Tag Archives: organists

DECEPTIVE APPEARANCES

‘You’re David Baker?’ the man whispered. His face shrieked incredulity.

‘Really?’

I nodded, apologetically.

‘Well’, he continued disappointedly, ‘I have always admired your work and I must thank you for your excellent conference presentation here today but, I have to tell you…’

He hesitated as I waited for what I assumed was to be the final superlative.

‘You’re a lot fatter than you write’.

‘Thank you’, I smiled. We shook hands and parted.

I was not offended. Nor was I surprised. Rather, he confirmed my own experience. Indeed, I knew exactly what he meant. I had come across similar mismatches between individual and output. I had read books and articles by eminent professionals in my main specialisms, formed images of them in my mind and then – when I had met them – found that they rarely looked anything my mental image of them.

Not only that, but I had spent a lifetime reading novels, developing an image of the main characters in my mind and then, when some of my favourite titles had been dramatised on film or television, been horribly disappointed with the results. I will never forgive whoever cast Janet Suzman as Hilda Lessways in Arnold Bennett’s Clayhanger trilogy.      

Wikipedia states that:

The English idiom ‘don’t judge a book by its cover’ is a metaphorical phrase which means ‘you shouldn’t prejudge the worth or value of something by its outward appearance alone’.

The trouble is, often, we do, because we all have our prejudices, however hard we may try to be non-judgmental. I once got in a London taxi, late for a meeting. My heart sank when I saw the age of the driver – he must have been well into his 80s – yet he knew all the shortcuts around central London, to the point where I arrived in time for the opening agenda item!

Remember when Susan Boyle first appeared on television? Everybody laughed at her because she was fat and gauche; but then she opened her mouth and started singing.

What about the difference between Handel the man and Handel the composer? How could someone who wrote such sublime music be a glutton, a gourmand; so much so that he could be depicted by a contemporary cartoonist as an organ-playing pig? Perhaps this was an extreme case of the musical thin man trying to get out of the binge-eating fat man.  

I have often thought about the girls at the Ospedale della Pieta where Vivaldi worked for much of his career. The women performed from behind grilles. The beauty of their music attracted many lucrative proposals of marriage until, that is, their suitors saw what some of the players looked like.  

‘All that glitters is not gold’, though Goetze and Gwynn, organ builders, might say otherwise after their experiences of restoring one old organ. The casework was refurbished first. Even though they had not begun work on the innards, everybody said how much better the instrument sounded!


Perhaps that is the exception that proves the rule. Many years ago, as a pipe organ mad teenager holidaying every year with my parents in Bournemouth, I would write in advance (enclosing a stamped addressed envelope, of course) to organists in the area, asking if I could ‘have a go’ when we were next on vacation.

Part of the annual trip was invariably attendance at the weekly recitals at nearby Christchurch Priory, given by Geoffrey Tristram, organist there. Tristram was a brilliant player: how I longed to be like him! What a role model! What a hero! Even his name sounded heroic!

At the end of each recital – which always included some of the most difficult parts of the organ repertoire – audience members (or at least the anoraks) would cluster round the strange ‘chantry chapel’ that enclosed the organ console. Having waited expectantly for several minutes, a tall handsome man, casually dressed in sports jacket, trousers and cricket sweater would appear, to be mobbed by the admiring crowd. As we walked away, my father and I would always notice a short, stocky, balding man would emerge and lock the door to the chantry chapel. We decided that this must be the page turner.

I became confident enough as a player to write to the great Geoffrey Tristram himself, never expecting him to reply. Remarkably, he did, and gave me a date and time to report to his fine Georgian house near the Priory. I could not wait until the great day arrived. My father and I stood at the front door at ‘Church Hatch’. The Priory clock struck the correct hour. I pressed the bell. The door opened. The short, stocky, balding man stood there.

‘We have an appointment to see Geoffrey Tristram. Is he available?’ my father said.

