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Last Modified on December 21, 2018

A Gift from the AGO

In the spirit of giving this holiday season, and through the generous support of Pro Organo, we are delighted to offer these excerpts from John Walker’s CD, Christmas Rediscovered, recorded at the Shadyside Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh, for free download:

Gigout: Rhapsodie sur des Noëls
Reger: Ave Maria
Karg-Elert: Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme
Bach: Canonic Variations on Vom Himmel Hoch

We will be honoring AGO Past President John Walker with the 2019 AGO Endowment Fund Distinguished Artist Award Recital and Gala Benefit Reception. Save the date: Friday, April 26! You are invited to join us at Shadyside Presbyterian Church in Pittsburgh to enjoy John’s free recital at 7:30 p.m. The AGO Endowment Fund Gala Benefit Reception follows. Learn more about the AGO Gala by clicking here.

Thank you for your support of the American Guild of Organists. On behalf of all of us here at AGO National Headquarters, I send best wishes for a joyful Christmas and all good things to come in the new year ahead.

Sincerely yours,

F. Anthony Thurman
Director of Development and Communications
American Guild of Organists

Last Modified on December 3, 2018

Give the Gift of Membership

Give the gift of membership … twice! Do you know two people who would love to receive the gift of AGO membership? Now through December 21st, you can buy a membership or TAO subscription for a new member and get a second new membership (of equal or lesser value) for free!

Have just one person in mind? You can gift a membership and receive a free gift for yourself and the new member. All potential members must be new to the Guild. Call us at 212-870-2310 (M-F, 9-5 Eastern) or 212-870-2311, ext. 7512 (M-F, 9-5 Pacific) for more information and to give the gift of AGO membership!

Last Modified on November 27, 2018

Support the AGO on #Giving Tuesday

We invite you to join us on #GivingTuesday, November 27, by making a tax-deductible contribution to the American Guild of Organists. Your gift can be directed toward supporting your local chapter or any one of our national funds.

The AGO Annual Fund supports educational programs nationwide ranging from opportunities for beginning organists to our professional certification program.

The AGO Endowment Fund is our fund for the future that provides annual operating support through earnings from our investments.

The New Organist Fund provides scholarships and support for Pipe Organ Encounters for students of all ages.

Contribute Now

In the weeks ahead, concert halls and houses of worship will be filled with the music of the King of Instruments, more so than during any other time of the year. Please join us in promoting the organ and those who play it by making a contribution in any amount.

You can designate your tax-deductible gift in honor of a loved one, a colleague, a student, or a teacher. Give online at agohq.org or by giving us a call at 212-870-2310. If you have already made a gift to the AGO this year, please accept our deepest thanks.

On behalf of the AGO National Council and Headquarters staff, we send best wishes for a blessed holiday season.

Contribute Now

Sincerely yours

Michael Bedford, AAGO, ChM
President

 

 

James E. Thomashower
Executive Director

P.S. If you are unable to make a gift at this time, please consider making a planned gift to the AGO through your estate plans. By doing so, you will be honoring your interests in our profession and recognized in perpetuity as a member of the Clarence Dickinson Society

Last Modified on November 27, 2018

Vox Humana: Charles Tournemire’s L’orgue mystique and the Ordinary Form Mass

In the November, 25 2018 issue of Vox Humana Douglas O’Neill writes about Charles Tournemire’s L’Orgue Mystique and the Ordinary Form Mass ( 1870-1939). It is unparalleled among Roman Catholic organ music; Tournemire had desired to do for the Roman Catholic Mass what J.S. Bach had done for the Lutheran Mass with his Orgelbüchlein. It is a set of 51 suites for nearly every Sunday and select feast days of the church year. Gregorian chant permeates Tournemire’s music, with motives drawn from the appointed proper chants for the day. Each suite consists of five movements: a “Prélude à l’Introït,” “Offertoire,” “Élévation,” “Communion,” and “Pièce terminale”.

Read Vox Humana

Last Modified on November 28, 2018

December 2018 TAO Cover Feature

Two Tales of Two-Manual Organs
By Patrick J. Murphy
View an enlarged cover
Stop List

Organbuilders dream about having the opportunity to construct fine large instruments that stunningly display their creative ethos. The realities of today’s market, however, more often challenge builders to create highly flexible instruments in very limited spaces and budgets. Many congregations give in to these limitations easily, threatening the extinction of quality music in their worship life. But there are many parishes, even small ones, that understand the value of quality music in their services and find ways to overcome the perceived limitations. Patrick J. Murphy & Associates recently had the fortunate opportunity to provide modest instruments for two of these churches, allowing them to continue building up their heritage of fine liturgical music.

Saint John Evangelical Lutheran Church
Carnegie, Pennsylvania
Facade and console

Located in suburban Pittsburgh, Saint John Evangelical Lutheran Church is just a few blocks away from our successful installation at Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Roman Catholic Church. It was at a chance visit to Saint Elizabeth’s that Saint John’s organist, Jeffrey H. Gray, was accompanied by Nancy J. McBurney. After hearing our work at Saint Elizabeth’s, she expressed her desire for such an instrument at Saint John’s. Ms. McBurney left a generous bequest to the church that upon her passing made Opus 65 possible. The final specification was produced in collaboration with Jeff Gray.

