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Ovid Young dead at 74

Ovid Young, artist-in-residence at Olivet Nazarene University, Bourbonnais, Illinois, passed away August 24 at the age of 74. A 1962 graduate of Olivet Nazarene, he spent his career as a member of the school’s faculty as pianist, organist, composer, and conductor. Appearances in performances were common throughout the United States, as well as in England, Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, Japan, South Korea, Denmark, Canada, India, and the Caribbean.

He performed on the organ in the United States and Europe, and played an integral role in acquiring the Fratelli Ruffatti pipe organ for Olivet’s Centennial Chapel. Music director of the Kankakee Valley Symphony Orchestra from 1974 to 1984, he would also direct ensembles such as the English Chamber Orchestra, English Symphony Orchestra, Seoul (Korea) Philharmonic, Danish Radio Symphony, Aarhus (Denmark) Symphony, Florida Philharmonic, and the symphonies of Denver, Phoenix, and Nashville. His numerous compositions and arrangements have been published by several American publishing houses. He composed scores for several feature-length movies, and was one half of the piano duo, Nielson & Young.

Ovid Young is survived by his wife, Laura (Rees), and two sons, Erik and his wife, Heather, and Kirk.

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Ovid Young, artist-in-residence at Olivet Nazarene University, Bourbonnais, Illinois, passed away August 24 at the age of 74. A 1962 graduate of Olivet Nazarene, he spent his career as a member of the school’s faculty as pianist, organist, composer, and conductor. Appearances in performances were common throughout the United States, as well as in England, Germany, Austria, France, Switzerland, the Czech Republic, Japan, South Korea, Denmark, Canada, India, and the Caribbean. He performed on the organ in the United States and Europe, and played an integral role in acquiring the Fratelli Ruffatti pipe organ for Olivet’s Centennial Chapel. Music director of the Kankakee Valley Symphony Orchestra from 1974 to 1984, he would also direct ensembles such as the English Chamber Orchestra, English Symphony Orchestra, Seoul (Korea) Philharmonic, Danish Radio Symphony, Aarhus (Denmark) Symphony, Florida Philharmonic, and the symphonies of Denver, Phoenix, and Nashville. His numerous compositions and arrangements have been published by several American publishing houses. He composed scores for several feature-length movies, and was one half of the piano duo, Nielson & Young.

Ovid Young is survived by his wife, Laura (Rees), and two sons, Erik and his wife, Heather, and Kirk.

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The French organist and musicologist Jean Bonfils died on November 26, 2007 in Rennes (Ille-et-Vilaine) at the age of 86. His funeral was celebrated on November 29 at the Notre-Dame Church in Vitré and a memorial mass was held in his honor at La Trinité Church in Paris on February 16, 2008.
Born in Saint-Etienne (Loire) on April 21, 1921, Jean Bonfils studied at the Paris Conservatory and received first prize in organ in 1949 in Marcel Dupré’s class, a second prize in composition in Jean Rivier’s class in 1948, and a first medal in analysis in Olivier Messiaen’s class in 1950.
Jean Bonfils substituted for Olivier Messiaen at La Trinité Church in Paris for over forty years (from 1950 to 1992), then for Naji Hakim. According to Denis Havard de la Montagne (http://www.musimem.com/BonfilsJean.htm), he also played the Merklin organ at the Grande Synagogue in Paris, rue de la Victoire, for over thirty years (succeeding Henriette Roger in 1953), and in 1964 he was also named titular of the Cavaillé-Coll/Mutin organ at Saint-Ignace (succeeding Paule Piédelièvre, remaining until 1975). After assisting Jean Langlais as organ professor at the Schola Cantorum, he taught organ there from 1973 to 1992.
He was editor of numerous liturgical journals and musical publications, including the collection he co-directed with Gaston Litaize, L’Organiste liturgique, Heinrich Schütz’s works for choir, and an organ method he wrote with Noëllie Pierront (Nouvelle méthode de Clavier, four volumes, 1960–68, and in 1962 a two-volume Nouvelle méthode d’orgue), which has formed an entire generation of organists, notably Olivier Latry. Seuil Editions published his reconstitutions of Goudimel’s psalms and motets. Jean Bonfils edited numerous 16th- and 17th-century French organ compositions, including Jacques Boyvin’s First and Second Organ Books as well as Deo Gloria, collections of liturgical organ music he prepared with Noëllie Pierront from 1962 to 1968.
A musicologist, Jean Bonfils wrote numerous articles, notably in L’Orgue: on the Christmas carols of Pierre and Jean-François Dandrieu (no. 83, pp. 48–54) and on Olivier Messiaen (1992, no. 224, pp. 12–14); in Recherches sur la musique française classique edited by Picard: on the instrumental fantasies of Eustache Du Caurroy (in 1961–62) and on Jehan Titelouze’s organ works (1965), as well as numerous biographical notices on French musicians for Die Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart (Bärenreiter) and for Corliss Arnold’s Organ Literature: A Comprehensive Survey (Scarecrow Press).
Jean Bonfils composed an organ piece, Communion on “Beata Viscera,” published in L’Organiste liturgique (Schola Cantorum). Jean Langlais dedicated to him his Trois Méditations sur la Sainte-Trinité, op. 129 (Philippo, 1962).
At La Trinité Church, I had the joy of working with him from 1989 to 1997. Like Olivier Messiaen, Jean Bonfils was very discreet, modest and cordial, and was an excellent musician. He played an eclectic repertory and carefully chose the pieces he played during the church services, strictly in keeping with their specific liturgical functions; an excellent musicologist as well, he was an immense inspiration to me and countless other musicians and students. In addition, he generously gave numerous manuscripts, musical scores and letters to the music department at the Bibliothèque nationale and to the library at the Conservatory in Boulogne-Billancourt.
—Carolyn Shuster Fournier
Titular of the A. Cavaillé-Coll Choir Organ at La Trinité Church in Paris

