Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Members in Recital, November 7, 2011

Click on any picture to see it full size; use the back arrow to return to this page

Members in Recital

On Monday, November 7, 2011, the Potomac Chapter met at St. Paul’s United Methodist Church in Kensington, MD. After being welcomed by Pastor Adam Snell, David Storey described his recent work of rebuilding and enlarging the 1967 Aeolian Skinner Opus 1499, which was done in conjunction with Casavant Frères. Four organists performed, beginning with host organist Marvin Mills, and then Thomas P. Smith, Julie Vidrick Evans and Samuel Springer. Dean Clarice Snyder expressed thanks to the church and welcomed members and guests to the reception.

Pictured are Samuel Springer, Thomas P. Smith, Julie Vidrick Evans, Marvin Mills and David Storey.

Photo by Gerald Piercey


Monday, October 24, 2011

PipeSpectacular XII October 23, 2011

Click on any picture to see it full size; use the back arrow to return to this page.

The TriChapter Committee of the
Washington Area AGO Chapters
Presented
PipeSpectacular XII, October 23, 2011
National City Christian Church,
Washington, DC

This event was originally scheduled to be at the
Washington National Cathedral
but due to the August earthquake damage at the cathedral,
it was moved to National City Christian Church.

The Pearl Neugent Nordan Gallery Organ has 16 ranks, including the brilliant Trompette en Chamade. The little squares at the base of the case are doors that cover 61 Whitechapel Handbells. The doors are the volume control for the Handbells.

The main organ was originally by E.M. Skinner in 1930. In 1976 it was removed and 30 ranks were retained in a Moller organ, 10 without revoicing. It was enlarged in 1980 and 2003 and presently has 141 ranks of pipes.

The recent earthquake did damage this building, too, but not as badly as the cathedral.
One hole is visible in the ceiling on the left side.

The big damage to the organ was when the capitals fell
from the front columns. This one is gone,
and you can see the missing pipes in the front rank
of the Positiv division on the left.
Many more pipes were damaged back behind.

I took lots of pictures of the artists performing. The only ones that came out
were this one of Anne Timpane playing,

and this one of her taking bows at the end of her performance.

Here are the six artists that performed:
Ken Lowenberg, Scott Matthias, Elizabeth Miller, Anne Timpane, Kyle Babin, Jeffrey Kempskie
There were two artists from each of the three local AGO chapters,
Northern Virginia: Elizabeth Miller, Scott Matthias
District of Columbia: Kyle Babin, Jeffrey Kempskie
Potomac: Anne Timpane, Ken Lowenberg


Ken Lowenberg playing the end of his "Variations on Laudate Dominium"


Elizabeth Miller playing the Myron Roberts "Prelude and Trumpetings"


Anne Timpane playing the "Dance Rondo" of Philip Moore


Jeffrey Kempskie playing the "Massig Schnell", Sonata I, Paul Hindemith


Kyle Babin plays the end of the Fantasia on "O Zion, Haste"
and "How Firm a Foundation" by William Bolcom

My apologies to Scott Matthias; I was setting up the reception
and missed making a recording of his performances.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Potomac Chapter Installation Service, Sunday, September 25, 2011

Click on any picture to view it full size; use the back arrow to return to this page.

On Sunday, September 25, 2011, the Potomac Chapter of the AGO held their annual Guild Service with Installation of Officers at the North Chevy Chase Christian Church in Chevy Chase, Maryland.


Here the officers are being installed. The address was by our Potomac Chapter Chaplain, Rev. Dr. Cheryl Tatham, titled "When In Our Music God is Glorified".


Some of the people that were present at the reception following the service.


The officers that were installed: Mary Ann Willow, Clarice Snyder, Ken Lowenberg, Judy Daffer, Cheryl Tatham, Emily Koons and Brenda Weiser. These pictures were taken by Jerry Dennis.


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Cruising the Baltic Sea, by Carol Dennis

Click on any picture to see it full size; use the back arrow to return to this page

Cruising the Baltic Sea
Carol Dennis

Starting from Copenhagen, my husband, Jerry, and I set out for our first port of call, Warnemünde, Germany, not too far from Berlin. Gale-force winds prevented us from docking, so on we sailed to Tallinn in Estonia, and St. Petersburg in Russia. Both cities are enjoying freedom with gusto and are crowded with tourists!

Estonia is part of the Eastern Bloc once controlled by the U.S.S.R. With great passion, our guide told us how she stood arm and arm with her compatriots as they faced the armored Russian tanks in 1991. We saw the TV tower protected by Estonians so that it never fell to the Soviets but broadcasted live to the world the frightening confrontation as it was unfolding.



We learned of Estonia’s love of choral music and saw the immense amphitheater at the Tallinn Song Festival Grounds where international choral competitions are held. We learned also of The Singing Revolution that began in the late 1980s as Estonians publicly sang their beloved folk and patriotic songs despite the ban of the Soviet Union. It was a very moving visit.

