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Robert Huw Morgan plays The Hildegard Organ Cycle by Frank Ferko, January 19

Frank Ferko

Concert Announcement



The Hildegard Organ Cycle

Ten Meditations on the Holy Visions of Hildegard von Bingen


by Frank Ferko


Robert Huw Morgan, organ

Friday, January 19, 2007, at 8:00 p.m.

Memorial Church, Stanford University



The composer will be present at this concert.



"It is easy to get wrapped up in this music because Ferko's style has that mystical quality that defies the boundaries of time... It is definitely music that needs to be experienced rather than understood." --American Record Guide

For ticket information and directions contact the Stanford University Department of Music at (650) 723-3811 or the Department for Religious Life at (650) 723-1762.

Related Content

Portrait of composer Frank Ferko and his Hildegard works

by Marcia Van Oyen

Marcia Van Oyen earned both master’s and doctoral degrees in organ and church music at the University of Michigan, where she studied organ with Robert Glasgow. Marcia currently serves as Director of Music and Organist at Glenview Community Church and is Dean of the North Shore AGO Chapter. She also writes reviews of organ music and books for The Diapason.

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“Frank Ferko inhabits a unique and unusual musical world.  In the background is his love of the music of Olivier Messiaen. In the foreground appears mystery, and thus his intense interest in the visions of Hildegard, her music, and the world of medieval chant. None of this is unique or unusual in the decade of the 1990s, but his vivid musical imagination, sometimes terrifying, in other instances timelessly static and meditative, is unique.”1

The preceding quotation offers a microcosmic portrait of Frank Ferko as a composer. Elements of his compositions have evoked comparisons to Poulenc, Messiaen, James MacMillan, and Arvo Pärt, yet Ferko’s style defies neat categorization.  His coloristic approach, especially in his organ works, links him with the French.  His bent towards ethereal sounds and other-worldly texts allies him with the current phenomenon of “CD spirituality,” as evidenced by the popularity of Gregorian chant recordings and the music of Pärt and Tavener.2 The portrayal of programmatic themes, especially those of a symbolic and spiritual nature, looms large on his agenda. On the other hand, he is very aware of the need for practical liturgical music, and bears that in mind when writing sacred compositions.

The catalog of Ferko’s works includes choral anthems on liturgical, chant, and hymn texts; settings of poems by symbolist writers Rimbaud and Mallarmé; hymn preludes and programmatic works for organ; a symbolist one-act opera and a sprinkling of compositions for various solo instruments and ensembles, including an intriguingly titled piece for horn, clarinet and piano, “The North Side of Heaven (Near the Rotunda).”  He has been commissioned to write works for Valparaiso University, His Majestie’s Clerkes, and the Dale Warland Singers, as well as many churches. He has been the recipient of annual ASCAP grants since 1987 among other grants, and has won awards for his compositions, including the 1989–90 Holtkamp/AGO award for “A Practical Program for Monks,” a song cycle for tenor and organ.

Although Ferko now spends most of his time composing, he has twenty-five years of experience as a church musician, most recently serving as director of music at the Church of St. Paul and the Redeemer in Chicago, and continues to perform as an organist. Ferko received his Bachelor of Music degree in piano and organ performance from Valparaiso University. He received the Master of Music degree in music theory with a minor in organ performance from Syracuse University and holds a doctorate in music composition from Northwestern University, where he studied with Alan Stout. His teachers have included Richard Wienhorst (composition) and Philip Gehring (organ) at Valparaiso, and Howard Boatwright (theory) and Will O. Headlee (organ) at Syracuse University. This traditional foundation, an openness to diverse influences, and a willingness to experiment combine to create Ferko’s unique style.

I spoke with Frank Ferko about his compositional style and two of his most recent works, the Hildegard Organ Cycle and the Hildegard Motets.  Excerpts from that interview follow.

When did you start composing?

I got started dabbling in composition as a teenage church musician at a little country church in Ohio. I started playing organ at fourteen, directing the choir at sixteen, and began exploring different kinds of church music, especially new music. My earliest compositions were take-offs on Richard Wienhorst’s works. I later studied composition with him at Valparaiso. He guided me into writing my own modes and writing pieces using those modes. Wienhorst encouraged me to explore Bartok (who wrote his own modes) and that eventually led to study of the music of Messiaen.

I also studied sixteenth-century counterpoint with Wienhorst. As a final project, we had the option of writing a 5-voice motet or taking the principles of sixteenth-century counterpoint we had learned and writing a modern work. I opted for the latter, and I’ve been building on that ever since, taking ideas from early music and working them into a modern context.

Have you always had a strong interest in new music?

I have been very interested in new music. While in the doctoral program at Northwestern, I was encouraged to stay in touch with what living composers were doing. But being a church musician, I’ve also been very interested in chant, so there are these two polar ends of things—the very early music and current music—that fascinate me.

Besides Messiaen, what other composers do you look to for inspiration?

Many different eras have influenced me. I’ve played Bach, and Bach’s counterpoint has been a very strong influence. Having a strong piano background, I’ve played Chopin and Brahms. These large sounds and rich harmonies have always stuck in my mind, but I’ve veered more towards the French as time has gone on. What I like to listen to most are French pieces from the twentieth century. Some people say there are elements of Poulenc in my sound, and of Messiaen from time to time. The Messiaen influence is strong because my master’s thesis was an analysis of his piano cycle, “Vingt regards sur l’enfant Jésus.” I studied his compositional techniques very thoroughly. There are techniques that he invented, explored up to a certain point, and stopped. Why not take those further and do something else? Or take a particular technique and combine it with minimalism and see what happens? I like many of the early works of Philip Glass and I don’t mind exploring that territory. I pull ideas from all over the place.

What do you have in common with composers like Arvo Pärt and John Tavener?

I feel a common bond in terms of the philosophical approach, the way I’m approaching writing music. Arvo Pärt very definitely is an intensely religious person. John Tavener also. In that respect, I’m approaching the writing of pieces in the way that they are.  We all use common modality in our writing, and there are certain ways that we form melodic lines that may be similar, but we’re putting things together in different ways.

I hear some similarity with Tavener in the way you approach writing for voices.

I know what you mean.  I think this has to do with the fact that we have learned how to write for the human voice. Many composers have learned instrumental writing and try vocal writing and don’t understand the voice. You have to understand the limitations.  You have to be very careful how you set text, especially vowels. That comes from studying early music and counterpoint—examples of glorious music for the voice. In that sense, there’s a certain similarity between Pärt, Tavener, James Macmillan and myself in the use of the materials. We all write well for voices.

As I’ve listened to your music, I’ve noticed that acoustics seem to a play a key role. Are live acoustics required for a true performance of your works?

I like live acoustical settings, the reverberance. This goes back to my love for chant and how a single line can spin and create other sounds. I can take a single line, a choral sound or an organ sound and create some interesting ear perceptions with the acoustics. The reverberance needs to be there. I’ve played the organ cycle successfully in relatively dead rooms, but there’s a whole dimension that’s missing. For example, the first movement of the organ cycle has a water drop idea, intended to reverberate through the room. It’s written at a very slow tempo to allow that to happen.

Do you have a special affinity for writing for the organ? What is there about it that works especially well for your music?

One of the reasons I’ve written so much for the organ is because it is my instrument and I like writing things that I can play, though I don’t write with myself as performer in mind. I understand it, and I’m very well aware that there aren’t that many composers today who feel comfortable writing for the organ. I enjoy it, so I’ll write pieces for the organ. With the organ, if I’m unsure about something I’ve written, I can sit down and try it out.

The musical ideas presented in the Hildegard Organ Cycle could best be presented successfully on the organ. The colors of the instrument and the acoustical setting in which organs are often found make it possible to express certain ideas in a way that cannot occur in other situations. The organ works are usually tailor-made with the tonal colors of the organ in mind. The approach I use in incorporating specific colors into my organ works allies me closely with the French composers who have always been colorists.

Do you think you almost have to be an organist to write music for the organ?

I tend to think so, although there are some people out there who are not organists and yet have written some very fine music for the organ. I’ve tried to get composers I know to write for the organ. They’re a little interested and they think the various colors and stop names are interesting, but it’s complicated for them. How do you deal with all these keyboards and these pedals? The thing that’s usually the biggest stumbling block is the registration—they don’t know what to suggest.  Some composers leave it up to the player. I object to that. I think it really is the composer’s responsibility to inform the performer as to what tone colors to use, because there’s so much choice involved there. Particularly when writing interesting harmonies, chromatic lines, and dense textures, I think it behooves the composer to let us know just what kind of color he wants. A composer wouldn’t write a piece for orchestra and give the conductor a piano score, leaving it up to him to decide who’s going to play what.  It’s not the conductor’s job to do that. An organ composer has to be the orchestrator. Composers usually have colors in mind, but are reluctant to write them down because they’re unfamiliar with stop names and know it’s going to differ from one instrument to another. Poulenc sat down with Duruflé and registered the organ concerto. Composers should sit down with organists and do that. Somebody who does play the organ knows the instrument and its capabilities so well that they can incorporate things that a non-organist wouldn’t do. But the same thing happens with writing for other instruments. A player can write more intimately for an instrument than a non-player.

You also perform as an organist, playing your own works.  What else do you perform?

On an upcoming recital, I’m doing one movement from the Hildegard cycle along with works by Bach, Brahms, Helmut Walcha, and Heinz Werner Zimmerman. Mostly Germans because it’s a germanic organ. Yes, I play other people’s music—especially when a church organist. I still improvise, that’s one thing I’ve always done—postludes—that’s kind of fun.

I studied improvisation with Philip Gehring, and he improvises all the time. He always said you can’t really teach it, but every Sunday in chapel services we heard him doing it. It was the best example. His postludes were always improvisations on the last hymn. When I became an active organist, I started doing the same thing. The early ones I did I’m sure were just horrors, but you just keep doing it and you learn. I would hear something I thought was interesting and I would work that into a Sunday morning improvisation and just see where it would lead, combining the idea with a hymn tune, which I always used as the basis. It was a good way to pick up ideas I was hearing and develop them into my own compositional style.

Was the organ cycle composed through improvisation or sitting down and writing?

Some of it came from improvisation, some from just sitting down and writing. Actually, the tenth movement, the terrifying one, did begin as a postlude for a church service. I started the postlude with the repeated chord figure with big gaps between the chords. Heads went up. It was a gripping effect. I remembered that later and thought it would be a good way to end this organ cycle.