This three-manual, 17-rank instrument is located in the northeast chamber that has housed all previous instruments, and serves a room that seats approximately 300 people. Careful engineering allowed us to lay out a well-developed two-manual instrument in the rather limited chamber space. We expanded the usefulness of those resources by including a third manual that makes it easy to solo out selected stops. All-electric windchests facilitate giving the organist that requested tonal flexibility.

Windchest installation

All stops are enclosed except for the Great Principal 8′ and Octave 4′ and the Pedal 16’/8′ units. Larger scaling with unforced voicing provide a conservative English-leaning ensemble that produces a warm buildup to a Mixture that gently caps the chorus. As is often the case, retention of worthy existing pipework from the previous instrument proved to be a responsible choice. Three stops were retained from the previous Wicks instrument and revoiced to make them fit seamlessly into the new tonal scheme. The Pedal Principal was extended to be playable on the Solo manual. New chorus fluework was designed by PJM and constructed by Organ Supply Industries.

New reeds from A.R. Schopps include a fine Trompette unit constructed with wide German shallots for the Haskell 16′ and 8′ octaves and modified parallel shallots for the treble. This provides the dual function of Pedal gravity in the lower range and manual ring through the treble compass.

Console

In tonal finishing, the focus was to balance the resources in a way that would maximize the flexibility of registration. Imaginative combining of stops that might not ordinarily be used together is here encouraged. Though the sound of full organ is not at all timid, extremes on both ends of the dynamic range have been restrained.

Our signature low-profile movable English drawknob console with Peterson’s “integrated control system” enhances the flexibility and portability within this small chancel location.

Pipework installation
Pipework installation

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Grace Lutheran Church
Astoria (Queens), New York
Grace Lutheran Church, Astoria

Located just ten minutes from New York’s busy LaGuardia Airport, Grace Lutheran Church is part of the laid-back Astoria neighborhood in the borough of Queens. This multicultural area of low-rise residences and small businesses is bounded by the East River and the famed Hell Gate railroad bridge. Grace Lutheran Church is a modest building constructed in the first quarter of the 20th century with seating for about 150 people. Just a few blocks from the famed Steinway factory, the parish is also home to a well-attended K–8 school.

Our Opus 64 replaces a 1932 Möller of two manuals and ten stops. With the exception of retaining two pedal stops from the Möller organ, this is an entirely new instrument. Cleverly installed in a space-challenged southeast chamber, all stops are under expression except for the Great 8′ Principal, which comprises the facade. The church also undertook much-needed renovations to the chamber to provide better temperature control as well as improved tonal egress. Our signature low-profile terraced console, all-electric windchests, and new tonal scheme are wonderfully complemented by our neo-Classic case.

Swell chamber

The 8′ Principal is scaled and voiced to be leaner in sound than is our standard but is no less effective within this curiously tricky acoustic. The mixture is conservative and based on examples of E. & G.G. Hook, whereas the 2′ is obtained directly from the three-rank mixture. The breaks occur at notes 25 and 37. The array of flute stops provides color and thickening effects to carry in this small room. For an organ of this size, it is a luxury to include two reed stops. The haunting Oboe, with its lifting caps, is partnered with a snappy but not crass Trompette that extends into the Pedal, developing increasingly fundamental tone as it descends to 16′ C. Haskell reed construction made it possible to fit a full-length 16′ into the severely limited space. New fluework was constructed by Organ Supply Industries.

Setup in shop

The challenge was to provide a suitable, year-round, solid, liturgically based instrument that can support not only congregational singing and choral accompaniment but also a reasonable portion of the larger organ literature. Our sincerest thanks to organist and director of music Henry Lee for his excellent guidance and musical oversight and to Pastor James Klockau for his unwavering support in this project.

As with all of our projects, all mechanicals—console, windchests, construction chassis, tonal direction, and engineering—were produced in-house by our committed team of talented craftspersons. Voicing and finishing for both projects was performed on site as a collaborative effort between our former tonal director Fredrick Bahr and present voicer Megan Farrell.

PJM STAFF
Matt Farrell: project foreman, winding, installation
Mark Tenreiro: engineering, case design, woodworking, installation
Jon Carmichael: woodworking, production, installation
Matt Jones: electrical wiring, console, installation
Chris Mills: production, winding, wiring
John Conner: woodworking, production
Megan Farrell: voicing, pipework preparation
Kitty Greer: office manager

 

Patrick Murphy is president and artistic director of PJM & Associates Organbuilders.

All photos of Saint John project by Philip Maye of Illuminating Studios Photography

All photos of Grace Lutheran project by Patrick J. Murphy

Last Modified on November 7, 2018

Online applications to attend 2019 Pipe Organ Encounters are now open

Six AGO Pipe Organ Encounters will be hosted by chapters in five states (Massachusetts, Illinois, Missouri, Texas, and Washington) and in one foreign country (Finland) in 2019.

In addition to four traditional POEs, there will be one POE-Advanced, and one POE-Technical.  For more information and to apply to attend, please visit any of the three following AGO website pages:

Pipe Organ Encounters for traditional POEs in Cape Cod, Massachusetts, St. Louis, Missouri, Seattle Washington, and Helsinki, Finland.

Pipe Organ Encounters-Advanced  for the POE-Advanced in Houston, Texas.

or

Pipe Organ Encounters-Technical  for the POE-Technical in River Forest and Oak Park, Illinois.

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