Sunday, June 29, 2014

The Boston Convention of the American Guild of Organists

Blog
June 28, 2014

I spent this past week in Boston at the national convention for the American Guild of Organists attending concerts and workshops and networking with other organists.
This is the banner from the Boston AGO Convention website showing a Boston skyline, the organ at Methuen Concert Hall and the organ at Old West Church

There were many highlights of this convention:
On Monday, June 24, I was one of about 14 people who played the organ at the Mother Church, First Church of Christ Scientist, during an open console time graciously hosted by the church organist, Bryan Ashley, who set the registrations for the players.  This organ is Aeolian Skinner’s Opus 1203, the largest single organ that the firm ever built.  I played J.S. Bach’s fugue in E Minor (The Cathedral).  Just getting to the console requires the organist to pass through Mr. Ashley’s music library and enter through a doorway that is only about four and a half feet high.
Aeolian Skinner Opus 1203, The Mother Church, First Church of Christ Scientist, photo from the church website


At the console of Aeolian Skinner Opus 1203, photo taken by Robert Atnip

On Monday afternoon, I traveled to Brookline for a session called “The Timeless Beauty of Hook Organs,” where the group heard Maury Castro play two historic Brookline organs built by E. & G. G. Hook:  the first in the Sears Chapel, Opus 307 (1861) (2 manuals, 21 ranks) and the second at Church of Our Savior, Opus 1366 (1887) (2 manuals, 11 ranks).  Mr. Castro played works of Stanley, Grieg, Laurin, Mendelssohn, Clarke, and Albright.

The convention started on Monday evening with a concert of Concerti featuring James David Christie, organ, and the Boston Landmarks Orchestra, Christopher Wilkins, conductor.  This concert featured works of Guilmant, Langlais, Pinkham, Piston, and Barger.  What a thrill to hear the organ featured with a full orchestra!

A photo from the Boston AGO website of the rehearsal for the Christie concert.  Photo from the AGO website

Tuesday morning began with an ecumenical worship service at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross in Boston.  This Cathedral is the home of E. & G. G. Hook’s Opus 801 (1875).  This service featured the choir and organist from Trinity Church (Episcopal) of Boston.  Leo Abbott, the music director at the Cathedral, played the postlude, which was a newly commissioned work by Daniel Roth, “Fantasie sur l’hymne à Saint Jean Baptiste.” 

I then attended a concert at Trinity Church played by Scott Dettra on the Trinity Skinner Organ Company Opus 573 (1926), Aeolian-Skinner, Opus 573-C (1961).  Mr. Dettra played works of Willan, Escaich, Howells, Bingham, Jongen, and Duruflé.  Tuesday evening featured a concert by Christian Lane featuring both organs at the Memorial Church at Harvard University in Cambridge.  He began on Skinner Organ Co., Opus 793 (1930) with works of Sowerby, Rorem, Hovhaness, and Reger, and continued on C.B. Fisk, Inc., Opus 139 (2012) with works of Cooman, Alain, and J.S. Bach.  Mr. Lane was joined by trumpeter, Chris Gekker who joined him on the Hovahaness “Prayer of St. Gregory” and the Cooman “Solstice Sonata,” a new work commissioned for this convention.

Christian Lane and Chris Gekker in front of the Harvard Memorial Chapel Fisk organ, photo from the Boston AGO website

Wednesday featured Catherine Todorovski playing works of Vivaldi, Pachelbel, J.S. Bach, Krebs, Verdi, Galupi, Gasparini, and Bellini at the First Church in Cambridge, Congregational, on their Frobenius & Sonner, Opus 765 (1972) organ.  This was followed by a concert at Old West Church entitled “The Seasons of Sebastian”  Music of Johann Sebastian Bach” played by Janette Fishell.  Old West Church is home to C.B. Fisk’s Opus 55 (1971).  This special organ used to be the recital organ for the New England Conservatory when they had an organ program.  It is now conserved by both the congregation of the Church and the Old West Organ Society, which features this organ in regular concerts and raises funds for its maintenance.