The music and writings of Hildegard von Bingen are currently receiving attention. 1998 is also the 900th anniversary of her birth. What prompted you to write music based on her writings?

I wrote most of the organ cycle back in 1990, before Hildegard became a big cult thing. I wanted to do something that would make people aware of who this woman was, what she did, and what she experienced.

What led you to choose Hildegard’s “Visions” as the basis for your works?

In the late 80s, my church choir in Hyde Park did a concert every spring.  There were a couple of women in the choir who were vocal feminists, and they said, “We never sing any music written by women composers.” I started exploring, finding music written by women composers. I had discovered the name Hildegard in the early 80s. In putting together this concert, I started researching her music and transcribed chant melodies into modern notation. The choir was fascinated. I found other women composers from the sixteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries. We did an evensong and concert in which all the music was written by women. That got me looking into Hildegard, and I wanted to find out more. I did more research and looked at her last book,  “De Operatione Dei,” which includes the ten visions. I had been wanting to write a large work for organ, and later that year I decided to write an organ cycle based on the ten visions.

You've written a detailed preface, a “guidebook” if you will, which provides information as to what’s being portrayed in each of the movements of the organ cycle. Without this guidebook, what can an average listener discern?

Most of the music I write is written on at least three levels—there’s the surface level, where anybody can just walk in and they will hear something they can appreciate. It will wash over them and they’ll either like it or hate it. They’ll form an opinion right away, but they’re really not appreciating what’s in the music.

The second level at which I write is an assocation with technical devices, for example writing numbers rhythmically or pitch-wise into a piece of music. There are other numerical phenomena which have also found their way into my music such as the Fibonacci series and certain kinds of numerical proportions such as 2:1, 3:2, or 4:3—proportions that were used for tuning in the medieval period.

The third level is extra-musical assocations—the programmatic elements. The whole organ cycle is program music: specific depictions of ideas that Hildegard presented in her descriptions of her visions. Most people haven’t read the “Visions,” which is why I wrote the “guidebook.” I thought I should condense some of these ideas into a concise format and provide the information for people so they have some idea of what the basic program is.

What are the most effective means for communicating ideas through music?  Without knowing the program, what images in the organ cycle can a listener recognize?

There are certain obvious techniques that can be built into the music. The water drops [in the first movement] come across pretty clearly. The fifth movement with the repeated clusters has a tendency to sound like somebody’s angry, and Hildegard was. She was talking about the anger and judgment of God. I wanted to show that anger. Writing great big clusters that are very dissonant and shaking away with full organ is a way of doing that. Another technique is to present thematic material in an obvious way, such as an unaccompanied single line melody, repeated. Repetition is an important way to impress a musical idea on people. In the organ cycle there’s one chant melody that comes back throughout the cycle—and people remember that. They recognize it in different guises and are aware of it

What was the impetus for composing the Hildegard Motets? How were the texts selected?

The fifth one was the first one to be written, and that came about purely as an experiment. I was in a group, now defunct, called Chicago Composers Consortium, and we did three concerts a year at the Three Arts Club. In 1991, His Majesties Clerkes had done the first Chicago performance of Arvo Pärt’s “Passio,” at Orchestra Hall. One of the people in the consortium had heard the concert, raving about the Clerkes’ performance of the Pärt. We decided to do a whole concert of choral music and hire His Majesties Clerkes to perform seven new works. Since I had been working on the Hildegard Organ Cycle, I had also looked at some of her poems in the back of the book which contains the visions. I bought a critical edition of the poems and found them amazing. I wanted to write a substantial piece for the Consortium program, so I was looking for a longer text. The Holy Spirit text, a sequence hymn, seemed like a good choice. I knew what the Clerkes were capable of, and figured they could do just about anything. I wanted to take advantage of that and wrote a fairly challenging piece. They really liked it and asked to keep the copies of the piece to perform again in their regular season. That was in the fall of ’91. In February ’92, I decided I wanted to write a whole cycle on these texts because they’re so vivid, intense, and wonderful. I decided on the number nine as a mystical number, then chose the texts. The Clerkes were celebrating their tenth anniversary, and decided to commission the set of works for their final concert in 1993. The texts were selected with liturgical use somewhat in mind, variety in terms of the language Hildegard used and variety of lengths—some long and some short. I wanted some continuity and some contrast.

Are the Hildegard works liturgical music or concert music?

The Hildegard pieces were originally intended to be concert works I knew when I wrote them that people—particularly church organists with the proper instrument, acoustics and a good choir—would probably want to use these pieces in the liturgical setting. Many of the pieces in the organ cycle are fairly quiet and not terribly long. They could work as prelude music. The first movement could be used with a baptism, with the water symbolism. There’s an implication of Advent in the seventh movement, the slow, lush movement with the long melody in the celeste chords. Even though the motet cycle was written as a concert cycle for His Majestie’s Clerkes, I thought people might want to use the individual movements in church settings, so I found texts of Hildegard that had assocations with liturgical settings and outlined that in the preface notes. These pieces have crossover quality—they can work in concert or in a church setting.

Widor once said “To play the organ properly, you need to have a vision of eternity.” Does that statement apply to performing your Hildegard works?

Yes, I think there’s truth to that statement. There’s a certain amount of that with the Hildegard pieces. Performers will have a much better understanding and be able to bring out what’s in the music much better if they have the textual associations, the implied ones in the organ cycle or the expressed ones in the motets, if they know where Hildegard was coming from, they have a good translation to work from, and they understand the texts. The performance will be much, much better. Many little musical points are strongly associated with the texts.

Some people have used the term “organist-theologian” to describe composers such as Widor, Tournemire, and especially Messiaen. Do you identify with that role, being an organist and composer yourself?

To a certain degree, yes. I think I’m creating similar kinds of things, at least with the Hildegard pieces. When I perform those works, I know exactly what is going on there because I’ve read all the visions and commentary of Hildegard. Reading them was a very intense, moving experience. It  moved me to write the organ cycle. I wanted to put the theology into music. I want people to know about what I felt from reading the texts when they perform or hear this music.

I was intrigued by the statement in the liner notes of the Hildegard recordings, “Frank Ferko inhabits a unique musical world . . .” (quoted at the beginning of  this article). What is your response to that?

I was flattered. The remark addresses the organ cycle specifically. When I was practicing in preparation for recording it, the producer came up to the organ loft and said, “I want to hear the last movement on this instrument. This is the most terrifying thing I’ve ever heard. I want you to use as much organ as you can, a lot of reeds.” I agreed, that’s what the movement really needs. That last movement is terrifying, and yet there are other movements that are gentler that take you off into some ethereal land somewhere. I think that he was thinking of all the different moods that are created in that work and how different they are when you stop and think about them from beginning to end.

Every now and then I do pull in, into my own little world when I’m writing. There are a number of people who’ve taken an interest in my writing and they’ll ask me if I’ve heard the latest recording of James MacMillan because they find a similarity between his style and mine. I tell them I can’t listen to that for a few months because I’m working on something of my own. I have to completely pull myself away from other things and just immerse myself into my own little world while I’m writing. I don’t want to listen to anybody else’s music while I’m doing that. There is a little bit of reclusiveness that’s implied in that statement, but not to an excessive degree. I try to be sociable.

Would you describe your music as mystical?

There is definitely an ethereal quality that I try for. “Mystical” carries with it some other connotations, and I suppose that the things that I’ve written have a certain amount of that because of the text associations, especially Hildegard’s texts. There is mysticism involved in it, but generally, I’m coming at the music from a technical viewpoint. I’m trying to create a certain mood.

I noticed several settings of poetry by Mallarmé and Rimbaud in your list of works.  Is their poetry of particular interest to you?

I like symbolism, and Mallarmé is very symbolistic. Rimbaud wrote very colorful poetry. The symbolist poems are particularly interesting to me.

You seem to have a strong preference for ineffable ideas and symbolic texts.

I’ve always been fascinated by that kind of thing—the intangible things that we perceive in some way, either through an association or imagination. When we are thinking of intangible things, such as God, angels, saints, good, evil, love, and so on, I think it is natural for us to try to represent these intangibles in some tangible way. That’s why we have church buildings, stained glass, religious paintings, statuary, and religious drama. These are ways in which artists have tried to represent things which are in a way abstract. Music is perhaps the best way to express or represent abstract ideas. Music has the capability of expressing things that words or pictures just cannot accomplish. By connecting music with symbols it is possible to create a very powerful form of expression. Is there such a thing as a symbolist musician? Maybe that’s what I am.

Frank Ferko’s compositional style is woven from diverse threads: ancient mystical texts and medieval compositional techniques, minimalism and Messiaen, ineffable mysteries and concrete images, the highly complex and the startlingly simple. The result is a musical tapestry of exceptional depth and beauty, a vibrantly spiritual contribution to the musical palette of both concert hall and sanctuary.

Musical examples are reprinted by permission of E. C. Schirmer Music.

For more information about Frank Ferko and his music, visit his web-site: 

http://pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~dahling/biography.html

Notes

                        1.                  The Hildegard Organ Cycle, Arsis CD 101, a statement made by producer Robert Schuneman in the liner notes of the recording.

                         2.                Patrick Russill, “Cantos Sagrados: Patrick Russill reflects on the holy songs of James MacMillan,” The Musical Times 1837 (March 1996): 35–37.

                        3.                  Philip Greenfield, “Review of The Hildegard Motets” The American Record Guide  6 (Nov./Dec. 1996):  p. 122.

New Perspectives on The Hildegard Organ

by Patricia G. Parker
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It is quite uncommon in organ literature to find a
composition collectively based on the preexisting melodies and literary works
of another composer or writer, let alone one who was active almost 900 years
ago. This has occurred, however, in The Hildegard Organ Cycle, by Frank Ferko.1
Published in 1996 by E.C. Schirmer, the composition of this work was funded by
grants from the San Francisco chapter of the AGO and the District of Columbia
AGO Foundation. The organ cycle is based on the writings and songs of the
12th-century abbess, Hildegard of Bingen. In studying Ferko's organ
cycle, I decided to explore Hildegard's De Operatione Dei (Book of Divine
Works) in more detail. From studying Hildegard's writing, I hoped to
ascertain any additional connections which Ferko might have suggested in this
work beyond the scope of his descriptive notes in the preface to the organ
cycle. Through frequent correspondence with Mr. Ferko, who has been most
generous in sharing both details about his compositional background and his
thoughts on this work, I have learned much additional information about the
special qualities of this composition that make it truly distinctive.