‘I am he’, came the reply.     

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Diocese of Leeds Organists’ Training Programme Masterclasses – venue change

Please note change of venue.  Arrangements have now been made to use the organ in St Robert’s, Harrogate (Robert Street, Harrogate HG1 1HP), which is a fine two-manual Hill
(http://www.npor.org.uk/NPORView.html?RI=N02918). The church is under five minutes’ walk from the station, and there is plenty of on-street parking,  or in the multi-storey car park.
 
 If you require any further information or think that you  might like to play in either of the classes, please contact David Pipe direct (contact details below).   Places for players are still available and observers are encouraged to attend as well.  
 
 
David Pipe
Director of the Organists’ Training Programme & Cathedral Organist
Diocese of Leeds
07810 810494

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HALIFAX MINSTER – 2017 ORGAN RECITALS

Organ Recitals 2017

Halifax Minster has attracted some international, also some high-profile organists for this series.

Last year there was a significant increase in attendance to the recitals. 

Please support the Minster in 2017; all are very welcome.

Recitals on Thursdays at 1:00 pm

(Lunch available from 12.30 pm) 

 

www.halifaxminster.org.uk

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AN EVENING WITH NIGEL OGDEN

AN EVENING WITH NIGEL OGDEN

Nigel Ogden A4 poster

CHRIST CHURCH, GREAT AYTON

GUISBOROUGH ROAD, GREAT AYTON, MIDDLESBOROUGH,  TS9 6NN
(Tel: 01642 722333)

FRIDAY 3 MARCH 2017 AT 7:30 PM

(DOORS OPEN 7:00 PM)

The star of BBC Radio 2’s ‘The Organist Entertains‘ comes to Great Ayton, providing an evening of unmissable classics and demonstrating the newly refurbished organ

Tickets £10:00 – light refreshments available

Tickets online from: Nigel Ogden and can be purchased from the Great Ayton Discovery Centre,

105B High St, Great Ayton, Middlesbrough, TS9 6NB (Tel: 01642 723268)

For more information – Tel: 01642 724450 or 01642 722501

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Huddersfield Bach Collegium

Huddersfield Bach Collegium – Sunday 26 February at 6:30 pm

at Holy Trinity Church, Trinity Street,

Huddersfield, HD1 4QT

Holy Trinity is delighted to be hosting the inaugural performance of the Huddersfield Bach Collegium.

This new group is performing the liturgical music of Bach and other composers to a professional standard in its intended form – as an act of worship.

We would like to invite all who might be interested to the first event, to be held on Sunday 26th February  at 6.30 pm.

It would be great to see a good congregation in what promises to be
an uplifting and rich start to the Lenten season.

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Halifax Choral Society ELIJAH 19 March 2017

Spring brings a burst of musical colour and life in the renowned Halifax Choral Society’s Spring Concert

with the North of England Classical Orchestra

at the Victoria Theatre, Halifax

on Sunday 19th March 2017 at 4.00 pm.

HCS Elijah A5 10.16 (1)

Here are the details of our first celebration concert of our 200th year; we were founded in 1817 and we believe that we are the oldest choral society in the world.  Over that long period we have performed the vast majority of the choral repertoire.  This is the first event in a very special year of music making, including a brand new work, specially commissioned by ourselves, a visit to sing in the Snape Maltings in Suffolk, a CD recording of our new work, a specially commissioned book on the history of the choir, written by the eminent Halifax historian Dr John Hargreaves, and much more. Whilst our members are all amateur singers from many walks of life, the choir is very highly regarded for the quality of its singing. Having a choir of this calibre in Halifax means that there is no need to travel into either Leeds or Manchester to attend concerts of the highest quality. This concert offers a wonderful opportunity to enjoy the drama and excitement of the musical story of ‘ELIJAH’.

