schrade, graduating in 1946. He studied musicology from 1947–49 at Yale University, and studied organ with Marcel Dupré in France and harpsichord with Gustav Leonhardt in Holland.
Wilson was founder and co-conductor of the Bolton Festival of Music in 1948, founder and first dean of the Adirondack AGO chapter, and cofounder of what would become the Lake George Opera Festival. During his career, he gave more than 1,000 public performances; they included a performance of Honegger’s King David at Alice Tully Hall with narrator John Houseman in 1975 and at the National Cathedral in Washington in 1983, and the debut of an organ concerto written for him by Union College professor Edgar Curtis in 1966. Hugh Allen Wilson is survived by his longtime companion, Marshall Ford, and many friends and colleagues.

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Margaret T. “Meg” Flowers died April 30, at the age of 71, in Houston. She earned a BA from Vassar College in 1960, and MMus and DMA degrees from Shepherd School of Music, Rice University, in 1990 and 2004. She served as organist, choirmaster, and music director at several Episcopal parishes in Houston, and at Salem Evangelical Lutheran Church, retiring in January 2010. She held memberships in the Association of Anglican Musicians and the AGO, and served as dean of the Houston AGO chapter and chair of the Diocesan Music Commission. Meg Flowers is survived by her husband, David C. Flowers, three daughters and their husbands, Jennifer and Lyman Paden, Rebecca and Brian Oxley, and Elizabeth and Michael Murray, stepdaughters Kay Flowers and Karen Stephen and her husband Denny, sister Frances Pearson, brothers Bill and Walker Taylor, and five grandchildren.

Yvonne Loriod died May 17 in Saint-Denis, France, at the age of 86. The French pianist was for three decades the wife of Olivier Messiaen, and the chief interpreter of his piano works, as well as a champion of the piano works of Pierre Boulez, Jean Barraqué, André Jolivet, and Arnold Schoenberg. A student at the Paris Conservatoire, Loriod had learned the major piano repertoire by the age of 14. At the Conservatoire, she studied piano with Lazare-Lévy, and harmony with André Bloch; when the Nazis deported them during the French occupation, Loriod resumed piano study with Marcel Ciampi and harmony with Messiaen, who had recently returned from a prison camp. Messiaen wrote the two-piano work Visions de l’Amen with Loriod in mind.
As a concert pianist, she was known for her performances of contemporary repertoire. After teaching at the Staat-
liche Hochschule für Musik in Karlsruhe, she was appointed piano professor at the Paris Conservatoire in 1967, where she taught for a quarter of a century. Loriod married Messiaen in 1961; she served as his proofreader, musical assistant, manager, and interpreter until his death in 1992. Yvonne Loriod is survived by her sister Jacqueline and her stepson Pascal.

Kathleen Funk Pearson, age 93, died March 22 in Fort Myers, Florida. Born in Philadelphia, she graduated from the Oberlin Conservatory, and did graduate study at the Eastman School of Music, where she was a student of Harold Gleason. She joined the music department at Vassar College and served as assistant college organist and Vassar College Choir accompanist there, and from 1957–1988 as chapel organist. She also served as organist at the First Presbyterian Church, and as organist and choir director at Christ Episcopal Church in Poughkeepsie. A visiting professor at SUNY–New Paltz, she was chapel organist for the Harvard Divinity School, and for twelve years organist for the Danforth Foundation summer conferences.
With her husband, Donald M. Pearson, she co-founded the Central Hudson Valley AGO chapter, for which she served as dean, and which recognized her in 2008 for her lifelong contribution and dedication to promoting excellence in organ performance and choral music. They moved to Florida in 1988, where she served St. John’s Episcopal Church in Naples, Covenant Presbyterian Church in Fort Myers, Sanibel Congregational Church, and Chapel of the Sea on Captiva Island, and founded the 65-voice Shell Point Singers. Following Donald Pearson’s death in 2004, she created an organ recital fund in his memory, for performances at Vassar College; the fund has now been renamed the Donald and Kathleen Pearson Organ Recital Fund.