One may be tempted to view Ferko's interest in
Hildegard as part of a larger trend towards the popularity of plainchant and
Medieval music in the New Age genre. In particular, Hildegard's music has
been given much attention in the last decades of the twentieth century, an era
when significant contributions in feminist scholarship have been made.
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It is important to understand, however,
that Ferko's preoccupation with Hildegard came about through his own
individual interest and research, not through the general influence of
Hildegard's popularity at the end of the twentieth century. The end result
is an outstanding work in organ literature that is based on an intertwining of
the literary and musical accomplishments of one person--a person who
happens to be the first composer in Western music whose biography we know.

The Hildegard Organ Cycle is a work comprising several
levels of meaning, the foremost of which impresses the listener with musical
images that bring Hildegard's words to life. There is a wide variety of
compositional techniques. Some methods obviously suggest the influence of other
composers, some ideas can be related to musical styles from as far back as the
Middle Ages, and yet other impressions reflect compositional trends in
twentieth-century music, such as minimalism and aleatoricsm. Ferko puts his
individual stamp on this work by combining his own ideas with this wide variety
of styles to describe what Hildegard sees in her visions and to give some
understanding of Hildegard's theology.

Ferko has twenty-five years experience as an organist and
music director. He first began work as a church organist at age 14, and as a
choir director at age 16. Most recently he was director of nusic at the Church
of St. Paul and the Redeemer in Chicago. He earned a BM in piano and organ
performance from Valparaiso University, where he studied composition with Richard
Wienhorst and organ with Philip Gehring, a MM in music theory with a minor in
organ performance from Syracuse University, where he worked with Howard
Boat-wright and Will Headlee, and a DM in music composition from Northwestern
University, where he studied with Alan Stout. Aside from the twentieth-century
French composer, Olivier Messiaen, other composers who have impacted
Ferko's work are Béla Bartok, Arvo Pärt, and John Tavener.2

Two primary influences in the organ cycle are Ferko's
religious background in the Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod, and his
admiration of the compositional style of Messiaen. Growing up in a religious
denomination infusd with the Lutheran chorale gave Ferko
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exposure to the use of theological
concepts such as numerology and symbolism in music, which are compositional
devices evident in chorale-based keyboard and choral works of many prominent
Lutheran composers including J.S. Bach and Hugo Distler.3 As one can see in
looking at excerpts from The Hildegard Organ Cycle, the Messiaen influence is
undeniable. It was not surprising to learn that Ferko's thesis for his
Master of Music degree at Syracuse University was an analysis of
Messiaen's piano cycle, "Vingt regards sur l'Enfant
Jésus." Also, while studying with Howard Boatwright at the same
institution, Ferko learned three movements from Messiaen's suite,
L'Ascension, and did a paper about this work.4

Ferko's specific interest in Hildegard first came
about during the years 1983–84 when he was working as a cataloger of
recordings in the music library at Northwestern University. This preoccupation
with Hildegard led him to compose an organ cycle in 1990, based both on
Hildegard's Book of Divine Works and specific chants by Hildegard.
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His primary intention in composing the
cycle was to promote Hildegard and her contributions to literature and
music.  Ferko later composed a set
of motets which feature Hildegard's complete texts in the original Latin
(the collection is known as the "Hildegard Motets"). From one of
many e-mail conversations with the composer, Ferko stated that he was unaware
of the public's growing popular interest in Hildegard as he was becoming
familiar with her accomplishments.5

Hildegard of Bingen was an extraordinary woman for her day,
significant for her activity as a writer, theologian, composer, and healer. The
occasion of her 900th birthday was celebrated in 1998. Hildegard had numerous
holy visions from about age three through the rest of her life, which she later
came to record. Her Book of Divine Works relates ten visions that she claims to
have witnessed, ranging from the creation of the world, through the birth of
Christ, and to the end of time.

The literary basis for The Hildegard Organ Cycle is these
ten holy visions Hildegard described at length in the Book of Divine Works. The
order and number of the movements in Ferko's cycle match the order and
number of the visions in Hildegard's writing. The ten movements are
essentially musical descriptions of these visions. They are listed below, in order:

                  I.
The Origin of Life

                  II.
The Construction of the World

                  III.
Human Nature

                  IV.
Articulation of the Body

                  V.
Places of Purification

                  VI.
Meaning of History

                  VII.
Preparation for Christ

                  VIII.
The Effect of Love

                  IX.
Completion of the Cosmos

                  X.
The End of Time

In addition to basing the organ cycle on this literary work
of Hildegard, Ferko also incorporates five of Hildegard's songs from her
Symphonia armonie celestium revelationum (Symphony of the Harmony of Celestial
Revelation). This collection, a set of Hildegard's own poems that she set
to music, includes more than 70 musical pieces, most of which are antiphons and
hymns. She placed these songs at the end of her written work, the Scivias (Know
the Ways of the Lord) of 1141.6 The five chants that Ferko incorporates into
The Hildegard Organ Cycle are "O Magne Pater," "Spiritus
sanctus, vivificans vita," "O gloriossimi, lux vivens
angeli," "O Virtus Sapientiae," and "O splendidissima
gemma." The piece is cyclic in that these chant melodies, as well as
newly composed themes, are definite musical ideas that recur throughout the
work and serve to unify the composition.7

Ferko includes a detailed preface to the organ cycle in
which he describes what he is trying to depict musically in connection to
Hildegard's ideas. For each of the ten movements related to
Hildegard's Book of Divine Works, 
Ferko quotes portions of text from Hildegard's visions before
specifically addressing the musical descriptions.  Through my research and analysis of the organ cycle along
with my communications with Mr. Ferko, I have been able to formulate a keener
understanding of this work in relation to its focus on Hildegard of Bingen. In
particular, this new insight focuses primarily on movements 2, 3, 6, 8, and 9.
Programmatic aspects of the other movements of the organ cycle are either
self-explanatory, or information about them has been published elsewhere.

The second movement, "The Construction of the
World," deals with God as the omnipotent, overseeing creator.
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The first way in which Ferko suggests
this thought is by using the chant, "O Magne Pater," which itself
is a supplication, or prayer to God. The first phrase of this chant acts as a
refrain throughout the movement. This refrain is meditative --much like
the repeated prayer of the Catholic rosary.8 Every appearance of this phrase
occurs in unison, except for the last in which the chant fragment is harmonized
by chords in parallel mo-tion. (Example 1.) The tendency towards unison writing
appears throughout the works of Messiaen. A prime example of the unison setting
of a melody can be found in "Subtilité des corps glorieux"
from the suite, Les corps glorieux of Messiaen. This entire movement features
unison writing.

Another Messiaen-like concept that Ferko uses is that of
chant paraphrase, which Messiaen described in his Techniques of My Musical
Language. Example 2 shows what Ferko calls a "chromatic commentary"
on the openingphrase of "O Magne Pater." Ferko follows the contour
of the chant phrase using chromatic pitches of his own choice--not those
from any particular scale or mode. He then presents extensions based on his
newly composed version of the original chant phrase.    After a second appearance of the unison
statement of the opening phrase of "O Magne Pater," a musical
statement in smaller note values (what Ferko calls an "elaboration on the
commentary") becomes the basis for more development by modulation.
(Example 3.) With the constant generation that occurs throughout this movement,
Ferko means to symbolize "the creeping and crawling and growth and
blossoming of life on the newly created planet."9 Perhaps the most significant
Messiaen influence can be seen in measure 67, about halfway through this
movement. (Example 4.) Here, Ferko uses Messiaen's "communicable
language" to spell out the Hebrew version of God's name,
"Yahweh," a motive that features the trumpet en chamade. This
technique, as well as the use of the "O Magne Pater" chant,
highlights God as the subject of the movement. In the ending section of
"Construction . . . ," the distinct use of minimalistic procedures
can be found.  Ferko uses the
gradual acceleration of two alternating chords in both hands to depict the
"spinning of the newly constructed world through the
universe."10  Example 5 shows
measures 86–92 of "Construction of the World."

In the third movement of the cycle,
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
"Human Nature," Ferko
musically describes Hildegard's opinions on hu-manity and the ever
influencing presence of sin. This movement is for pedals alone, partly, as the
composer told me, to give the performer's hands a rest from the rapid
playing of the two alternating chords from the end of the previous
movement--one of the most technically demanding sections of the entire
organ cycle.11 The idea of the sinful nature of mankind is suggested by a
primitive musical subject that employs much syncopation. (Example 6.) The first
three measures of the subject show a rhythmic palindrome--a statement in
which the note values are the same both backwards and forwards. By using a
palindrome as the basis for this movement, Ferko means to show that man, who
was created by God, is a mirror image of the creator.12 Messiaen was also fond
of rhythmic palindromes, which he referred to as "non-retrogradable
rhythm."