This is the major choral work of the celebrated Victorian composer Felix Mendelssohn, who was a great favourite of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.  The work was commissioned for the Birmingham Music Festival of 1846, and it seems that members of the Halifax Choral Society took part, as the work was performed again in Halifax later that same year.  It has rightly remained a very popular work ever since.

 The titanic battle between rival prophets, and the whirlwind and fire from heaven are spectacular, contrasting with the wretchedness of drought and famine and the strong faith of the widow and her son who care for Elijah. A wonderfully crafted oratorio, not to be missed.

Along with the Halifax Choral Society, we welcome, as our guests, members of the Ipswich Choral Society (who as the 2nd oldest Choral society wanted to work with HCS as the oldest!), so the impressive forces of singers will themselves be a feature of the concert. 

 In order to fit all the many musicians on stage for this epic concert, we have an innovative stage layout which will bring some of the orchestra into the auditorium area on a raised platform.  This should add much extra interest for the audience.

There are four very talented young soloists, Catrin Pryce-Jones soprano, Emma Stannard mezzo, Peter Harris tenor, and Paul Grant baritone. The conductor for this impressively ambitious concert is the Choral Society’s celebrated music director, John Pryce-Jones.

Tickets for this special event range from £9:00 to £23:00 with discounts available, on sale from the Theatre Box Office on 01422 351158 or online at www.victoriatheatre.co.uk

 

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RCO ACADEMY SUMMER COURSE 2017

THE RCO ACADEMY SUMMER COURSE

MONDAY 31 JULY TO SATURDAY 5 AUGUST 2017

IN THE CITY OF LONDON

(founded by Anne Marsden Thomas MBE)

Summer Course 2017

Please see above link for booking form/information regarding the above summer course, to be held Monday 31 July to Saturday 5 August 2017.  

Ideally, please book through the website at https://www.rco.org.uk/events.php?eventid=476  but if this is not possible, you can print off the form and post a cheque to RCO Bookings (address below).  

www.rco.org.uk

Correspondence address: RCO Bookings and Accounts, PO Box 7328, New Milton, Hampshire, 
BH25 9DU

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Essex Organists’ Association Organ Competition

Entries are now welcomed for the Essex Organists’ Association Organ Competition

(Potential applicants do not need to be a member of the EOA to take part)

This is a great opportunity to perform in a low-pressure environment, and there are trophies and cash prizes available. There is also an opportunity for the winner of the advanced category to perform a pre-Evensong recital in Chelmsford Cathedral.

Further details, including covering letter and application form can be found on the EOA website:

http://www.essexorganists.net/Events2

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ORGAN COMPETITION – KENT COUNTY ORGANISTS’ ASSOCIATION

KENT COUNTY ORGANISTS’ ASSOCIATION

(PATRON: BISHOP OF ROCHESTER)

ORGAN COMPETITION

18 MARCH 2017 – 1:00 PM

AT ALL SAINTS CHURCH, MILL STREET, MAIDSTONE, KENT,  ME15 6YE

(CLOSING DATE FOR APPLICATIONS: 31 JANUARY 2017)

If you are a young and enthusiastic student of the organ, here is an opportunity that could change and enhance your musical life.  The Kent County Organists’ Association is again organising their annual competition, open to organ students under 21 years of age, offering YOU the chance to:

  • PLAY before a discerning and appreciative audience
  • WIN handsome prizes
  • RECEIVE expert advice
  • PERFORM in Rochester Cathedral and Central London
  • ENHANCE your prospects of advancing your career as an organist

For full details visit: Kent County Organ Comp

Or contact Dr David Shuker: Tel 07970 276070/E-mail info@signofthepipe.com

Or find us on Facebook (Kent Organists) and follow us on Twitter @KentOrganists

 

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Master Class Images – St Patrick’s RC Church, Huddersfield

Photographs taken during the Master Class (Protestant Germany 1650-1750)

held at St Patrick’s RC Church in Huddersfield

 on Saturday 26 November 2016

led by James Parsons (Royal College of Organists)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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