Robert N. Cavarra died February 8 in Denver, Colorado after complications from kidney failure. He was for many years professor of music at Colorado State University and a leading participant in the revival of the classical organ tradition in North America.
Under Cavarra’s leadership, three examples of this movement were realized in Fort Collins: the Casavant Frères organ at CSU (1969), the Lawrence Phelps opus 1 organ at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church (1973), and the Danish Marcussen and Son organ at First United Methodist Church (1987). He brought together artists from throughout the world for master classes and recitals on these instruments, including E. Power Biggs, Marie-Claire Alain, Luigi Tagliavini, Gillian Weir, Lionel Rogg, Bernard Lagacé, and Anton Heiller. He taught from 1963 until 2000 on the faculty of CSU’s Department of Music, Theater and Dance. At his death, he was Professor Emeritus of Music. As a student of both philosophy and music, Cavarra also served as organist for the North American College.
Robert Nicholas Cavarra was born on February 23, 1934, in Denver. His musical training began in childhood, and by age 12 he was performing publicly. As a recitalist, Cavarra toured widely, including concerts in Denmark, Sweden, France, England, Canada, Mexico and the United States. He and his wife Barbara founded an international non-profit foundation, “Pro Organo Pleno XXI.” As a recording artist, he released CDs through the Musical Heritage Society, and he was a major figure in the “Christmas at CSU” series of recordings. He was also a published composer and solo and ensemble harpsichordist.
In addition to the classical organ, Cavarra was responsible for the installation of a Wurlitzer theatre organ at CSU, and sponsored numerous workshops on theatre organ music. He was organist at St. Joseph and St. Pius X Roman Catholic Churches and St. Barnabas Episcopal Church in Denver, and St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, and the First United Methodist Church in Fort Collins. He also taught music at Loretto Heights College and St. Thomas Theological Seminary in Denver, as well as at the University of Wyoming. Cavarra is survived by his wife Barbara, a daughter, three sons, and five grandchildren.

Jack Hennigan died November 11, 2007 in Pelham Manor, New York, at the age of 64. Born in Scranton, Pennsylvania, he earned a bachelor of music degree at Juilliard, having studied organ with Vernon deTar. Further studies were in Cologne, Germany, with Michael Schneider (organ) and Gunther Ludwig (organ). He earned master’s and doctoral degrees from Yale, studying organ with Charles Krigbaum and piano with Donald Currier. He won international organ competitions in Bruges, Belgium, and Worcester, Massachusetts. Hennigan served as organist-choirmaster at St. Matthews Church, Wilton, Connecticut, and the Church of Christ the Redeemer (Episcopal) in Pelham Manor, New York. He wrote a monthly column for The American Organist dealing with fingering, hand coordination, and performance anxiety, and lectured to AGO groups on these topics. He was also known as a gourmet cook, traveling and studying food preparation in France. Jack Hennigan is survived by his partner, Martin Nash, of Pelham Manor.

Winston A. Johnson died February 4. He was 92. Born in China in 1915 to Covenant missionaries, he first studied piano with his mother. His family returned to the U.S. in 1927, eventually settling in Illinois. Johnson began organ study at age 13 and by age 16 held his first church organist position. He earned bachelor and master of music degrees from the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago, and the master of sacred music from Union Theological Seminary in New York City. His teachers included Clarence Dickinson, Marcel Dupré, Hugh Porter, and Leo Sowerby. He served in the U.S. Army from 1942–46 as a chaplain’s assistant, playing for Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish services.
Winston Johnson served as organist and choir director for over 60 years, including at University Presbyterian Church in Seattle for 32 years. Active in the American Guild of Organists, he was one of twelve organists who studied with Sowerby in Chicago for the Associate certificate; he was the only candidate who passed the two-day examination that year. Johnson held several offices with the Seattle AGO chapter, including as dean. He also played for two AGO regional conventions, and had performed with the Seattle Symphony Orchestra and the Seattle Opera. He taught at North Park College and Trinity Bible Institute in Chicago, and at Simpson Bible Institute and Seattle Pacific University in Seattle, and taught privately. He gave his last piano lesson three days before his death. Winston Johnson is survived by Irma, his wife of nearly 50 years, his sister, two sisters-in-law and a brother-in-law, and nieces and nephews.

Robert V. McGuire died November 12, 2007, in Haines City, Florida, at the age of 79. Born and raised in Chicago, his doctoral dissertation from the University of Chicago dealt with the use of the augmented second in Bach’s Passions and other choral works. Dr. McGuire served as organist-choirmaster at churches in Illinois and in Florida; his last position was at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Haines City, retiring in 2002. He served on the boards of the Messiah Association of Polk County and the Bach Festival of Central Florida, for which he authored program notes for many years. A lifelong member of the AGO, he served as dean of the Lakeland Area (Florida) chapter. Robert McGuire is survived by many cousins, nieces, nephews, and his friend Jeanette Stokes.