This movement also borrows a motivic idea from J.S. Bach
which can be seen in the chorale prelude, "Dies sind die Heiligen zehn
Gebot" (BWV 679) from the third part of the Klavierübung. Example 7,
which is from the beginning of Bach's work, shows a motive made up of a
number of repeated notes. Example 8 features mm. 15–19 of Ferko's
movement. Ferko describes the hammering motive in this piece as "a German
father banging his fist on a table as he ‘laid down the law' to his
children." He also went on to say about this movement of the cycle and
its connection to BWV 679, " . . . the chorale is all about the Ten
Commandments, which are God's law, and ‘Human Nature' is all
about transgressions of God's law in everyday experience . . . ."13
From the Book of Divine Works in general, Hildegard often speaks about the
sinful nature of mankind and the constant need to repent. This
fire-and-brimstone theology is a perpetual theme that appears throughout her
writing. The repeated notes that appear in example 8 might suggest the
obstinacy of wickedness in human nature.14

The one redeeming means of assistance to mankind, according
to Hildegard, is the power of the Holy Spirit. It is this, she says, that
removes or cleanses impurity from the soul. Ferko depicts the Holy Spirit in
several different ways in this movement. First, the rising triplet featured at
the end of the palindrome each time the palindrome is presented, is based on the
first three notes of the chant, "Spiritus Sanctus, vivificans vita"
(the bracketed notes in Example 6).15 Then, in measure 36, the first two
phrases of "Spiritus Sanctus . . . " are presented on a 2¢
flute stop with rhythmic interjections based on the palindrome. (Example 9.)
The text of this chant reiterates the idea of the Holy Spirit as the purifier
of creation.16 At the end of this movement, there is a series of 16th-note
triplets that start at the interval of a 17th which eventually close inward to
a minor 2nd. (Example 10.) Recently, Ferko suggested to me that this intervalic
closure symbolizes a bridging of the gap between man and God. The triplets are
also significant in that they reflect yet another representation of the Holy
Spirit--this time as part of the Trinity suggested by the number
"3." Because Ferko often uses mystical numbers and proportions
where he feels it is appropriate, the appearance of the number "3"
in this section is intentional.17

Movement number six, "The Meaning of History,"
comprises many levels of musical symbolism. In this movement, Ferko combines
two chant melodies--the previously quoted "O Magne Pater" and
"Spiritus Sanctus"--with a newly composed line of his own, to
form a trio texture. (Example 11.) "O Magne Pater" appears in the
pedal in relatively long note values, while the middle voice contains the
chant, "Spiritus Sanctus," in smaller note values.
style="mso-spacerun: yes"> 
Here Ferko is showing Hildegard's
idea of God being a force ever present in the background of human lives
throughout all history--hence, this chant is set as a background voice in
this movement by the use of long note values and by its placement in the lowest
part. The Holy Spirit, whom Hildegard sees in a more active role in the
creation of history, is depicted as closer to the foreground in this movement
by the use of smaller note values and by its placement in a higher register.18
The line that Ferko quotes at the beginning of this movement from vision six of
Hildegard's Book of Divine Works is, "Nothing that has existed from
the very beginning of the world until its end is hidden from God." How
appropriate it is that Ferko uses such a transparent texture to allude to this
concept. Also, in choosing a trio texture, Ferko again suggests the idea of the
Trinity.

But what about the top voice in this movement, which is
Ferko's own creation? In his prefatory notes to the organ cycle, Ferko
describes the top voice as being an isomelic construction --a series of
pitches in a particular order that appear throughout the piece in the same
order, but with different rhythmic values in each repetition. Octave
equivalence can be invoked at any time in a presentation of the isomelic
construction. Starting in measure 3, the top voice has the following pitch
sequence (Example 11): C - D - B - C - D - E - F# - G# - A# - C - F# - E - C# -
C natural - A# - D - G# - F# - F natural, and E. Beginning again in measure 8,
these pitches are repeated in the same order as in their initial presentation.
It so happens that this isomelic construction appears seven times in this
movement, the invoking of yet another mystical number.19 Something interesting,
however, happens in the seventh and final presentation of the isomelic
construction: it is incomplete! (See the bracketed notes in example 12.) The
top voice in the penultimate measure includes the pitches G# - F# - and F
natural, but no E--the pitch that was used to end the isomelic
construction as presented in the first eight measures. In leaving the isomelic
construction unfinished, Ferko relates the idea that history, which continues
to unfold, is not yet completed.20

In the eighth movement of the cycle, "The Effect of
Love," Ferko melodically suggests the folk-like tunes that might have
been heard among the vineyard workers in the Rhine valley around Bingen during
Hildegard's time.21 This melody, which is Ferko's original
creation, appears unaccompanied at the beginning of the movement on a light
8¢ reed. In measure 8, the newly composed folk melody is combined in
two-voice counterpoint with a particular fragment of the chant, "Spiritus
Sanctus," which states "suscitans et resuscitans omnia"
("you waken and reawaken everything that is"). This particular text
refers to the Holy Spirit as emanating from God who rekindles and resurrects
all life through loving power. Later in the piece, the folk melody is
harmonized by ninth chords, creating an impressionistic effect. To end the
piece, the previously mentioned fragment of "Spiritus Sanctus" is
then combined with the folk melody, and both are harmonized by ninth chords.
The use of the impressionistic ninth chords, especially when played on a
celeste stop, creates a warm, rich, and luscious sound that Ferko uses to
describe God as a God of love. Also, by the juxtaposition of sacred and secular
elements in this movement, Ferko is representing love as a two- faceted entity:
the folk song, representative of human love, is an imperfect reflection of
God's love (the chant fragment), which is perfect.22

The ninth movement, "Completion of the Cosmos,"
is framed, at the beginning and end of the movement, by a setting of the entire
chant melody "O gloriosissimi . . ." in two-voice counterpoint.
(Example 13.) In choosing this two-voice texture, a parallel can be made
between this movement and the second movement ("Construction of the
World"), which also includes a two-voice setting at the beginning of the
movement. Each of these movements is one movement away from an end of the whole
organ cycle, so they can be viewed as complementary movements.23

The text that accompanies this movement, from
Hildegard's ninth vision, says, "I will let all my splendor pass in
front of you, and I will pronounce before you the name of Yahweh." Ferko
uses these sections in two-voice counterpoint at the beginning and end of this movement
to symbolize this approach and passing by of Yahweh, according to
Hildegard's description. She relates in this vision that the face of
Yahweh is too bright to gaze upon directly. The relationship of the text of
"O gloriosissimi" to this text is somewhat peripheral, in that
Hildegard describes in this antiphon the "living light" of the
angels, and this light is also meant to refer to the bright face of God.24

Following this exposition is one of the most striking
moments of the entire cycle--the Yahweh motive from the second movement
("Construction of the World") and the rhythmic palindrome from the
third movement ("Human Nature") are combined. (Example 14.) Here
Ferko is depicting Hildegard's ninth vision: the beginning of a major
battle between good and evil, or as Ferko puts it, "Yahweh trouncing on
the sinfulness of the human soul."25 This battle heats up in measure 16.
(Example 15.) Here, through the quotation of fragments of the chant "O
Virtus Sapientiae" in the pedal against thick, dissonant note clusters in
the manuals,  Ferko symbolizes the
power of Wisdom being revealed, and it wins the battle!26

It would be far too easy to say that Ferko's
techniques are restricted to ideas reflected in the work of Olivier Messiaen.
What can be found throughout The Hildegard Organ Cycle is a wide range of
technical devices, and if stylistic features of Messiaen are invoked, Ferko
utilizes them to suit his purpose. Ferko combines these devices with his own
ideas to creatively express Hildegard's theology. The implementation of
techniques ranging from medieval cantus firmus technique to 20th-century
minimalism contributes to a sense of universality in this work, as the composer
himself relates. One can also associate this free selection of compositional
styles with a timeless quality in Hildegard's theological ideas.27

In considering the literary and musical basis for The
Hildegard Organ Cycle, this work stands in a category by itself. The idea of
modeling a composition after both pre-existing literature and melodies that
emanate from the same person, yet which were not conceived as a set, is
extremely rare in organ literature. Though the movements of The Hildegard Organ
Cycle may themselves be pleasing to the listener without some brief
understanding of who Hildegard was, one can develop a deeper awareness of the
symbolism embedded in this composition by exploring Hildegard's Book of
Divine Works and the Symphony of the Harmony of Celestial Revelation in more
detail.

 

Notes

                  1.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
It
may be noteworthy to mention that an errata sheet for the organ cycle exists,
and that ECS Publishing will provide a copy of the sheet upon request for
anyone who has bought the score. Furthermore, a new, corrected edition of the
score will be available later this year.

                  2.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Frank
Ferko, "Biographical Information," Home page, 12 May 1999.

http://pubweb.acns.nwu.edu/~dahling/other.html

                  3.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Frank
Ferko, interview by author, Electronic Mail, 10 and 13 August, 1999.

                  4.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             

Marcia Van Oyen, "Portrait of Composer Frank Ferko and His Hildegard
Works," The Diapason, Eighty-ninth year, No. 6, Whole No. 1063 (June
1998): 14.

                  5.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Ferko
interview.

                  6.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Frank
Ferko, The Hildegard Organ Cycle, Boston: E.C. Schirmer, 1996, preface, I.

                  7.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Ferko
interview.

                  8.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Ibid.

                  9.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>             
Ibid.

                  10.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko,
The Hildegard Organ Cycle, preface, ii.

                  11.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko
interview.

                  12.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  13.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko
interview.

                  14.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  15.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko,
The Hildegard Organ Cycle, preface, iii.

                  16.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko
interview.

                  17.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  18.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  19.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  20.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko,
The Hildegard Organ Cycle, preface, iv.

                  21.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.,
vi.

                  22.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko
interview.

                  23.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  24.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  25.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ibid.

                  26.
style='mso-tab-count:1'>          
Ferko,
The Hildegard Organ Cycle, preface, vi.

27.               
Ferko interview.

 

Patricia G. Parker holds both a DMA and MM in organ
performance and literature from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY.
She also earned her BM degree in organ performance from Salem College in
Winston-Salem, NC. Her teachers have included Dr. Katharine Pardee, Dr. Michael
Farris, David Higgs, and John Mueller. In particular, Dr. Parker would like to
publicly thank the following individuals for their guidance in this project:
Frank Ferko, and from the Eastman School of Music: Dr. Katharine Pardee, and
Dr. Jürgen Thym.

In the wind . . .

John Bishop

John Bishop is executive director of the Organ Clearing House.

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A recipe for success
A couple months ago—the January issue to be exact—I quoted an article from the newsletter of the parish in which I grew up:

Trapped on the paper, it is just a lot of lines and squiggles, circles and flags, black and white—an ancient language, undecipherable to the uninitiated. But to those who are “called” to it, music on the page is the door to a multi-colored, “sensational” world, both a challenge and a reward for heart, mind, and soul . . .
It seems improbable that a few dozen pages of black and white “directions” could convey the recipe for an opera, or a symphony—and yet they do. But it is only the recipe. It takes a parish choir to pick up the pages, to apply much valuable time and energy, to learn the skills in order to share this amazing transformation with each other, with a church family, and in the praise of the Creator who has gifted us with the miracle that is music.
I improvised on this theme, suggesting that the printed score is a recipe for a living work of art, that the music comes alive when a performer reads the recipe and sends it out into acoustics. I wrote:

We place heavy emphasis on Urtext editions of the pieces we play, those publications claiming to be accurate transmission of the composer’s intentions—the Ark of the Covenant or the Holy Grail. But does that mean we all have to play the pieces the same way? I think that Urtexts ensure that we start from the same recipe—that our extemporizing comes from the same source. But for heaven’s sake, don’t be afraid to add some garlic and salt and pepper to taste.