William Louis Shepard died July 15. For the last six years he held the position of organist and choirmaster at the First United Methodist Church in Park Ridge, Illinois. He earned his master’s degree in church music from Northwestern University and his bachelor’s degree from Wheaton College. Shepard taught piano, organ, and voice in academic settings as well as privately. He held positions as organist, choral director, handbell director, and children’s choir director at numerous churches in the metropolitan Chicago area as well as the Hot Springs, Arkansas area.
Born July 9, 1949, in Geneva, Illinois, he and his two sisters formed a string trio at a young age. During their early school years in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, the trio was awarded first place in several Illinois ensemble competitions. In 1984 Shepard moved to Hot Springs Village, Arkansas. Upon his return to Mount Prospect, Illinois, in 2002, the trio continued to perform.
Shepard was the winner of a student competition of the Chicago AGO chapter, and maintained his membership in the Chicago chapter. For eight years he was the regular organist for the Chicago Sunday Evening Club, broadcast on Channel 11 (WTTW). He also operated his own antique clock repair business. William Shepard is survived by his mother, three sisters, and five nieces and nephews.
Eugene Szonntagh died May 8 in Sarasota, Florida. He was 85. Born July 31, 1924, in Budapest, he immigrated with his family to the U.S. in 1956 to escape the communist occupation of Hungary. He held degrees in both the arts and sciences and worked as a research scientist, for Leeds & Northrup Co. in Philadelphia, and for Honeywell. A holder of 29 U.S. patents, he had published over 100 technical articles in the field of chemical engineering. Szonntagh served as organist at several Philadelphia churches, and as dean of the Philadelphia AGO chapter. He composed over 100 organ and choral works, and performed as a recitalist and choral director both in the United States and in Hungary.
In 1982 he and his wife moved to Florida, where he served at churches in St. Petersburg, and as dean of the St. Petersburg AGO chapter. Later, in Sarasota, he served on the board of the Sarasota-Manatee chapter, and as musician at St. Wilfred’s Episcopal Church. Eugene Szonntagh is survived by his wife of 59 years, Nora, sons Desi and Tom, granddaughters Erika and Tiffany, and grandson Andrew.

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Betty Jean Taylor Bartholomew died October 11, 2008, at the age of 84 in Eugene, Oregon. Born in Eugene on December 10, 1923, she had a career as a piano and organ recitalist and church musician in five states before returning to Oregon in 1990, where she was music director-organist at the Episcopal Church of the Resurrection. She established the Leadership Program for Church Musicians in the Diocese of Oregon, and presented workshops at AGO conventions and for the American Choral Directors Association, the Association of Anglican Musicians, and at diocesan conferences. Ms. Bartholomew was dean of the Seattle and Eugene AGO chapters and served as a regional and national councillor. She also held positions on the AGO special projects advisory board, the national convention committee, and the professional concerns committee.
Bartholomew was the recipient of the Bishop’s Cross of the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia in 1991, and in recognition of her achievements and service to the AGO for more than 50 years, she received the Edward A. Hansen Award during the 2004 national convention in Los Angeles. She is survived by five children and five grandchildren.

Margaret E. Brakel died July 17, 2008, at age 85 in Reading, Pennsylvania. Born in Marshall, Minnesota, in 1923, she earned a bachelor’s degree in music from the University of Minnesota and a master’s in organ performance from the University of Oregon–Eugene. She served as organist at First Congregational Church, Eugene, before moving to Pennsylvania in 1965. Brakel served as organist for West Chester United Methodist Church, West Chester, Pennsylvania, for 37 years until her retirement in 2002. During her years there, she continued organ studies with Harry Wilkinson and Vernon deTar. She is survived by a son, daughter, sister, brother, and three grandchildren.

N. Frederick Cool, long-time organ builder, died December 27 in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma, at the age of 80. He was born June 1, 1928, in Independence, Missouri, where a memorial service was held at the Stone Church, the same building where, as a small boy, he fell in love with the church and the church’s Pilcher organ. He married Beryl Romaine Lafferty in 1949 while at Graceland College in Lamoni, Iowa. They had seven children over the next eleven years, all of whom worked at one time for the organ building firm that he founded in 1953, Temple Organ Company.
Starting in Independence, the company was moved to Lamoni in 1958 and then to Burlington, Iowa in 1966, where six organs were built. The company was moved to St. Joseph, Missouri in 1975, where it has been ever since, now under the direction of oldest son David.
Early in his career, having apprenticed with the late Charles McManis, Cool eschewed the style of organ building prevalent in this country during the 1950s, opting for the more classical approach. Obtaining a contract for a large rebuild in the Episcopal church, then a cathedral, in Quincy, Illinois, he secured the consultation help of Robert Noehren and designed a 51-rank organ in 1955. It had, before being destroyed with the church in a recent lightning strike, 23 ranks of mixtures and seven reeds, including a horizontal trumpet.
Before his retirement in 1999, Cool had built 150 organs, including several digital instruments in conjunction with Classic Organ Works of Ontario, Canada, after he could no longer do intricate voicing work due to the onset of Parkinson’s disease. The company continues to operate in St. Joseph, based on the tonal concepts of a balanced organ, with the legacy of N. Frederick Cool’s determination to build church organs suitable for edification and musical uplift in divine worship.
—David Cool