Edward Lamond Nobles, age 72, died January 2 in Meridian, Mississippi. Born in Meridian, he first studied piano with an aunt; he earned a bachelor of music degree at Jackson State College (now Jackson State University) in 1958, and a master of music education degree from Columbia University in New York City in 1968. Nobles taught music for eight years in Mississippi and for 18 years in Michigan; he also served as organist-choir director in various churches in those two states. He returned to Mississippi in 1984 and served as organist at St. Patrick Catholic Church of Meridian for over 20 years. Nobles was a member of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Music Fraternity and the AGO, and was active in the Jackson, Mississippi chapter. He is survived by several cousins and many friends.

Glenn Edward Pride, 57, died suddenly February 26 at his residence on St. Simons Island, Georgia. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, he graduated from Peabody Demonstration School in Nashville and from Hope College in Holland, Michigan, majoring in organ performance. His graduate degree in sacred music was completed at Southern Methodist University, Perkins School of Theology, in Dallas, Texas. Mr. Pride had served St. Simons Presbyterian Church as director of music and organist since 2000. During his 34-year music career, he also served First Presbyterian Church of Dalton, Georgia; First Presbyterian Church of Bartlesville, Oklahoma; First Presbyterian Church of Jonesboro, Georgia; and the First Presbyterian Church of Douglasville, Georgia. He was a member of Rotary International and the American Guild of Organists. He was also artistic director of the Island Concert Association of St. Simons Island.

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William P. “Bill” Brown died February 2 at his home in Phoenix, Arizona. Born in Battle Creek in 1925 and raised in Columbus, he attended New Mexico Military Institute for high school and college, where he was known as “WP,” and went to Japan with the Army during World War II. Upon his return, he took his MBA at Wharton, then began a career in real estate development. Over the years, he served on the Phoenix Planning Commission, held many offices for the Downtown YMCA and Midtown Rotary, and was active in the Phoenix Ski Club and NMMI and UPenn alumni groups.
Brown may best be known as the owner of the Organ Stop Pizza restaurants, and was an accomplished pianist and theatre organist in his own right. With his restaurants, he entertained vast numbers of people, brought the theatre organ and its music into the vernacular, launched the careers of many artists, and inspired and helped others to create similar restaurants across the country. He was a leader and active participant in all the major theatre organ organizations and also supported the installation of dozens of organs in the valley and across the country, including Phoenix’s Orpheum Theatre. Memorial services were held at Trinity Episcopal Cathedral, Phoenix, February 10. He is survived by his two sons, daughter, and five grandchildren.

Michael Fleming died January 10 in Surrey, England. Former Warden of the Royal School of Church Music, he was director of music at St. Alban’s, Holborn 1980–98, and had served at several well-known London churches.
Fleming was born April 8, 1928 in Oxford, where his father, Guy Fleming, was curate at the Anglo-Catholic St. Mary Magdalen’s. His grandfather, Arthur Fleming, was Precentor of Gloucester Cathedral and headmaster of the cathedral school. Michael Fleming started organ lessons at age 12 at St. Austell in Cornwall. After National Service he studied music at Durham University, was organist of St. Oswald’s, and had organ lessons with Francis Jackson. Fleming served as organist and choirmaster at St. Giles, Cambridge, and continued organ lessons with George Guest. During his two years as organist of Chingford Church in Essex, he studied with Harold Darke. In 1958 he was appointed director of music at All Saints Margaret Street in London, where he taught in its choir school. A decade later, he moved to Croydon Parish Church and became a full-time tutor at nearby Addington Palace, then home of the Royal School of Church Music. Ten years later, he moved to St. Mary’s, Primrose Hill. In 1980, Fleming was apppointed director of music at St. Alban’s, Holborn.
After retirement from the RSCM in 1993, he continued on the governing bodies of both the English Hymnal Company and the Church Music Society. In 1998, he left Holborn to become director of music at St Michael’s in Croydon. His numerous arrangements for hymns include settings with trumpets and drums. In 1999 he was awarded an MA Lambeth degree “in recognition of his contribution to church music and liturgy.”