I drew parallels between cooking and making music—starting with a recipe and creating a masterpiece:

Ingredients in a recipe are the blueprint, the roadmap to be translated by the cook, through the utensils and heat sources, into the magic which is delicious food.
Notes on a score—those squiggles and symbols—are the recipe, the blueprint, the format to be translated by the musician, through the instrument, into the magic that is audible music.
The chef learns the basics, the techniques, the theories, and the chemistry. Once he knows those basics and can reliably prepare and present traditional dishes, he’s freer to experiment because he knows the rules.
The musician learns the techniques, the historical priorities, and the language of the art. Once he can reliably prepare and present the great masterworks, he’s more free to experiment, to innovate, and to challenge himself and his audience. How’s that for a lot of lines and squiggles?
I return to this now because after that column was published several of my friends were in touch to comment and one sent a little stack of quotations from well-known musicians that add to the mix:

Classical, Romantic, Modern, Neo-Romantic! These labels may be convenient for musicologists, but they have nothing to do with composing or performing . . . All music is the expression of feelings, and feelings do not change over the centuries . . . Purists would have us believe that music from the so-called Classical period should be performed with emotional restraint, while so-called Romantic music should be played with emotional freedom. Such advice has often resulted in exaggeration: overindulgent, uncontrolled performances of Romantic music, and dry, sterile, dull performance of Classical music.
The notation of a composer is a mere skeleton that the performer must endow with flesh and blood, so that the music comes to life and speaks to an audience. The belief that going back to an Urtext will ensure a convincing performance is an illusion. An audience does not respond to intellectual concepts, only to the communication of feelings.
That passage may sound like an excerpt from the January issue, but I give myself too much credit. That was Vladimir Horowitz (1903–1989). As a bright-eyed student of historically informed performance in the 1970s, I recall knowledgeable and eloquent student-lounge debates about Horowitz’s performances. My peers and I were pretty sure he was old-fashioned and we were the wave of the future. But I have to admit that his performances were better attended than mine. I guess he did a better job communicating feelings. Mr. Horowitz continued:

In order to become a truly re-creative performer, and not merely an instrumental wizard, one needs three ingredients in equal measure: a trained, disciplined mind, full of imagination; a free and giving heart; and a Gradus ad Parnassum command of instrumental skill. Few musicians ever reach artistic heights with these three ingredients evenly balanced. This is what I have been striving for all my life.

Vladimir Horowitz was celebrated for his performances of the great Russian Romantic piano repertory. I vividly remember a stereo simulcast in 1978 (FM radio and public television) of his performance of Rachmaninoff’s Third Piano Concerto with Zubin Mehta and the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. (I bought a new stereo just in time for it.) There was something magic about the way his huge Russian hands enveloped that intricate and expansive score. You can see that historic performance by the 75-year-old virtuoso on YouTube: www.youtube.com/watch?v=D5mxU_7BTRA&feature=related>. Amazing! I gave it the full 45 minutes this afternoon. Give it a look. I think you’ll join me in seeing the imagination and the free and giving heart piled on top of a lifetime’s work developing one of the most fluid keyboard techniques ever.
But he was also celebrated for his readings of sonatas by Antonio Scarlatti: unerring rhythmic drive, mystical coloring of the piano’s tone (how did he do that?), colorful and humorous phrasing. His fertile imagination enabled him to play dozens of those seemingly similar short pieces with infinite expression. Of course, it was technically perfect. That was a given. When Horowitz sat at the piano, one never wondered if he would “get through it.”

Painting a sunset
Arthur Friedheim was a student of Franz Liszt who later developed a successful concert career in the United States. In his book, Life and Liszt (Taplinger, 1961), Friedheim related Liszt’s comments on interpretation:

The virtuoso is not a mason who, chisel in hand, faithfully and conscientiously whittles stone after the design of an architect. He is not a passive tool reproducing feeling and thought and adding nothing of himself. He is not the more or less experienced reader of works which have no margins for his notes, which allow for no paragraphing between the lines . . . He is called upon to make emotion speak, and weep, and sing, and sigh—to bring it to life in his consciousness. He creates as the composer himself created, for he himself must live the passions he will call to light in all their brilliance . . .
Conscientiously whittles stone . . . That sounds ominous. Is that what we do when we produce a historically informed performance from an Urtext edition? Does it follow that the piece sounds the same the next time we play it?
Friedheim continued,

I recall one of my later lessons with him in the Villa d’Este, in Tivoli, not far from Rome. Late one afternoon I sat down at the piano to play Liszt’s Harmonies du Soir. Before I had time to begin he called me to the window. With a wide sweep of the arm he pointed out the slanting rays of the declining sun that were mellowing the landscape with the delicate glamour of approaching twilight. “Play that,” he said. “There are your evening harmonies.”

On January 6, 2010 concert pianist Byron Janis published an article titled “In Praise of Fidelity” in the Wall Street Journal. In it he contrasted comments about musical scores from conductor and music historian Gunther Schuller and Spanish cellist Pablo Casals: Schuller stated, “A conductor is the faithful guardian of the score—the score is a sacred document.” Casals opined, “The art of interpretation is not to play what is written. Our interpretation of what is written cannot, in fact, be written down.”
Mr. Janis relates a story by Julius Seligmann, president of the Glasgow Society of Musicians as he commented on a performance by Frederick Chopin. Mr. Seligmann

. . . attended a recital where the composer played his new Mazurka in B-flat, Opus 7, No. 1, as an encore. According to Seligmann, it met with such great success that Chopin decided to play it again, this time with such a radically different interpretation—tempos, colors and phrasing had all been changed—that it sounded like an entirely different piece. The audience was amazed when it finally realized he was playing the very same Mazurka, and it rewarded him with a prolonged, vociferous ovation.

So what’s this all about? I’ve spent the last 40 years in the thrall of the pipe organ. I’ve worked as a recitalist, a church musician, a tuner and technician, a designer, builder, restorer, relocator, writer, and elocutionist. And I’m not finished. I figure that with luck (and some attention to portion sizes) I could last another 25 years or more. I’m assuming that people will be listening to, commissioning, and caring for organs longer than I’ll be able to appreciate them. But is that a rash assumption?
The publishing schedule of The Diapason means that I submit this column six weeks before publication date. So as I write, the rush of preparing for Christmas is fresh in my mind. (In fact, this is a good moment because in January the mailbox fills with our clients’ payments for December tunings.) During December I ran in and out of about 30 churches and as I’ve noted in years past, there’s not much new. Virtually every organ console and choir room table sports copies of Carols for Choirs (especially the green and orange ones, volumes I and II). And when I look at the paper clips I can see that each choir is singing the same selections. Almost no one sings A Boy Was Born by Benjamin Britten (page 4).
Those books have defined 50 years of Christmas music in American churches—simple proof of the immense influence the English tradition has over our worship. Because of the lovely and brilliant arrangements in those volumes, at least two generations of American church musicians have grown up with David Willcocks, Reginald Jacques, and John Rutter. Each carol, each descant, each varied harmonization is more beautiful than the last. But isn’t there anything else?
Volume I (the green one) was copyrighted in 1961. I first handled it as a young teenager in about 1969, when my voice changed and I got to be in the senior choir, and haven’t passed a Christmas without it since.
As part of my work with the Organ Clearing House I am often invited to visit churches that are offering their pipe organs for sale. You walk into the chancel and find drums, microphone stands, electronic keyboards, saxophone stands, and wires all over the floor. Are they played by professional musicians with liturgical backgrounds? Most often not. They’re more likely to be local amateurs playing from scores that come each week by subscription. My first recommendation always is that they should keep the organ. How do you know that the next pastor won’t want to use the organ? I think the organ is more permanent than those alternative forms of musical worship.
And why have those churches made those changes? We’re told that modern worshippers no longer connect to traditional musical forms. Why is that? Is it because public schools don’t expose students to the fine arts any more and it’s catching up with us? Is it because people listen to popular music genres so much that they cannot appreciate anything else?
Or is it because organists are failing to present interesting, thoughtful, varied, and challenging music programs that keep people interested and that give them something to think about as well as tunes to whistle? Is it because using the same ten carol arrangements every Christmas fails to interest our congregations? Is it because the same ten carol arrangements are offered in every church in town, in the county, in the state, or in the country?
Do we as musicians spend so much effort on the accuracy and correctness of our performance that we fail to present the emotions of the music to our congregations? Do we think so highly of our skills and knowledge of what’s correct that we program music that’s unintelligible to our congregations?
Think of a pipe organ as a high-performance machine. You step on the gas and your wig flies off. The builder of that machine intended that you’d feel the thrill of G-force cornering and lighter-than-air acceleration. Climb in a car like that and putt-putt to the grocery store to pick up milk and toilet paper and you’ve missed the point of the machine.
Your American organbuilders put thrilling instruments under your fingers, instruments that can go from zero-to-sixty in three measures, instruments that can both roar and caress. We rely on you the player to take it to the edge, to push it to the limit—to tell us about the limitations of our instruments. If the congregation—the consumer—is enthralled we get to keep at it.
If you’re not using that instrument so the congregation is thrilled, then we won’t get to build any more organs.
And organbuilders, it’s up to you too. Let’s not settle for ordinary. Ordinary is for substitutes. Let’s reserve extra-ordinary (say it slowly!) for the pipe organ, that high-performance machine with the capacity to thrill the players and the hearers. If we put magic under their fingers, they’ll put magic into the air. I’ll still be writing 30 years from now—and forget about the portion control! 

“Organ Renewal” in the Southwest

The Holtkamp Organ at the University of New Mexico

Arlene DeYoung Ward

A native of Los Angeles, Arlene DeYoung Ward is currently coordinator of the piano lab and the piano proficiency program, and teaches organ along with John Clark at the University of New Mexico, Department of Music. Ms. Ward is a veteran of more than 100 solo organ and harpsichord recitals, including the complete works of J. S. Bach. In addition, she has published articles in both The American Organist and The Diapason on the subject of the Orgelbewegung. Most recently, she has completed two CDs, featuring music of J. S. Bach and organ music of Spain and Spanish America. Current recordings in progress are Music for Flute and Organ, with flautist Laura Dwyer, and Nineteenth Century Masterworks for the Organ. Ms. Ward has been a featured organ concerto soloist with both the Symphony Orchestra of Albuquerque and the Los Alamos Sinfonietta, has been heard nationally on The Pacifica Foundation Network as soloist in the American Guild of Organists (Los Angeles Chapter) 20th-century organ music series, and has toured in Oulskapar, The Netherlands, and Darmstadt-Eberstadt and Hamburg, Germany.