Carol A. Griffin died September 14, 2008, at age 76 in San Jose, California. Born in French Camp, California, she majored in organ at San Jose State University. She was a church organist for 59 years, serving in various churches in the Bay Area, including First Christian Church, San Jose; Willow Vale Community Church, and Trinity Presbyterian Church. A member of the San Jose AGO chapter, Griffin earned the Colleague certificate in 1981. She was also a member of the Music Teachers Association of California and for 41 years held various offices for MTAC, including president and vice-president. She is survived by her husband Bill, a son, a daughter, six grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.

Alfred John Neumann died October 13, 2008, at age 79. Born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1928, he earned a bachelor’s degree from Davidson College in North Carolina, and a master’s from the University of Michigan. From 1958–94 he was organist-choir director at Christ Congregational Church, Silver Spring, Maryland, during which time he took the choir on 20 singing tours in the U.S., Canada, Hawaii, and Europe. Under his leadership, the choir premiered two of his sacred operas on NBC-TV in Washington, DC. During his tenure at Christ Church, Neumann produced and directed many musical works, and the choir recorded two commercial LPs on the Crest label. In 1976, he was coordinator and music director of the national convention of the United Church of Christ. During the summer months, he served as assistant to the director of the Brevard Music Center in North Carolina.

Wesley T. Selby, Jr. died July 3, 2008, at age 80. He was raised in Salisbury, Maryland and enlisted in the Army in 1946. He earned a bachelor’s degree in composition from the University of New Mexico and a master’s degree from the University of Colorado, where he studied with Everett Jay Hilty. He served two tenures each at the Cathedral of St. John and St. Paul Lutheran Church in Albuquerque, and was organist-choirmaster at the Church of St. Michael and All Angels. For four years he was minister of music at Montview Presbyterian Church in Denver, and he taught at the University of Colorado in Boulder. As professor of organ at the University of New Mexico, he taught organ, music theory, composition, and conducting. He directed the installation of the Holtkamp organ in Keller Hall and the Wicks organ in the Alumni Memorial Chapel. He served as dean of the Albuquerque AGO chapter, was coordinator for two regional conventions, and served as state chairman for New Mexico. He built a harpsichord, which he donated to UNM, and a small practice pipe organ for his home.

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Raymond J. Barnes, 73, founding dean of the Southern Nevada AGO Chapter, died suddenly of a heart attack the afternoon of May 21, after having played for the morning worship service. On April 30, 2006, the chapter presented him with an Honorary Lifetime Membership in the guild. Born in 1933 in Adrian, Michigan, he began piano lessons at age five with his aunt, Ella Kafer, later studying with Myria Fox, whose piano studio was on the campus of Adrian College, where he saw the college’s four-manual Hutchings-Votey organ. He entered Adrian College in 1951 and began organ study with James Houston Spencer, graduating in 1955.
Barnes’s career in music education included teaching in Pensacola, Florida; Biloxi, Mississippi; and in Las Vegas, Nevada, where he was influential in developing and implementing a music curriculum for the Clark County schools. His teaching career in Clark County, Nevada spanned 25 years, during which time he earned a master’s degree from University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
In addition to his activities in the AGO and in music education organizations, he was a member of the Fellowship of Methodist Musicians, and with his wife was active in the Swedish American Fraternal Organization, the VASA Order of America. He is survived by his wife Inga-Britt of Las Vegas and by two brothers. A memorial service was held on the campus of UNLV on June 11.
The Southern Nevada AGO Chapter has established the Raymond J. Barnes Memorial Scholarship Fund to assist young students interested in the organ with lesson scholarships, and to help underwrite attendance at Pipe Organ Encounters. Contributions to the fund may be sent to: Raymond J. Barnes Memorial Scholarship Fund, Joan Winter—Treasurer, HCR 38—Box 559, Las Vegas, NV 89124.