Hiroshi Tsuji, Japan’s pioneer organbuilder, passed away on December 22, 2005, at the age of 72, in Shirakawa. He is survived by his wife, Toshiko, a daughter, Megumi Wolter, who presently lives in Berlin, Germany, and three grandchildren. Born in Aichi-ken in 1933, Tsuji showed an early interest in music, and later attended Geijutsu Daigaku (“Gei Dai”) music school in Tokyo, studying organ and graduating in 1958. While there he realized that tinkering with the school’s old organ interested him as much as playing it, and shortly afterward came to the United States, where he apprenticed with the Schlicker Organ Co. in Buffalo 1960–1963. He then went to Holland, where he apprenticed for another year with D. A. Flentrop, studied some of the historic organs, and became convinced of the importance of classical voicing and tracker action.
Returning to Japan in 1964, he established a small workshop in a Tokyo suburb, where he built a few small organs in the “neo-classic” style. Although in this period organs were already being imported to Japan, mostly from Germany, Tsuji was the first native Japanese craftsman to engage full-time in organ-building. In 1971 he returned briefly to Europe to continue his study of historic organs, and shortly afterward moved to the mountain town of Shirakawa, where he established a workshop in a spacious former schoolhouse. By this time he was securing some larger contracts and had several people working for him, some of whom later established workshops of their own.
Tsuji early made a commitment to basing his instruments on historic European models, at first only in the North German style. Later, in the early 1980s, encouraged by Umberto Pineschi and Yuko Hayashi, he went to Italy and became intrigued with the sound of historic organs in Tuscany. In 1982 he restored a small organ of 1762 in Pistoia, and also made a replica of it, which was displayed at the Boston Early Music Festival and is now in Canada. Another replica, of a larger 1755 organ by the Pistoian builder Tronci, was later built for a museum in Gifu, Japan. In 1984 he restored the 1745 Tronci organ in the church of San Filippo in Pistoia, for which he was made an honorary citizen of the city. One of the Italian-style organs that Tsuji had built he kept in his workshop, and at his suggestion the town of Shirakawa has for the past 20 years sponsored an annual Academy of Italian Organ Music there, which has brought several distinguished teachers to Japan. One of the results of this collaboration is that Shirakawa and Pistoia have become “sister cities,” participating in cultural exchange.
While several subsequent organs continued to reflect the North German style, by the late 1980s and early 1990s Tsuji was building some larger organs based on 18th-century Italian principles, culminating in his last instrument for the Community Hall in his home town of Shirakawa, completed in 2005. In this period too he spent some time in Spain, where he restored the historic Renaissance organ in Salamanca Cathedral, a large one-manual instrument. In 1994 he built a sizable organ in the Spanish style for Salamanca Hall in Gifu, the third manual of which is tonally a replica of the Salamanca Cathedral organ. However, most subsequent Tsuji organs were in either the German or the Italian style. Because most Christian churches in Japan are quite small, many of the organs built for them by Tsuji were likewise small, some with only three or four stops and either a coupled pedal or no pedal at all. Some of his larger church organs included those in the Tokyo Lutheran Center (II/15, 1972), St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Tokyo (II/22, 1976), the chapel of the Salesian Boys Home (II/16, 1989), and the Protestant Church in Kobe (II/24, 2001). Most of Tsuji’s larger organs were built for schools and concert halls. These included the Tamagawa School (II/18, 1978), Nagoya Gakuin University (II/14, 1984), Seinann Gakuin University (III/33, 1987), Salamanca Hall, Gifu (III/45, 1994/9), Aoyama Gakuin, Shibuya (II/14, 1994), and Community Hall, Shirakawa (II/21, 2005). Tsuji also made a number of small residence and practice organs, contributing to a total number of 81 organs built between 1964 and 2005. The workmanship of Tsuji’s instruments, regardless of size, was impeccable, the sound refined and balanced, and the casework well-proportioned and of handsome classical design. It is to be regretted that the only examples of his work to be exported to the American continent are a small house organ and a 3-stop continuo organ, both in Canada. —Barbara Owen

Grady W. Wilson, a longtime resident of Columbus, Ohio, formerly of New York City, died January 15 at Dublin Retirement Village. He was 75. Born July 16, 1930, Wilson received his bachelor’s degree from the University of Alabama, Master of Music from Florida State University, and Doctor of Musical Arts in organ from the University of Michigan. Dr. Wilson retired as professor of music at the State College of Jersey City (now Jersey City University) in 1993. He most recently served as organist at Trinity United Methodist Church in Marble Cliff, having previously served churches in New York and New Jersey. Wilson performed as a pianist and organist, both as soloist and with his identical twin brother, the late Dr. Gordon Wilson. The Wilson brothers toured the United States and Europe performing original duets for organ (two performers at one console), releasing a recording of these works in 1977. A memorial service was held February 2 at Trinity United Methodist Church, Columbus, Ohio.

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Wilbur R. Dodge, 83, died November 20, 2017, in Binghamton, New York, an engineer, physicist, professional photographer, English country dancer, organist, organbuilder, and organ technician. He graduated from Clarkson University and Harpur College (now Binghamton University) with degrees in electrical engineering and physics and followed in his father’s footsteps working at Ansco Film Company.  With Norman Smith, he started their company, R D & D before he moved on to Link Aviation where he worked on simulators for the Gemini and Apollo missions.

Dodge was a member of the choir and guest organist for various churches in the community including Trinity Memorial and Christ Churches. He also maintained and tuned pipe organs in churches throughout the region. He was dean of the Binghamton Chapter of the American Guild of Organists, 1999–2001. 

Wilbur R. Dodge is survived by his partner, Anneliese Heurich; children: Glenn Burch (Bellefonte, Pennsylvania), Michael and Tammy Burch (Deland, Florida), Barbara Burch (Paisley, Florida), and Laura Appleton (Binghamton); several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. A memorial service was held at Christ Episcopal Church in Binghamton on January 20.

 

Mark Coan Jones died December 24, 2017. Born February 25, 1957, in Asheville, North Carolina, he studied organ with Marilyn Keiser and with Donna Robertson at nearby Mars Hill College. For the past 22 years, Jones was director of music and organist for The Pink Church (First Presbyterian Church), Pompano Beach, Florida. He previously served St. Nicholas Episcopal Church, Pompano Beach; First Presbyterian Church, Newton, North Carolina; and Trinity Episcopal Church, Asheville.