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“Most of what I have learned about organs has come from working on organs or from observing organs. But I have had two principal teachers. The first was John Swinford of Redwood City, California. He taught me about organ tone. The second was Walter Holtkamp, Sr. He taught me that an organ should be articulate above everything else. And he did a fair job of teaching this lesson to the country as a whole.”--Charles Fisk1

“Someday people will realize that the organ is a keyboard instrument and not just a big vat of sound.”

--Walter Holtkamp, Sr., 19542

Any discussion of organs designed by Walter Holtkamp, Sr., must begin with the profound influence of the Orgelbewegung (Organ Renewal) movement in Germany during the first three decades of the twentieth century, as well as its French manifestations with Nadia Boulanger. The Orgelbewegung strongly influenced the work of Walter Holtkamp. One of Holtkamp’s organs, designed shortly before his death in 1962, resides in Keller Hall at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, and is the organ featured and pictured in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians (2001), Volume 18, page 635.3

But before we trace the history of this instrument, its visual impact and articulate good sound, here follows a history of the movement that inspired its creation.

The Orgelbewegung (Organ Renewal) Movement

The portrayal of 20th-century church music’s regeneration, effected primarily in Germany in the 1920s, should be viewed only as an attempt to trace the outlines of an age which justifiably has been called “the Renaissance of church music” (O. Sohngen). As the Renaissance of Humanism stood upon the shoulders of its predecessors, so does this newest epoch of Protestant church music have its roots in the past. Consequently, we are obliged to shed light upon the diverse historical determinants and principal features in the development of the “Renaissance,” whose influence extends to the present and perhaps even into the future. The rebirth owes a great deal more to the hymnologists, liturgists, restorers of church music, and liturgical reformers in musicology, as well as to one or another 19th-century creative musician, than was immediately apparent to the new generation around 1930.4

--Adam Adrio

The various trends and movements that characterize the music of the 20th century are usually considered under the heading of New Music.5 New Music may perhaps be regarded simply as anti-Romanticism. One group particularly known is Les Six in France, a group that formed a front against the romantic concept of things artistic. Another manifestation is the movement generally known as neo-Classicism. Although Ferruccio Busoni is usually considered its prime mover,6 neo-Classicism experienced its real beginnings with Igor Stravinsky in his Octet for Wind Instruments (1923). Perhaps the chief exponent of neo-Classicism was Paul Hindemith, with his mastery of contrapuntal technique. Heinrich Strobel, a major biographer of Hindemith, shows the affinity of the neo-Classical movement to the aims of Les Six.7 [Briefly summarized, neo-Classical works exhibit a kinship with Bach and earlier composers through the consistent use of contrapuntal texture and imitative procedures; a decided preference for motor rhythms; the choice of comparatively short themes with sharply defined rhythms; the reduction of orchestral resources and color; and the rejection of the idea of program music. Thus, compactness and structural clarity are principal aims of neo-Classicism.]

Since it came into being at about the same time as neo-Classicism, exhibits a similar reaction to the excesses of the 19th century, and shares its retrospective nature, the German “Renaissance of church music” and within it the Orgelbewegung8 must be regarded as parallel movements within a more limited sphere. Rochus von Liliencron stated in 1900: “The New . . . can be discovered only through reverent contact with the old church art of the 16th century and the Protestant of the 18th; but for the purpose of permeating the music to today with the exalted, genuinely religious spirit of the old art, rather than of imitating it insensitively.”9 The Orgelbewegung, then, was primarily a reaction against the Klangideal of the 19th-century organ, a return to the organ music of the Baroque masters, and a renewal of interest in polyphony and the organ as a vehicle for compositional activity.10

Albert Schweitzer, in his 1906 essay “Deutsche und franzosische Orgelbaukunst und Orgelkunst,”11 favored a reform in organ construction to make available an organ that would be more compatible to the works of J. S. Bach and his predecessors. As history often has a habit of doing, the political turmoil in Europe culminating in World War I prevented the idea of reform in organ building until the 1920s. A major step in the direction of the Orgelbewegung was taken when Willibald Gurlitt, together with the organbuilder Oskar Walcker, undertook the construction of the Praetorius-Orgel in 1921 at the University of Freiburg in Breisgau. This instrument was constructed according to the specifications which Praetorius set down in his Syntagma Musicum II:  Organographia (1619).12 In the aftermath of the Praetorius-Orgel, a number of other old organs in Germany were discovered, including those built by Arp Schnitger (Jakobi-Orgel, Hamburg, 1688-1692) and the Silbermann-Orgel in Freiburg.

Beginning in 1925, several organ conferences were held in Germany, with the purpose of clarifying the direction of the Orgelbewegung for organbuilders. As Friedrich Hogner has suggested, however, the effect of these would have been lost if they had ended with a mere revival of the classical organ masters, important as that was, and had not operated as a fruitful stimulus to contemporary composers.13 The French were not only aware of the efforts of their German neighbors; beginning in the middle of the 19th century they had experienced their own renewal of composition, organbuilding and, through the Lemmens school, brilliant technique. Nadia Boulanger (1887-1979), arguably the most influential teacher of composition of the 20th century, was not only aware of the efforts of the Orgelbewegung, she became deeply involved in it. An organist herself, Boulanger was an organ recitalist of considerable fame as well as a composer and one of the first professional female conductors. An important figure in American musical life as well, she toured the country as an organist in 1925, giving the premiere of Copland’s Symphony for Organ and Orchestra,14 and lived here during World War II, conducting the Boston Symphony, Philadelphia Orchestra and New York Philharmonic, and teaching at Wellesley, Radcliffe and Juilliard.15

The Holtkamp Family--Early Works

In the United States, wave after wave of German immigrants arrived during the second half of the 19th century, settling through the American Midwest with especially large communities in the Dakotas, the Texas hill country and the Ohio River valley. For generations they remained faithful to their religious heritage, language and customs. In fact, during the 19th century, so many new Americans spoke German rather than English that German almost became the official language in several areas, losing, for example, by only one vote in the Texas legislature as the language of that state.

Several members of the Holtkamp family emigrated from Ladbergen, Westfalen, Germany to the United Stated in the 1850s and 1860s. Heinrich Herman Holtkamp settled in Illinois;16 Heinrich Wilhelm and his brother came to New Knoxville, Ohio. The latter Heinrich Holtkamp and his wife Mary produced eight children, and it is their son Herman Heinrich “Henry” Holtkamp (d. 1932) who was the first organbuilder in the family.17

The Holtkamp Organ Company traces its lineage back to 1855, when G. F. Votteler established a shop in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1903, the first organbuilding Holtkamp, Herman Heinrich “Henry,” moved to Cleveland to join the then retiring Henry Votteler. Briefly named the Votteler-Holtkamp-Sparling Company, control of the firm eventually passed to Herman’s son, Walter Holtkamp (1894-1962), in 1931.18

The young organbuilder Walter had already been profoundly influenced through contact with musicians who had in turn been inspired by their teacher, Nadia Boulanger. Chris Holtkamp, in a phone interview, spoke of his grandfather’s musician friends who had worked with Boulanger. Exposing her students to the real literature of the French and German Baroque and the new ideas about organbuilding, these young organists and composers returned from Paris, sought out Walter Holtkamp and encouraged him to “look into this,”19 and a new era of organ building in the U.S. began. Although of German descent, Walter Holtkamp, Sr. had never attended any of the famous Orgelbewegung conferences in Hamburg or Freiburg, but learned about the new movement and its “sound ideal” through his French connections.

After 1918 and the end of WWI, the American economy was experiencing a “boom” cycle in the decade referred to as the “Roaring Twenties.” “The craze for ever-larger, more opulent organs, filled with luxury stops designed to tickle the ear, and conceived as one-man symphony orchestras, seemed to take over. The competition was on for possession of the largest and most extravagant instrument. The pipes of these organs were then buried in chambers out of sight, sometimes behind heavy curtains or carvings. This development tended to lose sight of the classical nature, its functional character, its . . . dignified tradition.” In addition, American organists tended to play transcriptions of symphonies in their recitals, to a great degree ignoring the great literature composed for their instrument in previous centuries.20

Walter Holtkamp, now strongly influenced by the new ideas and rediscovery of early music, advocated several seemingly radical notions: Pipes, he said, should be out in the open, clearly visible to the eye. To bury them in “chamber-tombs” is like asking a violinist to play from a closet backstage with the door closed, “like trying to woo a lady by correspondence,” he said. With pipes displayed in the open, fewer would be needed. Holtkamp’s success in obtaining very open positions for his organs gave them a presence and spontaneity that made him famous. So he insisted on smaller, leaner instruments, carefully designed to make each rank distinctive in its own right but essential to the total ensemble of tone--as his German contemporaries called it, the Werk-Orgel. Moreover, he demanded the highest quality materials and workmanship. The metal pipes were to have a high content of pure tin, the ivory on the keys was to be thick-cut and heavy, as ivory absorbs perspiration while other materials allow moisture to collect in puddles, to the distress of the player. (It is duly noted that it is now illegal to import pure ivory into the U.S.)

In 1933, Walter Holtkamp addressed the American Guild of Organists and the Association of Pipe Organ Builders with a pronouncement that is regarded as the starting point for a return to integrity in organ design in the U.S. He said, “The watchword should be smaller organs of finer quality, in advantageous positions. They are more of a pleasure to build and certainly more of a pleasure to listen to. The mammoth thing may satisfy the ego of the purchaser, but it sins against all the dictates of good taste and the laws of musical sound.”21

Following the philosophy of the early Orgelbewegung and the ideas of Boulanger and her disciples, Walter Holtkamp first designed several portativ organs for use in smaller church buildings--a vision for a rich, authentic pipe organ sound at a price that could compete with the newly-emerging electronic organ. The result was a totally self-contained, single-manual, three-stop pipe organ. Holtkamp said that the portativ organ was typical of his urge to natural, functional expression. Besides adapting the pipe organ to the smaller setting, the early portativs incorporated design features that were to become hallmarks of even the largest Holtkamp organs.