Charles M. Eve, 72, died of cancer at his residence on February 10. He was a retired assistant professor of music at the University of Louisiana at Monroe and organist at the First Presbyterian Church of Monroe, Louisiana. A graduate of Central High School in Pueblo, Colorado, he earned the bachelor of music and master of music degrees from University of Colorado, where he also did additional study. His teachers included Arthur Poister, Claire Coci, and Vernon DeTar. He served as an organist and chaplain’s assistant in the U.S. Army.
Before coming to Monroe, he taught at Temple Buell College and the University of Colorado, and served as organist and choir director at Christ Methodist Church in Denver. In 1956, he placed second in the AGO playing competition. While studying in New York City, he served as organist at All Angels Church, St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, and Interchurch Center.
After coming to NLU in Monroe, Louisiana, he served as organist at St. Paul’s United Methodist Church, Grace Episcopal Church, and the First Presbyterian Church. He had given recitals at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., New York’s Riverside and Trinity churches, and at the U.S. Air Force Academy. He was the former dean and founder of the Ouachita Valley AGO Chapter, a member of the American Musicological Society, and the National Association of Presbyterian Musicians.
Mr. Eve is survived by his sister and her husband, as well as by a nephew and two nieces, and a host of friends and former students. A memorial concert was held February 25 at the First Presbyterian Church in Monroe. A series of memorial concerts is planned.

Rolande Falcinelli died in Pau, France, on June 11, at the age of 86. She was one of the leading exponents of the modern French school of organists-improvisers-composers and taught organ and improvisation at the Paris Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique from 1954 to 1986. Among her pupils are some of the greatest French virtuosos and improvisers of our time.
A favorite disciple of Marcel Dupré, she was the most authorized performer of his works, as the composer himself asserted. She reached the highest level of virtuosic skill, as testified by her own Poèmes-études, the most difficult pieces ever written for the organ, which she played and recorded in the U.S.A. during her legendary 1950 tour.
As a composer, she leaves a catalog of 74 opus numbers that includes organ, piano and harpsichord works, chamber music, vocal music and orchestral works. Her writing is characterized by tormented chromatic harmonic progressions, by explorations of tone color, and by the new perspectives of extra-European music (she integrated Persian and Indian modes and rhythms into her works). She pursued and extended Marcel Dupré’s ideals, associating the organ with other instruments: she composed works for organ and violin, organ and violoncello, organ and viola, organ and two violas, organ and flute, organ and piano, organ and voice, organ and orchestra.
Today, her artistic legacy (as a performer, an improviser and a composer) is inspiring an awakening interest in her works, sustained by a progressive series of CDs and numerous publications. —Sylviane Falcinelli

A mass was held at Saint-Eustache Church in Paris, France, on June 30 in remembrance of Rolande Falcinelli. The titular organist Jean Guillou, who was one of her first disciples (he began to take private lessons from her in 1947), improvised with an unforgettable and moving intensity at the beginning and at the end of this ceremony. Philippe Brandeis (the last of her 65 students awarded the First Prize in Organ at the Paris Conservatory) interpreted her works: Offertory for the Feast of Christ the King (op. 38), Prayer to the Holy Spirit (op. 24, no. 4), and Antiphon of the Salve Regina (op. 43). Her colleague Jason Meyer, the American violinist from Boston, performed his own special arrangement for violin solo of the cadences and solos in her work for organ and violin, Song of Sorrow and Struggle (op. 53). Gregorian chants were sung by a men’s choir from the Paris Conservatory, directed by Louis-Marie Vigne. The Belgian Stéphane Detournay, a specialist of her works, also rendered homage to her high spiritual ideals and her constant devotion to her art.
—Carolyn Shuster Fournier
Paris, France