Jones appeared with the Florida Philharmonic, New World Symphony, Lynn University Conservatory Orchestra, Young Artists Chamber Orchestra, Palm Beach Atlantic Symphony, and Miami Bach Society, and in collaborations with chamber groups and area choruses, including the Nova Singers, Florida Philharmonic Chorus, Master Chorale of South Florida, Masterworks Chorus of the Palm Beaches, Fort Lauderdale Christian Chorale, and Gay Men’s Chorus of South Florida. He arranged music for organ and brass and performed with the Dallas Brass, Avatar Brass, Empire Brass, Lynn Conservatory Brass, and Eastman Brass. He performed extensively across Europe, Scandinavia, and Russia, in collaborations and solo recitals. 

Jones’s organ compositions have been performed in venues across the United States and in Europe, and have been broadcast nationally. His Three Lenten Hymn Meditations, Trumpet Tune in D, and Lenten Hymntunes have been recorded and performed by various organists.

From 2006 through 2014, Mark was principal accompanist for the von Trapp Children, the great-grandchildren of the singing family made famous by the Rodgers & Hammerstein movie The Sound of Music. His solo appearances and concerts with the von Trapps included performances around the world.

Mark Coan Jones is survived by his parents Hubert Mack and Shirley Williams Jones of Asheville, his sister Suzanne Jones Hamel and husband Richard Anson Hamel of Covington, Kentucky, and his partner Hilarion (Kiko) Suarez Moreno of Deerfield Beach, Florida.

 

Yuko Hayashi died January 7 in Salem, New Hampshire, at the age of 88. She was born in Hiratsuka, Japan, on November 2, 1929. For more than 40 years she was professor of organ at the New England Conservatory and department chair for 30 years. As a performer, she concertized extensively on three continents—Asia, North America, and Europe—giving recitals and masterclasses in Japan, South Korea, the United States, Holland, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Switzerland, Denmark, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. She was the recipient of the coveted Arion Award from the Cambridge Society for Early Music as an “outstanding performer and master teacher of the historical organ.” She was also awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award from the New England Conservatory.

Hayashi graduated with a degree in organ performance from Tokyo University of the Arts in 1948 and for five years was organist for the symphony orchestra of NHK, the Japanese national broadcasting company. She came to the United States in 1953 on scholarship, sponsored by Philanthropic Educational Organization and studied for one year at Cottey College in Nevada, Missouri. She then transferred to the New England Conservatory in Boston where she was awarded three degrees in organ performance: Bachelor of Music, Master of Music, and Artist Diploma. In 1960 she began teaching at the conservatory and was appointed chair of the department in 1969 by then president Gunther Schuller. Her primary teachers were George Faxon, Donald Willing, Anton Heiller, and Gustav Leonhardt (harpsichord).

Her frequent travels to Europe began in 1966 when she went to the Haarlem Organ Academy in the Netherlands and began life-long associations with Anton Heiller, Luigi Tagliavini, and Marie-Claire Alain. In 1971, she studied with Michel Chapuis in France and was introduced to many historic organs in North Germany and Holland by Harald Vogel and Klaas Bolt. This was the beginning of many exchanges of concerts and masterclasses across the Atlantic Ocean between Boston and Europe. It was during this time that Hayashi became organist of Old West Church in Boston, performing on a new mechanical-action organ built by Charles B. Fisk. She served as organist there for nearly 40 years and was the founder and executive director of the Old West Organ Society until her retirement in 2010.

Beginning in 1970, Hayashi crossed the Pacific Ocean yearly to give recitals and masterclasses in Japan. With Italian organist Umberto Pineschi and the assistance of Japanese organ builder Hiroshi Tsuji and his wife Toshiko Tsuji, she founded the Italian Organ Academy in Shirakawa. She was influential in persuading organ committees from universities, churches, and concert halls to commission mechanical-action organs from organbuilders from around the world. Most noteworthy are the instruments for International Christian University (Rieger), Toyota City Concert Hall (Brombaugh), Minato Mirai Concert Hall, Yokohama (C. B. Fisk, Inc.), and Ferris University, Yokohama (Taylor & Boody, Noack Organ Company, and J. F. Nordlie Pipe Organ Company organs).

In 1989, Yuko Hayashi took a leave of absence from the New England Conservatory to accept a position as professor of organ at Ferris University, Yokohama. She taught there for six years before returning to Boston. She also became titular organist at St. Luke’s International Hospital Chapel, which houses an organ built by Marc Garnier of France. She was responsible for relocating a historic 1889 organ built by Hook & Hastings to St. Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral in Yokohama where her father served as priest for many years.

Yuko Hayashi is survived by two brothers, Makoto Hayashi and Satoru Hayashi, and several nieces and nephews, all residing in Japan. A memorial service for Yuko Hayashi will be held at Christ Church, Andover, Massachusetts, April 28, at 11:00 a.m. Memorial contributions may be directed to: Old West Organ Society, c/o Jeffrey Mead, Treasurer, 72 Trenton Street, Melrose, Massachusetts 02176;  St. Andrew’s Cathedral, 14-57 Mitsuzawa-shimo-cho, Kanagawa-ku, Yokohama City, Kanagawa, 221-0852, Japan; or St. Luke’s International Hospital Chapel, c/o Organ Committee, 9-1 Akashi-cho, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, 140-8560, Japan.