Wednesday evening I attended a Solemn Evensong Worship service at Church of the Advent Episcopal Church.  The music for this was provided by Mark Dwyer, Ross Wood, and the Advent Choir.  This was a very uplifting and inspirational and included Herbert Howells “Magnificat and Nunc dimittis for the Cathedral Church of the Holy and Indivisible Trinity, Gloucester.”  The St. John’s Chamber Choir, which I am a member of, has just performed this beautiful Howells music at St. John’s in Bangor on March 30.  The Advent Choir also performed a Bruckner motet, “Os justi meditabitur sapientian,” WAB 30 (translated as The mouth of the righteous).  This evensong was one of the highlights of the convention.  The worship service was followed by a concert by John Scott, organist at St. Thomas Church, New York City, featuring works of Berkeley, Stanford, Bridge, Muhly, Whitlock, Fricker, and Mathias masterfully played on the Advent’s Aeolian-Skinner, Opus 940 (1936/1964).

Thursday morning I attended the premier of James Woodman’s “Eight Little Harmonies and Counterpoints,” which were commissioned for this convention and were inspired by J. S. Bach’s “Eight Little Preludes and Fugues.”  These pieces were played by eight high school students on the Casavant Frères organ, Opus 1498 (1933) at Our Lady of Victories Church.  The students did a wonderful job premiering this new music.  I also attended part of “A Hook Morning at Cathedral of the Holy Cross,” which was a panel of George Bozeman, Fritz Noack, Leo Abbott, Robert Newton, Barbara Owen, and Scot Huntington.

Some of the organ students who played the Woodman "Eight Little Harmonies and Counterpoints." Photo from the Boston AGO website

Thursday afternoon, I attended a choral concert by Blue Heron, which is directed by Scott Metcalfe.  This vocal group specializes in a cappella music from the fifteenth through the seventeenth centuries.  Their singing filled the space with the wonderful acoustic of St. Cecilia Parish.

Thursday evening I attended a Praetorius Lutheran Organ Vespers service for Pentecost at First Lutheran Church of Boston.  This is the first time I have attended a Lutheran Vespers.  Bálint Karosi, their minister of music and their choir, Canto Armonico, provided the music.  The choral works were in Latin and German, while the congregational hymns were in English.  This was followed by a concert of organ Concerti of Handel, Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, and J. S. Bach performed by Joan Lippincott and the Boston Early Music Festival Chamber Ensemble, Robert Mealy, director.  The First Lutheran Church is home to Richard Fowkes & Co, Opus 10 (2000).

Friday morning, we rode in a bus to Wellesley where we heard two concerts.  Kimberly Marshall played the first concert in Wellesley College’s Houghton Memorial Chapel on C.B. Fisk’s Opus 72 (1982).  This organ was informed by early Dutch instruments and was the first major American organ that is tuned in meantone with sub-semitones for some of the keys.  The wind for the organ for this concert was provided through manual pumping.  Marshall performed works of Scheidemann, Schlick, Morungensis, Buxtehude, Gardane, Frescobaldi, J.S. Bach, and Sweelinck. 


Wellesley College Fisk organ.  Photo from the Wellesley website


Wellesley College Fisk keyboard showing the sub-semitones on the keys.  Photo from the AGO website

Wellesley College Fisk pedalboard showing the sub-semitones on the pedals.  Photo from the AGO website

Renée Anne Louprette performed the second concert in Wellesley’s St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church.  She masterfully performed works of Widor, Duruflé, Decker, de Grigny, Migot, Balbastre, and Franck on the Juget-Sinclair, Opus 24 (2006) organ.


St. Andrews Wellesley, Juget-Sinclair organ.  Photo from the church website

During the convention I kept in touch with several people from Maine.  I shared a hotel room with Sarah Johnson, a Mainer who was a student of my teacher, Dr. Kevin Birch.  Sarah is currently an organ performance major at Vassar College.  David and Nicholas Wallace are Maine organ builders who built a portable organ of one manual and pedals.  They displayed this organ in the convention exhibit hall.

Sarah Johnson playing the Wallace portable organ.  Photo from the Wallace facebook page


Overall this was an exhilarating convention.  I heard historic and new music performed by top organists and met old and new friends.