John Anthony Steppe lost a year-long battle with cancer at the age of 51 on October 14, 2005. He was a native of New Jersey, born in Jersey City on February 3, 1954. He studied voice at Westminster Choir College. A man of many talents, he was an artist, a gourmet cook, and a consummate vocalist. His rich bass/baritone voice was heard in many venues around south Florida, most notably in the church choirs of St. John the Evangelist, Lighthouse Point; St. Martin in the Fields, Pompano Beach; and finally at St. Gregory’s in Boca Raton. He sang with the Florida Philharmonic Chorus and was featured bass soloist in Handel’s Messiah in a community-wide production at First Presbyterian Church, Fort Lauderdale. But his true passion and dream was to be an organbuilder. The dream became a reality when he, Walter Guzowski, and Christopher Kane established Guzowski and Steppe Organ Builders, Inc., in 1983. His passion and love of the instrument was evident in the craftsmanship in every instrument he designed or enhanced. John’s graceful, lyric visual designs were inspirational. He was a master in woodworking as well. He is survived by his mother, Sonia Bobo, of Neptune, New Jersey. Innumerable friends will miss his exuberant personality, acutely wry sense of humor, and delight in all things musical. Memorials may be made to St. Gregory’s Music Ministry, 100 Northeast Mizner Boulevard, Boca Raton, FL 33429.
—Paul Aldridge

Henry VanSeters, curator of the organs at the United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, for 42 years, died in September 2005 in Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York. He began playing the organ at age 10, apprenticing in his teens and later becoming an organbuilder, technician and installer for M. P. Möller. He served in the U.S. Coast Guard in World War II, and after the war was appointed curator of organs at West Point.
He guided the rebuilding and expansion of the Cadet Chapel organ from 211 ranks to more than 334 ranks. In addition to the chapel organ, he maintained, tuned, and rebuilt the Post Chapel, Catholic Chapel, Old Cadet Chapel, and St. Martin’s Chapel organs all on the USMA post.
In addition to maintaining and rebuilding numerous organs in the Hudson River Valley, he built five pipe organs for various churches, including his home church, The Netherlands Reformed Congregation of Clifton, New Jersey. He was a frequent consultant to churches and attended conventions of the American Guild of Organists, American Institute of Organbuilders, and Associated Pipe Organ Builders of America.
Mr. VanSeters is survived by Teresa, his wife of 54 years, a son and daughter, granddaughters, and many friends. A memorial service was held at the Cadet Chapel with organists Lee Dettra and A. Robert Chapman.

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William Ernest Baker died August 31, 2007 in Tucson, Arizona. Born in 1938 in Denver, he had enlisted in the United States Air Force as an in-flight computer technician. During this time, he studied organ at the University of the Pacific, and later studied at the University of Colorado. While in Denver, he worked with Fred H. Meunier & Associates. Mr. Baker’s early work took place in California and Nevada; in 1963, he rebuilt the 1877 Johnson organ at St. Paul Episcopal Church in Sacramento. He relocated to New York City in 1968, serving as organist-choirmaster at St. Savior’s Roman Catholic Church in Brooklyn, where he further rebuilt and enlarged the 1911 Reuben Midmer & Sons organ. He eventually settled in Hatfield, Massachusetts, living on the top floor of the wooden-frame building that housed his shop. Mr. Baker would take on difficult projects, such as improving the actions for the slider windchests at St. Thomas Church in New York, and restoring the high-pressure Solo chests of the Skinner organ at Mt. Holyoke College following water damage. Upon retirement, Mr. Baker moved to Mexico. His remains were inurned October 29 at St. John’s Cathedral in Denver.

William Dinneen died July 26, 2007 in Greenville, Rhode Island. He was 91. Mr. Dinneen, a graduate of Harvard University, served as organist for over 60 years, including positions at the chapel of Brown University (where he taught) and First Baptist Church in America, both in Providence. He also directed the University Glee Club and the Rhode Island Civic Chorale, and served as keyboardist for the Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra and as music critic for The Providence Journal. A member of the Rhode Island AGO chapter, he served as dean in the 1950s, was a recitalist and accompanist for many Guild programs, and for years offered Sunday afternoon coaching sessions for groups of organists. He was awarded the chapter’s Anna Fiore-Smith Award in 2005. He is survived by Frances, his wife of 64 years, two sons, and two grandsons.

Noel E. Heinze, of Riceville, North Carolina, died on December 14, 2007, of a massive heart attack. He was 67. Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, he graduated from Michigan State University with a master’s degree in English and music. During the Viet Nam War, he served as a captain in the U.S. Army Adj. Corps. He worked in contact administration with various firms in Washington, D.C., and most recently with Palmer, Wahl in Weaverville.
He began playing the organ in church at age 11, while attending Cranbrook Academy in Michigan. He served as an organist while in the Army, and held church positions in Michigan, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New York, before moving to North Carolina. Most recently he served as organist at St. Giles Chapel, Deerfield Retirement Community in Asheville. A member of the American Guild of Organists and the Organ Historical Society, he performed in concerts with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra as well as at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., and at St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. Noel Heinze is survived by his wife of 37 years, Kathryn Heinze, a daughter, a sister, and many nieces and nephews.

