BLOG #19, July 9, 2009
Organ music
Later this morning I will be meeting at South
Church with a young woman named Sharon who wants some tips about
playing the organ. She is a pianist who has a summer job in a small
church and wants to get some advice. The organ, of course, is a
tremendously seductive instrument, and I think she’s feeling the
pull. (She writes enthusiastically about practicing and playing
services on Face Book—a dead giveaway.) As my professor Hubert
Kessler used to say, back in the day in Illinois, the thing that is
so majestic about the organ is the “effortlessness” of the thing—all
that enormous sound, produced with so little effort. (On the part of
the player, at least.)
Sharon is a college student who lives in the
greater New Haven area. In the summer she comes to the shaped note
singings we have here in Middletown. The connection between organ
playing and The Sacred Harp brings to mind a project of a few
years ago, which I mean to reinstitute later this morning. In the
summer of 2003, and for some time thereafter, I began my practice
sessions at South Church by improvising on Sacred Harp tunes. My
intention was to work through the book in a systematic fashion, then
write a sort-of-shaped-note-tradition response to J. S. Bach’s
Orgelbüchlein. This project came into my mind at the same time I
was writing “The Sacred Guitar,” a set of seven free pieces,
“take-offs” as it were, on Sacred Harp tunes. There were two
immediate effects—first, I played “The Sacred Guitar” on the organ
(with appropriate elaborations) and found it worked beautifully.
Then I began to introduce this sort of improvisation into the
services at South Church. (For this purpose, by the way, I use a
copy of the 1936 edition of The Sacred Harp I inherited from
William Satler.) I kept a notebook of what I thought was working
particularly well. When the South Church sanctuary was restored and
painted two years ago the notebook, like everything else in the
choir loft, was packed away. It’s time to dig it out and resume
systematic practicing along these lines.
This meeting with Sharon will also be the
occasion to stick around and practice Tom Johnson’s Organ and
Silence. I’m playing this unique collection of pieces in Kansas
City on Friday, September 4th of this year, as part of the Second
International Conference on Minimalist Music. I’ll be writing a lot
more about this conference and Tom’s pieces in future blogs. If
you’d like more information right now see:
http://2ndminimalism.org/
Practicing the organ, and writing organ music,
are very satisfying activities. Writing this blog is firing my
imagination and making me want to get more performances of my organ
pieces. There are over seventy of them, composed over a period of
almost fifty years!
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Blog List
#1:
July 14, 2005,
First Singing of Bill of
Rights
#2: July 20, 2005,
Bill of Rights - Performance
Options
#3: September 6, 2005, First Public
Performances of Bill of Rights
#4 January 7, 2006,
Commission for a new orchestra piece
#5 January
12.2006, My new orchestra piece
#6 January 24,
2006, The premiere of my “Introduction and Grand March.”
#7 February
15, 2006, The Ives Vocal Marathon
#8 March 1,
2006, But there is real news on the First Amendment front.
#9 July 7,
2006, TnTnT performance July 19, 2006
#10,
September 20, 2006, Some Recitals and the Friendly Fugues
#11 May 4,
2009, Hansel and Gretel and the Ives Vocal Marathan
#12 May 4-12,
2009, Hansel and Gretel
#13 June 25,
2009, Change of Blogging Schedule; H&G Wrap-up
#14 June 27,
2009, Orbits
#15 June 30,
2009, Henry Brandt
#16 July 2,
2009 Where I am
#17 July 4,
2009 Independence Day
#18 July 7,
2009 Additions to my catalogue |