In several early Holtkamps, tracker key action was used (this was by no means the only action for later organs). Most important, however, was the placement of the organ pipes within the space where they would be heard, rather than in rooms or chambers adjacent. Only about a dozen of these early Holtkamp portativs were built; several, though, are still in use and can be seen and/or heard at the Smithsonian Institution, the Cleveland Museum of Art and (still in constant church use) at Faith Lutheran Church, Jacksonville, Illinois. This latter instrument has been recently enlarged by  Chris Holtkamp, who saw to it that the visual design of the new pipes complemented the design of the existing, that the woods and finishes of the cabinetry were carefully matched, and the integrity of the original portativ was not compromised.22

As the Holtkamp Organ Company became ever more famous, another surge of organbuilding came after the Second World War. This time, colleges and universities around the country were demanding high quality organs. The upsurge in serious historical musicology in the 1950s and ‘60s would result in many institutions of higher learning greatly desiring organs that brought to life the excitement of the early music so avidly being rediscovered, and which could, in addition, do justice to new music as well. Among those institutions with funds newly available to achieve these goals were such prestigious schools as Amherst, UC, Emory, Furman, Hollins, Indiana, Juilliard, MIT, Northwestern, Oberlin, Ohio Wesleyan, Randolph-Macon Woman’s College, Salem, Sweet Briar, Syracuse, Wellesley, Yale and Duke.23 Is it any wonder that the University of New Mexico should desire the same for their new performing arts complex of several halls?

The University of New Mexico and its Holtkamp Organ

Following World War II, universities around the country were again booming, along with the economy. UNM was certainly no exception, as students poured in. For a time, the various departments in Fine Arts were scattered around campus. By the middle 1950s Tom Popejoy, President of the University from 1948-1968, Edwin Stein, Dean of the College of Fine Arts, and Joe Blankenship, Chairman of the Music Department, had determined that the university needed a true Center for the Arts, with several performing and exhibit halls, rehearsal halls, an art museum, classrooms, libraries, faculty offices--in fact, everything that a first class university should have. Even more astonishing to those of us working in universities today, there were funds available to make all of this happen, and fairly quickly: a 2000-seat auditorium (Popejoy Hall) and a 324-seat Recital Hall (later named Keller Hall in memory of Walter Keller, Music Department Chair (1967-70). Any music or art department needs seem to have been funded within the 10-year period that the Center for the Arts was conceived and built. This included a fine organ for the Recital (or Keller) Hall, with 51 ranks and 2,471 pipes.24

At a time when university music departments across the country were sharing the excitement of musicological research and the rediscovery of neo-Baroque organbuilding principles, this was a rare opportunity for a brilliant builder, Walter Holtkamp, to work together with the architect Edward Holien and acousticians Bolt, Baranek and Newman, to build what was considered to be the very best possible marriage of instrument and building--a contrast to the problems innate in building an organ for an already existing space.

Accordingly, Edwin Stein contacted Walter Holtkamp in March 1960; Holtkamp was retained as the designer of the organ in January 1961 and completed the design between January and April, 1961. Several other organs were at various stages of design and building during this same time, and a comparison of their specifications shows where Walter Holtkamp’s creative energies had taken him. Tragically, Walter Holtkamp died in February of 1962, at the relatively young age of 68, while still realizing his considerable creative powers. Organs conceived during the late period in addition to the one for UNM included St. John’s Abbey in Collegeville, Minnesota, Lakewood Presbyterian Church, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Mountain Brook, Alabama, the Unitarian Church in Arlington, Virginia,25 and Westwood Lutheran Church in St. Louis Park, Minnesota.

This final project was another opportunity to work with the architects (Sovik, Mather and Madsen) and once again with the acoustical engineering firm of Bolt, Baranek and Newman. The organ at St. John’s Abbey was the last large contract, completed in November, 1961, before Walter Holtkamp’s death.26 St. John’s organ was placed in a monastically austere, not to mention large, church, and the brothers felt that the organ might be dwarfed by the scale of the room. Never conceived for concert use, but rather to serve the monastic community at prayer, the pipes were placed behind a red cloth screen, acoustically transparent, chosen primarily for architectural considerations. The brothers at St. John’s Abbey consider this organ to be Walter Holtkamp Sr.’s magnum opus. One should comment, however, that the Holtkamp at St. John’s was first played by the great Flor Peeters at its inaugural.27 It is most useful, now, to compare the specifications of this sister organ with the one in Keller Hall at UNM--only slightly smaller, but in this instance, one meant to be played in concert and to be seen.

At this point in the creation of the organ in Keller Hall at UNM, some construction delays occurred, and the organ was not completed until December of 1967. St. John’s was indeed the final opus totally designed and installed by Walter Holtkamp, Sr. These last half dozen or so organs designed by Holtkamp were then completed by his son, Walter Holtkamp, Jr., who insured the integrity of his father’s design. Another important figure, then, in this installation at UNM came to be the new Department Chair, Walter Keller, who was a keyboardist (harpsichord, piano and organ) and musicologist of some note. Thus there was a virtual guarantee that the vision of those 20th-century builders of the Orgelbewegung would come to fruition at UNM.28

Our Holtkamp in Keller Hall was inaugurated in grand fashion, with a conference and series of lectures by the composer-author William Schuman. The inaugural recitals in what was then called Recital Hall, now Keller Hall, were given in February and March, 1968. Featured artists were Catharine Crozier, Wesley Selby and the UNM choirs, brass and string orchestra together with Wes Selby.29 The original recordings of those programs are now available on CD, thanks to recording engineer Manny Rettinger (UBIK Sound).

I am pleased to report that our newest generation of young students, particularly those in our Music Appreciation courses (more than 1,000 of them in several sections!), really love our Holtkamp organ. It is exciting to me as both teacher and performer to have a full house of excited 18-year-old students come to organ recitals--our new audience of the future for the next generation of concert organists.

The Holtkamp at UNM is in marvelous condition, helped by the temperature control designed into the building and the commitment of the Music Department to preserve the organ with the help of the Mountain States firm for tuning and maintenance. It has been continuously played since its installation, by numerous students of Wes Selby and Wes Selby himself, now Professor Emeritus of Organ and Theory, as well as numerous guest artists over the years, organ instructor Edwina Beard, and by myself. With our excellent recording system in the hall, new CDs continue to be made with this instrument. The author is grateful to Wes for his oral history and contributions to this article. It is Wes’s picture that accompanies this article, playing the instrument in its, and his, early days at UNM. The author is also grateful for the extensive interviews and oral history contributions by Professor Emeritus Dr. William Seymour.

In the wind . . .

John Bishop

John Bishop is executive director of the Organ Clearing House.

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Whenever I’m demonstrating, playing, selling, or moving an organ, people ask, “How did you get into this?” I’m pretty sure every organist and organbuilder has fielded a similar question.