 

Pierre Pincemaille, 61, died, January 12, an international concert organist, church organist, music professor, and composer. Born in Paris, France, December 8, 1956, Pincemaille was awarded five first prizes at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris (harmony, counterpoint, fugue, organ interpretation, and organ improvisation) and won five international improvisation competitions: Lyon (1978), Beauvais (1987), Strasbourg (1989), Montbrison (1989), and Chartres (1990).

In 1987, Pierre Pincemaille was appointed titular organist of the prestigious 1841 Cavaillé-Coll at the Gothic Saint-Denis Cathedral-Basilica. He loved accompanying beautiful liturgy there, amidst the tombs of the Kings of France. Highly inspired by Pierre Cochereau, Pincemaille founded a concert series there, from 1989 to 1994. For his 30th anniversary there, he performed his last concert on November 5, 2017, programming choral works he cherished, conducted by Pierre Calmelet: Louis Vierne’s Messe Solennelle and three of his own recently composed vocal motets (to be published), as well as J. S.
Bach’s Pièce d’Orgue, BWV 572, symbolizing for him the three periods of life.

Pierre Pincemaille also performed with orchestras under the direction of conductors such as Mstislav Rostropovitch, Myung-Whun Chung, Riccardo Muti, Charles Dutoit, and John Nelson. His recordings include the complete organ works of Maurice Duruflé and César Franck, Charles-Marie Widor’s ten symphonies, selected pieces by Jehan Alain, Pierre Cochereau, Olivier Messiaen, and Louis Vierne, his own improvisations and transcriptions of Stravinsky’s The Firebird and Petrushka, as well as works with orchestra by Camille Saint-Saëns, Hector Berlioz, Joseph Jongen, and Aaron Copland. Several of Pierre Pincemaille’s compositions were published: Prologue et Noël varié [Prologue and Variations on a Noel] (Sampzon, Delatour France, 2007), a 4-voice a cappella Ave Maria (Lyon, À Coeur Joie, 2013), and En Louisiane for trombone and piano (Delatour France, 2017).

Recently, Pierre Pincemaille taught counterpoint at the Conservatoire National Supérieur de Musique de Paris, harmony at the Conservatory in Saint-Germain-en-Laye, and organ improvisation at the Conservatory in Saint-Maur-des-Fossés for the past 17 years. For the past 14 years, he formed a generation of French and foreign organ improvisers, many who have won prizes in international competitions: among them, six Parisian organists: David Cassan (at the Oratoire du Louvre), Thomas Lacôte (La Trinité), Samuel Liégeon (St.-Pierre-du-Chaillot), Hampus Lindwall (St.-Esprit), Baptiste-Florian Marle-Ouvrard (St.-Eustache), and Olivier Périn (St.-Paul-St.-Louis).

Among his honors and distinctions, Pierre Pincemaille was a Knight in the following three orders: the Academic Palms, Arts and Letters, and St. Gregory the Great. 

Pierre Pincemaille is survived by his wife, Anne-France, and their three children, Claire, Marc, and Éric.

—Carolyn Shuster Fournier, Paris, France

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Christopher Hogwood—English conductor, musicologist, and harpsichordist—died September 24 at his home in Cambridge, England. He was 73. Born in Nottingham, England, on September 10, 1941, he received piano lessons as a child and enrolled at Cambridge University, where he switched from studying Greek and Latin to music, and went on to pursue keyboard studies with such talents as Rafael Puyana, Mary Potts, and Gustav Leonhardt.

Early in his career, he performed on the harpsichord with the Academy of Saint Martin-in-the-Fields and was a founder, with David Munrow, of the Early Music Consort of London. He founded the Academy of Ancient Music in 1973, with help from the Decca recording label, and created approximately 200 albums with its musicians.

Hogwood stepped down as the ensemble’s music director in 2006 and assumed the title of emeritus director. Even when he was leading the Academy of Ancient Music, he found time to appear with other ensembles, landing jobs as principal guest conductor with groups in Europe and the U.S., including a long association with the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra.

His conducting projects were closely connected to his research and editing work. He was in the process of a completing a new edition of Mendelssohn’s orchestral works for Bärenreiter and sat on the board of the Martinů Complete Edition and the C.P.E. Bach Complete Works Edition. In 2010, he launched his latest project as general editor of the new Geminiani Opera Omnia for Ut Orpheus Edizioni in Bologna.
He wrote extensively on George Frideric Handel and gave lectures as well as master classes in Europe. As a conductor, Hogwood received the most acclaim for his renditions of well-known Baroque pieces, particularly Handel’s Messiah and Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons. He sometimes made forays into 19th and early 20th-century music, and led performances of music by Schubert, Stravinsky, and Britten.

Hogwood was on the music faculty at Cambridge for many years and recently served as a professor of music at Gresham College in London. He was named a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in 1982 and a Commander of the British Empire in 1989.

Christopher Hogwood is survived by his sisters, Frances, Kate, and Charlotte, and his brother, Jeremy.

 

Carl B. Staplin died July 12 in Des Moines, Iowa, at the age of 79. Professor emeritus of organ and church music and former chair for the keyboard music department at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, Staplin was also minister of music and organist emeritus at First Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), Des Moines. He served as a member of the faculty at the University of Evansville, Evansville, Indiana, from 1963 to 1967.

