Epiphany, 2010
I love the "Readers' Photos of G.M. Cars" feature on the New York Times website.
One in particular, from Fenner Douglass of Oberlin, Ohio, caught my eye.
The elder Fenner Douglass (who took this photo?) was the famous organist, scholar and teacher.
Labels: organists, transportation
President-elect Barack Obama worshipped at Nineteenth Street Baptist Church in Washington, D.C. yesterday. Word got out that he was going to be there, and seats for the 11:00 a.m. service were claimed quickly.
At 9:15 a.m., a Secret Service agent announced to a disappointed crowd that the church had reached capacity, with the exception of the members of the choir and church officers. A light moment occurred when presiding usher Gerald Young asked the crowd where the organist was and 15 hands immediately shot up.Wright, James. "Final Sunday before Inauguration Obamas Worship at Black Church in Washington". Afro News 18 January 2009
Organist Cameron Carpenter's CD "Revolutionary" is among those improv-tinged records that make up NPRs list of the best classical CDs of 2008.
Labels: improvisation, organists
Speaking of ST MAGNUS (written by Clarke, you know), there's the St. Magnus Festival in Orkney (where?).
Gillian Weir played, and wouldn't you know it
. . . a sour note on the organ - a crucial one in Messiaen's Dieu Parmi Nous - rather hampered her performance. Intended for BBC Radio 3's festival coverage, it will have to be re-recorded if it is to be broadcast.Smith, Rowena. Music: St Magnus Festival, Orkney. The Herald 23 June 2008.
So, that means the organ was out of tune? I find that easier to believe than Gillian Weir missing a note.
In an article that references the "slow death of organ music", the New York Times profiles the 50-year veteran organist of the College World Series.
And "French pipe organist" Michel Bouvard plays the largest pipe organ in Asia.
Labels: organists
Yesterday, Christoph Bull accompanied Safety Last for a full house in Los Angeles, and organist Clark Wilson performed an accompaniment to Metropolis Tonight in Toronto.
Labels: organists
The result of a recent tribunal probably means that organists in the Church of England will gain "full employment rights".
You know, like parking spaces and coffee privileges.
Organists across the pond evidently constitute their own religion:
Of the estimated 30,000 practising organists in Britain, only about 100 are full time. The majority have other jobs and can expect to take home about £40 a week for their services.Nugent, Helen. "Church told to play pipes of peace as organists get workers' rights" The Times (London), emphasis added
I like the phrase "practising organists", and I imagine large late-night bonfires and Messiaen.
How do "practising" organists contrast with North America's "practicing organists?"
Do the latter play better?
Labels: organists
If church music and Super/Fat Tuesday were to intersect, Sinden.org would be the one to bring that convergence to you.
From the two political donors who have identified their occupation as "organist", Barack Obama has received $250, while Mitt Romney has only received $225.
Expand the criteria to those who identify as "music directors", and there's a lot more money involved:
There you have it. "Music directors" have given $4,242 to Barack Obama, and $350 to John McCain.
How do you like them pancakes?
Labels: church music, organists
On the front page of the Arts section of today's New York Times is an article about the sudden departure of the director of music and organist at Trinity, Wall Street: "Director of Music at Trinity Steps Down".
Owen Burdick's departure is rather abrupt, leaving the Trinity choir and Rebel Baroque Orchestra leaderless for their upcoming Monteverdi Vespers performance at the end of the month.
In the Times article, Linda Hanick, vice president of communications at Trinity is quoted as saying "We’re going to be looking at how we’ll restructure the music program."
Churches of Trinity's caliber don't often use the word "restructure" in regard to the music program; usually, they just want to keep it going. But Hanick is blunt: she doesn't say the church will be looking at if or when they'll restructure the music program. Those two questions are implicitly answered in her statement. Yes to restructuring, and now! This led the staff of Sinden.org to speculate that some forces in the church are eager to depart from the professional chamber choir model.
So how will the Trinity program be "restructured"? Perhaps the Trinity Choristers, currently under the direction of Rob Ridgell, will have a more prominent role in the music of the church. Or perhaps their will be an increased focus on liturgical music rather than afternoon concerts.
There is also speculation about what this may mean for the organ in the church, which is a Marshall & Ogletree digital prototype dubbed a "virtual organ". Last summer Burdick wrote an "Open Letter to the Organ Community" in defense of the instrument.