Roots
I got interested in the pipe organ as a pup. When I sang in the junior choir as an eight-year-old kid, the director was Carl Fudge, a harpsichord maker and devoted musician. When my voice changed and I joined the senior choir, I sat with other members of Boston’s community of musical instrument makers. I took organ lessons, found summer jobs in organbuilders’ workshops, studied organ performance at Oberlin, and never looked back. It’s as if there was nothing else I could have done.
As I’ve gone from one chapter of my life to the next, I’ve gathered a list of people who I think have been particularly influential in the history of the pipe organ, and who have influenced my opinions and philosophy. I could never mention them all in one sitting, but I thought I’d share thoughts about a few of them in roughly the order of their life spans. This is not to be considered a comprehensive or authoritative list, just the brief recollections of their role in the work of my life.
Arp Schnitger (1648–1719) was a prolific organbuilder active in Germany and the Netherlands. He was involved in the construction of well over a hundred organs—more than forty of them survive and have been made famous through modern recordings. As a modern-day organbuilder, I marvel at that body of work accomplished without electric power, UPS, or telephones. Schnitger’s work burst into my consciousness with E. Power Biggs’ landmark Columbia recording, The Golden Age of the Organ, a two-record set that featured several of Schnitger’s finest instruments. I was captivated by the vital sound, especially of the four-manual organ at Zwolle, the Netherlands, on which Biggs played Bach’s transcription of Vivaldi’s D-minor concerto from L’estro armonico. His playing was clear, vital, and energetic, and I remain impressed at how an organ completed in 1721 could sound so fresh and brilliant to us today.
Schnitger’s organs all sport gorgeous high-Baroque cases and some of the most beautiful tonal structures ever applied to pipe organs. Many of the most influential organists of his day were influenced by Schnitger’s work, which was a centerpiece of the celebrated North German school of organbuilding and composition.
In my opinion, Aristide Cavaillé-Coll (1811–1899) is a strong candidate for best organbuilder, period. No single practitioner produced more tonal, mechanical, or architectural innovations. Among many other great ideas, he pioneered the concept of multiple wind pressures, not only in a single organ but also in a single windchest. Big organs in large French churches had the perennial problem of weak trebles, especially in the reeds. That’s why the Treble Cornet was so important to Classic French registration—if you wanted to play a dialogue between the bass and treble of a reed stop, accompanied by a Principal, you used the Trompette for the bass and Cornet for the treble (remember Clérambault 101!). Cavaillé-Coll used one pressure for bass, slightly higher pressure for mid-range, and higher still for the treble. This required complicated wind systems that would be no problem for us today, but remember those were the days of hand-pumping. Imagine that for more than half of Widor’s career at St. Sulpice, the 100-stop organ had to be pumped by hand. Those poor guys at the bellows handles must have hated that wind-sucking Toccata!
Cavaillé-Coll’s organs created vast new possibilities for composers through tone color and snazzy pneumatic registration devices. It’s safe to say that without his work we wouldn’t have the music of Franck, Vierne, Widor, Dupré, Tournemire, Messiaen, Saint-Saëns, Pierné, Mulet, or Naji Hakim, to name a few. A pretty dry world . . .
Andrew Carnegie (1835–1919) was a Scottish-born industrialist who built great companies in nineteenth-century America for the production of steel and many other products. The rapid expansion of the railroads formed a lucrative market for Carnegie’s products, and he built a vast fortune. He once stated that he would limit his earnings to $50,000 a year and use the surplus for the greater good. He gave millions of dollars for the establishment of great universities, notably Carnegie-Mellon University and the Carnegie Institute of Technology, and countless library buildings were built throughout the United States with his money. He loved the pipe organ and was a loyal customer of the Aeolian Organ Company, commissioning several instruments for his homes. His love of the organ did not carry across to religious devotion—he was cynical enough about organized religion that as he gave money for the commissioning of new organs for churches he said that it was his intent to give the parishioners something to listen to besides the preaching. In all, Andrew Carnegie and the Carnegie Foundation contributed to the purchase of more than 8,000 pipe organs. During the time I was a student at Oberlin and for several years after my graduation, I was organist of Calvary Presbyterian Church in Cleveland, where there was a large Austin organ donated by Andrew Carnegie.
Dudley Buck (1839–1909) was born in Hartford, Connecticut, educated at Trinity College, and studied organ at the Leipzig Conservatory in Germany. He was organist at Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, New York, for many years, was a prolific composer and an active concert artist. His studies in Europe formed him as one of a group of American musicians who brought European virtuosity to the United States. This in turn inspired the transition of the nineteenth-century American organ from the simple, gentle, English-inspired instruments of the early eighteenth century with primitive Swell boxes and tiny pedal compasses to the instruments more familiar to us, with significant independent pedal divisions, primary and secondary choruses, and powerful chorus reeds. The first American organ Renaissance was under way.
Ernest Skinner (1866–1960), one of America’s most famous organbuilders, was a pioneer in the development of electro-pneumatic keyboard and stop actions, and in the tonal development of the symphonic organ. His brilliantly conceived combination actions gave organists convenient, instant, and nearly silent control over the resources of a huge organ. Those wonderful machines can fairly be described as some of the first user-programmable binary computers, built in Boston starting in about 1904, using wood, leather, and a Rube Goldberg assortment of hardware. Mr. Skinner devoted tremendous effort to the creation of the ergonomic organ console, experimenting with measurements and geometry to put keyboards, pedalboard, stop, combination, and expression controls within easy reach of the fingers and feet of the player. He was devoted to the highest quality and was immensely proud of his artistic achievements. He lived long enough to see his organs fall out of favor as interest in older styles of organbuilding was rekindled, and he died lonely and bitter. He would be heartened, delighted, and perhaps a little cocky had he witnessed the reawakening of interest in his organs some twenty-five years after his death.
E. Power Biggs (1906–1977) was central to the second American organ Renaissance. He was born and educated in England and experienced the great European organs of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries before coming to the United States. Disenchanted with mid-twentieth-century American organbuilding and empowered by the introduction of the long-playing record (remember those black discs with the holes in the center?), he traveled Europe with his wife Peggy, recording those venerable instruments, handling the heavy and bulky recording equipment himself. He produced a long series of recordings of historic European organs, each of which focused on a single country or region and featured performances of music on the organs for which it was intended. This vast body of recorded performances brought the rich heritage of the European organ to the ears of countless Americans for the first time. Biggs’s recordings were an early example of the power of the media, made in the same era of fast-developing technology in which the Kennedy-Nixon presidential race was so heavily influenced by that mysterious new medium, television.
The response from organists and organbuilders was swift and enthusiastic. Dozens of small shops were established and important schools of music shifted the focus of their teaching to emphasize the relationship of organ music and playing to those marvelous older instruments.
In 1956 Biggs imported a three-manual organ built by Flentrop, which was installed in Harvard’s Germanic Museum, later known as the Busch-Reisinger Museum, now known as Busch Hall. Using that remarkable instrument, Biggs produced his record series released on Columbia Records, E. Power Biggs Plays Bach Organ Favorites, which became the best-selling series of solo classical recordings in history. Especially through the wide distribution of his recordings, Biggs was enormously influential, introducing a new world-view of the organ to the American public.
Virgil Fox (1912–1980) was a contemporary of Biggs, equally widely known and respected, who represented a very different point of view. He was champion of a romantic style of playing, celebrating organs with symphonic voices, lots of expression boxes, and plenty of luscious strings. His virtuosity and musicianship were without question, his lifestyle was flamboyant, and he was outspoken in his opinions, especially as regarded his artistic rival Biggs. Fox was determined that the “new” approach to organs and organ playing as borrowed from earlier centuries in Europe would not overshadow the romantic symphonic instruments that he so loved.
The rivalry between Biggs and Fox formed a fascinating artistic portrait and could well have been a healthy balance, but at times was vitriolic enough to become destructive. We had tracker-backers and “stick” organs on one side and slush buckets and murk merchants on the other. Those members of the public who were not interested enough in the organ to know how to take sides often simply walked away.
Jason McKown (1906–1989) was a right-hand man to Ernest Skinner, born in the same year as Mr. Biggs. It was my privilege to succeed Jason in the care of many wonderful organs in the Boston area when he retired, including those at Trinity Church, Copley Square (where Jason had been tuner for more than fifty years) and the First Church of Christ, Scientist (The Mother Church) that is home to an Aeolian-Skinner organ with 237 ranks. We overlapped for six months at the Mother Church to allow me a chance to get my bearings in that massive instrument. With forty-one reeds and more than a hundred ranks of mixtures, that organ was a challenge to tune. Jason had helped with the installation of several Skinner organs in the area in the 1920s that he maintained until his retirement, leaving me as the second person to care for organs that were sixty years old. He had prepared organs for concerts played by Vierne and Dupré, and though he never drove a car, he dutifully cared for dozens of organs throughout the Boston area, taking buses wherever he went. Jason’s wife Ruth was a fine organist and long-suffering key-holder. She had been a classmate and lifelong friend of former AGO national president Roberta Bitgood. I attended Jason’s funeral at his home church, Centre Methodist Church in Malden, Massachusetts, home to a 1971 Casavant organ. When that parish disbanded, the Organ Clearing House relocated Jason’s home organ to Salisbury Presbyterian Church in Midlothian, Virginia. Jason was a gentle, patient, and humble man who spent his life making organs sound their best.
Sidney Eaton (1908–2007) was an organ pipe maker and the last living employee of the Skinner Organ Company. He was Jason McKown’s co-worker and a long-time resident of North Reading, Massachusetts, where I lived for about ten years. I got to know Sidney when he was very old and quite crazy—I think he lived alone long enough to stop disagreeing with himself, and when he lost himself as his final filter he could say some outrageous things. One day I stopped by his house on my way to say hi and he came to the door in his birthday suit. Nothing weird, he had just forgotten to get dressed. Sidney told me about working next to Mr. Skinner as he dreamed up the shimmering Erzähler, the beguiling English Horn, and Skinner’s most famous tonal invention, the French Horn. Though it was often a challenge to find the line between fact and fantasy, I felt privileged to have had an opportunity to hear first-hand about some of our most famous predecessors. In his last years, Sidney road around town on an ancient Schwinn bicycle with balloon tires, a wire basket on the handlebars, and a bell that he rang with his thumb. He would lift his right hand and give a princely wave and a toothless smile to anyone driving by, whether or not they were an organbuilder.
Charles Fisk (1925–1983) began his musical life as a choirboy at Christ Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where E. Power Biggs was the oft-truant organist. He studied physics at Harvard and Stanford, worked briefly for the Manhattan Project in New Mexico under Robert Oppenheimer, and rescued himself to become an organbuilder. He apprenticed with Walter Holtkamp in Cleveland, Ohio, became a partner in the Andover Organ Company, and later formed the venerable firm of C. B. Fisk, Inc. My father, an Episcopal priest now retired, was involved in the purchase of two organs by Fisk. When I was growing up, we lived equidistant (about three blocks) between two Fisk organs, one in my home church and one in the neighboring Congregational church, where I had my lessons and did most of my practicing through high school. I didn’t know Charlie well but I did meet him several times and attended workshops and lectures that I remember vividly. I consider him to be the Dean of the Boston School of revivalist organbuilders—that fascinating movement that was well underway as my interest in the organ developed.
Brian Jones (still very much alive and active!) was director of music and organist at Trinity Church in Boston when Jason McKown retired and I took on the care of the complicated and quirky organ there. Complicated because it is in fact two organs in three locations, with a fantastic relay system and sophisticated console, quirky because it was first a Skinner organ, then an Aeolian-Skinner organ, and then continuously modified by Jason in cahoots with George Faxon, long-time organist there, and much beloved teacher of many of Boston’s fine organists. Brian understood the central position of that church in that city—a magnificent building designed by H. H. Richardson, decorated by John LaFarge, and home to some of the great preachers of the Episcopal Church—and the music program he created reflected the great heritage of the place. He brought great joy to the church’s music as he built the choir program into a national treasure. Otherwise polite-to-a-fault Back Bay Bostonians would draw blood over seats for the Candlelight Carol Service (now famous through the vast sales of the twice-released Carols from Trinity), and the 1,800-seat church was packed whenever the choir sang. I remember well the recording sessions for the second professional release, which took place in the wee hours of stifling June and July nights, the schedule dictated by the desire for a profitable Christmas-shopping-release. It was surreal to lie on a pew in 90-degree weather, tools at hand, at two in the morning, listening to the third take of I saw three ships come sailing in.
My Trinity Church experience included tuning every Friday morning in preparation for the weekly noontime recital. The opportunity to hear that great organ played by a different musician each week had much to do with the evolution of my understanding of the electro-pneumatic symphonic organ that I had been taught to consider decadent. And the weekly communal lunches that followed each recital at the Thai place across the street introduced me to many of the wonderful people in the world of the pipe organ.
My wife, Wendy Strothman, was organist of the Follen Community Church (Unitarian Universalist) in Lexington, Massachusetts, and chair of the organ committee when we met. I was invited to make a proposal to the committee for the repair and improvement of the church’s homemade organ for which there seemed to be little hope, but whose creator was still present as a church member. A spectacular 14-rank organ by E. & G.G. Hook fell from the sky as a neighboring U.U. church closed and offered the organ. With lots of enthusiastic volunteer help, we restored and installed the organ. I marveled at Wendy’s commitment to her weekly musical duties as she managed the rigors of her day job—executive vice-president at a major publishing house in Boston. When the organ was complete, the church commissioned Boston composer Daniel Pinkham to compose a piece for this wonderful organ. He responded with a colorful and insightful suite called Music for a Quiet Sunday, published by Thorpe Music. It includes about a half-dozen tuneful, attainable pieces and a partita on the tune Sloane. Daniel had sized up Wendy’s dual life and produced a marvelous collection of pieces aimed at the skillful dedicated amateur who worked hard to squeeze out enough practice time from a life filled with pressing professional responsibilities, not to mention raising a family. I write often about the brilliant big-city organists who I am privileged to know—their deep dedication, and virtuoso skills. Daniel’s reading of Wendy’s situation was a third-person insight for me into the joy of playing the organ in church as a sideline to a professional career.
There are dozens of you out there who know you’re on my list. Stay tuned. We’ll do this again. 

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