Born December 5, 1934, Carl Staplin was a choirboy and acolyte at St. Paul’s Cathedral, Buffalo, New York. He received organ training with Roberta Bitgood, followed by four years of study under Arthur A. Poister at Syracuse University. His private composition study was with Ernst Bacon. Following military service with the United States Army as the chaplain’s assistant in Frankfurt, Germany, Staplin studied at the Yale University School of Music, under the guidance of Charles Krigbaum and Finn Viderø; he earned his master’s degree in 1963. Private composition study was pursued with Richard Donovan. 

Appointed to the music faculty at the University of Evansville, he took a leave of absence to further his scholarly pursuits in 1965, and returned to graduate studies at Washington University, St. Louis, where he received an appointment as a graduate research fellow and received Phi Beta Kappa Honors while earning his Ph.D. in performance practice, following which were studies in organ performance and musicology with Anton Heiller, Howard Kelsey, and Paul A. Pisk. He received coaching in improvisation in Paris, France, during a 1984 sabbatical with Jean Guillou and premiered Guillou’s La Chapelle des Abîmes. His 1997 recording of Bach’s Clavierübung III was performed with the Chancel Choir of Faith Lutheran Church (Eric Knapp, conductor) on a Dobson mechanical-action organ (Opus 61) at Faith Church, Clive, Iowa, and was released by Calcante Recordings Ltd.  An earlier recording of other Bach works (1975) was made on a Holtkamp tracker instrument (First United Methodist Church, Perry, Iowa), and selections from both recordings have been heard on Pipedreams.

On a 1972 sabbatical, Staplin resided in Paris, France, where he studied with Marie-Claire Alain and André Marchal, studying French organ literature. While working in the Washington University library as part of his 1991 sabbatical research, he located a previously unidentified manuscript composed by J.S. Bach. In 1999, he received coaching by Harold Vogel while surveying Baroque-era German instruments. While in Europe he traveled extensively and recorded more than 35 organs in seven countries. He studied the English choir tradition in a number of English cathedrals and completed a series of five recitals devoted to Bach’s organ masterpieces, a total of 44 works. These recitals were performed in Des Moines, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Freeport, Illinois, and Perry, Iowa.

Staplin’s publications include his doctoral dissertation on the chorale preludes of J.S. Bach, and more than 20 organ, choral, and instrumental compositions released by eight national publishing firms. He presented over 200 concerts and workshops throughout the United States and Europe, appearing at conventions of the American Guild of Organists, and the Music Teachers National Association.

Staplin concertized under Phyllis Stringham Concert Management and was also a touring artist for the Iowa Arts Council. He also performed in Germany, the Netherlands, Russia, Sweden, and Switzerland, consulted for organ installations in numerous churches and institutions, and served as organist for the Des Moines Symphony directed by Joseph Giunta and Yuri Krasnapolsky. A member of the Iowa Composers Forum, recent performances of his works were featured at Drake University, Iowa State University, Coe College, the University of Northern Iowa, and the Iowa Composers Forum Festival. 

Staplin’s former organ students, more than 300 total, occupy leading positions in churches and universities; many have been winners and ranked finalists in organ competitions, and have received grants for postgraduate study abroad.

Carl B. Staplin is survived by his wife of 53 years, Phyllis M. Staplin; two children, Elizabeth Tausner (Eric) and William Staplin (Ruth); and his five grandchildren, Mena, Benjamin, and Samuel Tausner, and Mary and Esther Staplin. 

 

David K. Witt, 72, died August 27. He had fallen and shattered his ankle August 23, and suffered a stroke during surgery from which he did not awake.

Witt graduated from Vanderbilt University cum laude with a bachelor of arts in mathematics, physics, and music. His career in software development, which began with GE and continued for more than 30 years at IBM, encompassed various programs, such as those related to retail store systems, antiballistic missile systems, and the NASA Gemini Space program.

Witt served as an organist in churches throughout the Southeast, Texas, and New Jersey for over 50 years and was integral in the design of new pipe organs in many of those churches. He served 39 years in the Raleigh area at Hillyer Memorial Disciples of Christ Church, Edenton Street United Methodist Church, and most recently at Hayes Barton United Methodist Church. He made recordings of his original hymn arrangements to raise money for the Methodist Home for Children, where he served on their board and as interim president and CEO. He was also a founding board member of the N. C. Child Advocacy Institute (now NC Child), and served as the Vice-Chair of Trustees with the Institute for Worship Studies, an institute dedicated to Christian worship renewal and education. Witt was active in the American Guild of Organists and served as dean of the Central North Carolina Chapter.

He is survived by his wife of 46 years, Patricia Carroll Witt (Pat), his daughter, Susan Craige and husband, Mark, of Raleigh, two grandsons, John Dakota (Koty) and David Paxton, and his nephew, James David (Jim) Nickle, son of his only sister, as well as many other nephews and nieces. ν