Labels: church music, churches, organists, organs
Organists everywhere can breathe a sigh of relief: a man who killed two organists is not going anywhere soon.
Suspect charged, 26 years after Mishawaka man's murder
Labels: organists
On YouTube you can watch bridal processionals from recent decades. It's interesting to note the variety in the processional music.
1999 - Edward and Sophie - Herbert Brewer's "March Heroique"
1986 - Andrew and Sarah - Elgar's "Imperial March"
1981 - Charles and Diana - Clarke's "Trumpet Voluntary"
So why, then, do modern, non-Royal American brides feel that they have but only one option? (At least in my experience. I have never been asked to play anything other than the Clarke.)
Among their myriad tasks, organists unwittingly carry on Diana's memory everytime a Jane Schmoe walks down the aisle in a white dress.
A young organist in Charlotte, North Carolina speaks for a whole profession when he says:
I thought for the longest time that it would be neat to be able to play that thing with all those keyboards and all those knobs.
and
"That's what I like about playing the organ -- especially in church. When you're playing the hymns ... you get to lead everybody," he says with a laugh. "If you take it slow, they have to follow you. I like having that kind of power."
Organist senses power of music... and of politics
Labels: organists
And now the latest installment in the ongoing battles between pious clergy and dirty, hippie-liberal musicians: St. Joseph's Catholic Church in New Franken, Wisconsin has removed their organist for selling sex toys.
This story has been picked up by the Associated Press.
Linette Servais, had been serving St. Joseph's as organist and choir director for 35 years (since she was 15 years old?). She was not salaried, and it sounds like she volunteered her services. Linette also "says she started selling sex toys after treatment for a tumor left her experiencing sexual dysfunction". She feels that the sex toy business is her "ministry".
Sounds like wrongful termination to me. Though, I must wonder how much of a "ministry" musicmuzak-making can ever be in the Roman Catholic church.
(via Boing Boing
And of course, leave it to CBS News to come up with Musician Canned For Focus On Wrong Organ
Labels: organists, Roman Catholocism
©MMIX Sinden.org: a site for fun and prophet

Currently:
(via Twitter)
Hungry? Try the Liturgical Guide to Altoids Consumption
Thirsty? Try the Tibia Liquida
The Eric Harding Thiman Fan Page: The greatest composer you've never even heard of.
Questions? Problems? email the sexton.
Anglicans Online
Alex Ross: The Rest is Noise
Book of Common Prayer
conjectural navel gazing: jesus in lint form
The Daily Office
The Lectionary Page
Ship of Fools
Stop Global Warming: Virtual March on Washington
Sluggy Freelance
This Blog Will Change the World
Andrew Kotylo - Concert Organist
Aphaeresis
Bonnie Whiting Smith, percussionist
Cheshirite
David Crean
Echoing Air
Friday Night Organ Pump
Halbert Gober Organs, Inc.
in time of daffodils
鉦彦物語
Kastenbalg News
Like a Fox
Musical Perceptions
My Life as Style, Condition, Commodity.
Nathan Medley, Countertenor
The Parker Quartet
Raw Story
Ryan is in Atlanta
Steven Rickards
This Side of Lost
Advent (Medfield MA)
Atonement (Bronx NY)
Broadway UMC (Indianapolis IN)
Cathedral of All Saints (Albany NY)
Christ Church (Bronxville NY)
Church of St. Stephen (Hamden CT)
Congregational (Belmont CA)
First UMC (Lancaster SC)
Gloria Dei ELCA (Iowa City IA)
Immanuel Lutheran (St Paul MN)
Immanuel Lutheran (Webster NY)
John Knox PCUSA (Houston TX)
St Andrew (Marblehead MA)
St James's (Lake Delaware NY)
St Mary's Cathedral (Memphis TN)
St Matthew and St Timothy (NYC)
St Paul's (Cleveland Heights OH)
St Paul's Cathedral (Buffalo NY)
St Peter's (Lakewood OH)
St Peter's ELCA (NYC)
St Thomas (New Haven CT)
St Thomas ELCA (Bloomington IN)
Second PCUSA (Indianapolis IN)
Trinity (Indianapolis IN)
Trinity on the Green (New Haven CT)
selling diphthongs?
Yes, but they're not the kind you buy on Wheel of Fortune.
on the faculty of The University of Blogaria?
Yes.
the owner of a bower at Bucklesfordberry?
Full daintily it is dight.
interested in touch lamps?
And fountain pens.