Herbert A. Severtsen died at age 77 on October 1, 2007, in Spokane, Washington. Born March 4, 1930, he attended the New York Institute for Blind and Bard College, and received a master’s degree and professional diploma in music from Columbia University. He met his wife when she joined the choir at St. Peter’s Episcopal Church in New York City, where he was organist-choirmaster for 25 years. In Spokane, he was employed by the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, and the Unitarian Universalist Church, and by Davis & Hosch Music. He served as dean of the Spokane AGO chapter 1978–80 and was awarded a lifetime membership in 2004. He is survived by Billie Marie, his wife of 41 years, five children, and two grandchildren.

Craig Smith died November 14, 2007 in Boston. He was 60 years old. He was the founder and artistic director of Emmanuel Music, the resident ensemble at Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Boston. Over the years he built Emmanuel into a major musical center that presented works of Schütz, Handel, Schubert, Schumann, Brahms, Debussy, Ravel, and contemporary composers, especially John Harbison. Between 1970–77, Smith conducted the complete cycle of Bach cantatas, the first time all these works had been performed in America. Mr. Smith studied at Washington State University and the New England Conservatory. He collaborated with the stage director Peter Sellars on Mozart and Handel operas, and works by Bach, Weill, Gershwin, and Gilbert and Sullivan; the productions were seen in both American and European venues, and on DVD. Mr. Smith was principal conductor of the Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie in Brussels from 1988–91 and had taught at the Juilliard School, MIT, the New England Conservatory, Pepperdine University, and the Tanglewood Music Center.

James Gary Stuart, age 72 and formerly of Lake Bluff, Illinois and Santa Fe, New Mexico, died on January 17, from complications due to cancer. He was preceded in death by his wife Nancy Anderson Stuart, an accomplished singer and music teacher, in 2006. Gary is survived by a sister, a brother, nieces, a grandniece, and a grandnephew. Born on January 28, 1935 in Jacksonville, Illinois, he earned B.Mus. and M.M. degrees from Northwestern University and began a career as a church organist-choirmaster for several churches on the North Shore of Chicago, including St. James the Less (Episcopal) in Northfield, and Church of the Holy Spirit (Episcopal) in Lake Forest, before beginning a music ministry at the Church of the Holy Comforter (Episcopal) in Kenilworth in 1990.
Gary married Nancy Elizabeth Stuart on March 29, 1970 in Lake Forest, Illinois. Together Nancy and Gary spent a lifetime devoted “first and foremost” to church and choral music. In addition to private teaching, he had also served as accompanist for the Chicago Symphony Chorus, the North Shore Choral Society, and the Lake Forest Camerata Singers. Mr. Stuart led two singing tours to England and was the visiting accompanist for a third. He retired as director of music at the Church of the Holy Comforter in Kenilworth in 2002 after establishing a music ministry of quality music and an Evensong series that included performances of Requiem settings by Duruflé, Fauré, and Rutter, and Masses by Gounod and Schubert. A celebration of the Holy Eucharist in thanksgiving for his life was celebrated at the Church of the Holy Comforter on January 23. A choir composed of current and former choir members and colleagues led by current music director Derek E. Nickels sang anthems by Lutkin, Mozart, and Vaughan Williams. The family asks that donations be made to the American Cancer Society, 820 Davis Street, Evanston, IL 60201.
—Derek E. Nickels

Susanne L. Taylor died September 10, 2007, in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, at the age of 89. A graduate of Smith College, Mrs. Taylor also attended the College of Charleston. She served as assistant organist at St. Philip’s Episcopal Church in Charleston, and in Mount Pleasant served as organist at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church and Christ Episcopal Church, and as junior choir director at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. She also spearheaded the restoration of the Henry Erben organ at the Huguenot Church in Charleston. A member of the Charleston AGO chapter, Mrs. Taylor served as dean from 1965–67. Preceded in death by her husband, Francis Bergh Taylor, she is survived by her four children and eight grandchildren.

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