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Jeffri W. Bantz, 52, died July 31 after a brief illness. A native of Marion, Indiana, he moved with his family to Florida in 1969 when his father, The Rev. Wayne Bantz, started First Methodist Church of Coral Springs. A graduate of Deerfield Beach High School, he was concertmaster of the school orchestra. His first church job in Florida was at the First Baptist Church in Deerfield Beach. He served several churches including First Methodist Church of Pompano Beach and St. Stephen’s Episcopal in Coconut Grove. In 1981 he became organist and associate director of music at the First Presbyterian Church of Pompano Beach (known as the Pink Church ), where he had began organ study with Arden Whitacre some eleven years prior. In 1998 he became director of music at the Pink Church, where he remained until June 2006.
Bantz studied organ performance at Florida Atlantic University and the University of Miami. Throughout his conducting career he continued his studies with such choral conductors as Robert Shaw, George Bragg, Joseph Flummerfelt, David Willcocks, John Rutter, Howard Swan, Gerre Hancock, and James Litton. In 2000, Bantz joined the Florida Philharmonic Chorus as assistant director. When the orchestra folded three years later, he and Jo-Michael Scheibe led the chorus in its new form as the Master Chorale of South Florida.
Bantz was associated with the Florida’s Singing Sons Boychoir for 20 years. During his 17-year tenure as music director, the choir won numerous awards including at least four international first prizes during their many concert tours around the world. They included the 1996 Kathaumixw International Choral Festival and Competition in British Columbia, the 1997 Prague International Choir Festival in the Czech Republic, and the 1998 Princeton Invitational Choir Competition. Under Bantz’s direction, the boychoir was featured in performances with James Judd, Maureen Forester, Chanticleer, Audrey Hepburn, Liza Minnelli, Judy Collins, the Bee Gees (with whom they recorded a CD) and many others. A longtime member of ACDA, Bantz’s choirs were featured at state, divisional, and national ACDA conventions. He was the accompanist for the School of the Arts Singers, from the Dreyfoos School of the Arts in West Palm Beach, directed by his longtime friend and colleague Arlene Graham Sparks, at their Disney Hall concert at the 2005 national convention in Los Angeles. Bantz also served ACDA as the Southern Division Boychoir Chair in the 1990s.
Equally in demand as a solo artist or accompanist, Bantz performed in South Florida with the University of Miami Symphony, the Palm Beach Opera, the Miami Beach Symphony, the Florida Philharmonic Orchestra, the Ft. Lauderdale Symphony Chorus, the Gold Coast Opera, the Ft. Lauderdale Christian Chorale, and the Nova Singers. He also served as conductor or accompanist for numerous international artists such as Marvis Martin, Dean Peterson, Janice Chandler, Steven Rickards, Curtis Rayam and many others. An accomplished organist, Bantz was active in the American Guild of Organists, having served as Dean of the Ft. Lauderdale Chapter. He served as adjudicator and guest clinician for numerous festivals, clinics, and symposia throughout his career.
The recipient of many local, state, and national awards, Bantz was awarded the Joseph Leavitt Award for outstanding achievement in the arts in 1993. In 2005 he received the Distinguished Service Award from the Broward County Music Teachers Association.
Jeffri Bantz is survived by his parents, The Reverend Wayne and Marilynn Bantz, his brother Gregg and sister-in-law Julie, his aunt and uncle Carl and Virginia Bantz, cousin Bradley and his wife Janell, as well as additional aunts and uncles. He is also survived by his colleague and partner, organist Mark Jones. It was Bantz’s wish that there be no memorial service. A celebration concert of his life will be held at a later date. Contributions in his honor may be made to the Jeffri Bantz Memorial Fund, through the Foundation of the First Presbyterian Church, 2331 NE 26th Avenue, Pompano Beach, FL 33062. Personal expressions may be emailed to .
—Mark Jones

Richard L. Krueger, 63 years old, died July 8 in Sunnyvale, California, after a valiant battle against recurrent melanoma cancer. The founding owner and chief recording engineer of Arkay Records, Krueger was born January 6, 1943, and took great inspiration from his entrepreneurial grandfather. He started Arkay records in October 1960, having studied recording engineering with Howard Dinowitz at CBS Masterworks, developing “360-Sound” using 3-channel recording. Mr. Krueger’s adaptation of this approach to organ recording produced a sense of realism.
From 1962–1965, Arkay Records was based in Chicago with 125 recordings of school and church music programs. In addition to recording choirs and organs, Krueger was also passionate about trains, recording thousands of trains, releasing 16 train albums and working for the railroad throughout the United States as an engineer and fireman. In 1967, Arkay Studios moved to San Mateo, California, and offered both recording and photography services. After a brief closure in 1969, Arkay relocated to Sunnyvale, specializing in train recording and selling hobby products. His recorded train sounds were used by MGM, Disney, Warner Brothers, Universal Studios and George Lucas Films in a total of seven motion pictures including “The Love Bug.”
In the 1970s, he also continued to record school and church music programs and helped to develop Westape, a company specializing in high quality cassettes and high-speed duplication. From 1967–1982, he recorded 150 record albums involving 72 artists. In October 1983, he released his first organ compact disc and from 1983–2006, he released 123 albums involving 80 artists, of which 63 were concert organists, in venues across the United States, France, Switzerland, Germany and Austria. He was an active member of the Peninsula Chapter of the AGO. He is survived by his two sons Robert and Christopher Krueger.
Among the artists who recorded for Arkay Records are Janice Beck, Craig Cramer, Angela Craft Cross, Pamela Decker, Jonathan Dimmock, Delbert Disselhorst, Paul Fejko, Faythe Freese, Stephen Hamilton, Barbara Harbach, James Higdon, Wilma Jensen, Boyd Jones, Marilyn Keiser, James Kibbie, Thomas Murray, Douglas Reed, Sandra Soderlund, Burton Tidwell, James Welch, David Westfall, and others.

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