Carol and Jerry Dennis in Tallinn Park, Estonia

St. Petersburg has approximately 40 days of sunshine a year. We had two of them, so everyone was outside. It was also hot without much air conditioning! Despite that, we persevered, learning about the tsars, notably Catherine the Great and Alexander II. In among the boxy Soviet architecture stood remarkable gems of palaces and churches along the bustling Neva River. We wisely visited the Hermitage Museum in the evening. Even though officially closed, other guided tours were being held and there was no air conditioning. It would have been brutal during the day. We walked through rooms filled with so many famous works of art we could not keep count. What a fantastic experience!


The next day, we visited several churches. Some are museums, but after years of abuse and neglect, they are gradually being returned to the Russian Orthodox Church. Among others, we saw the Church of the Resurrection on the Spilt Blood built on the very spot where Alexander II was assassinated in the street. The interior is totally covered with murals of Christ and the saints. The Russian fairytale exterior is topped by colorful onion domes.



Helsinki’s serene Sibelius Park features a magnificent sculpture of pipes honoring Finland’s most famous composer. Listening to breezes blowing through the pipes, I could almost hear “Finlandia.”

Later, we mounted the steps to the Lutheran cathedral that dominates Senate Square. Although plain in decoration, it has a splendid neo-classical pipe organ.


Another highlight was the famous church built within walls of solid rock and bathed in natural light; one sensed the holy despite the milling tourists. A young woman was practicing on the pipe organ, and the acoustics were marvelous.


In Stockholm we visited Drottningholm Palace. Although we have enjoyed Sweden’s capital many times, we had never journeyed to the summer palace that now serves as the home of the royal family. We knew of the renovation of the Royal Theater building to its original 18th century style and were disappointed that we could not enter.


However, we enjoyed the palace by the lake and the charming Chinese Pavilion tucked away in a forest.


Kiel, Germany, was our last port of call. We rode into Lübeck where we would have several hours on our own. Most of Lübeck was leveled during World War II, but the town has been almost completely rebuilt in the original style. It was a lovely day, and we headed for the Marienkirche where Buxtehude had played for more than 35 years. Bach as a young man walked 250 miles from Arnstadt to Lübeck and stayed three months to listen and learn from the great organist. A plaque in the church commemorates that occasion.

The Grosse Orgel and Totentanz Orgel have been replaced and the famous mural of robed skeletons adorns the wall.


From there we strolled to the Niederegger candy store for their famous marzipan. We also visited the Herz Jesu Catholic Church and discovered the inspiring story of The Four Lübeck Martyrs – four priests, three Catholic and one Lutheran - who spoke out against the Nazi regime and were murdered together in 1943. At the Lutheran cathedral we witnessed a christening processional complete with organ music as parents and infant, children holding flowers, and friends walked to the baptismal chapel led by a lady minister dressed in the long black robe and elaborate ruff of earlier days.

The next morning we arrived in Copenhagen to be met by our son, John, and his wife, Anna, who had come to whisk us across the Öresund Bridge to Malmö, Sweden, where they live. And that is a story for another day!


The Little Mermaid Statue, Copenhagen

Carol, her son John and John's daughter Julia at Nyhavn

Summer house at Ljunghusen

Pernilla's Sofa

Skanor Harbor

Oreson Bridge from Limhamn

Monday, July 11, 2011

2011 Region III AGO Convention in Harrisburg, PA

Click on any picture to see it full size; use the back arrow to return to this page.

Potomac AGO Chapter members Carol and Jerry Dennis attended the convention and submitted this report.


This is the First United Methodist Church of Hershey, PA.

Here is Carol Dennis beside the church banner.

Everyone is getting ready for the program featuring the new Letourneau organ.

The altar area of St. Patrick's Cathedral

The organ in the rear gallery with the Trompette en Chamade.


PULLING OUT ALL THE STOPS
By Carol Dennis

In June, AGO Region III held its convention in Harrisburg, PA. For my husband, Jerry, and me, Harrisburg has always been a city we pass on the way to someplace else. This time we stayed. The program included some wonderful pipe organs in downtown churches as well as more outlying areas. The Harrisburg Chapter did indeed pull out all the stops to present a program that included recitals by some of today’s fine organists as well as the opportunity for young organists to compete and test their musicianship. Encouraging young organists with competitions, recitals, and specific programs for them was the theme of the convention. It was wonderful seeing so many young people attending and performing.

The convention formally opened with a Vesper Festival Celebration at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. There was full-throated hymn singing by all and beautiful psalm singing by the combined choirs of several local churches. The playing was outstanding on the newly renovated Austin/Gundling pipe organ. President Eileen Guenther welcomed everyone. Each day began with a prayer service at a local church followed by morning recitals, afternoon workshops and evening concerts.

One highlight was a trip to Hershey where we visited First United Methodist Church, on Chocolate Avenue of course. We were treated to a buffet lunch followed by a handbell concert and a recital on their new Letourneau pipe organ. No, there were no chocolate pipe organs!

Among others, Donald Sutherland and Jane Errera gave very informative workshops. Donald spoke from his perspective as a member of the AGO Long-Range Planning Task Force. He covered the history of the Task-Force as well as a number of the ideas generated by members like you concerning the future of the AGO. His talk was both thought provoking and entertaining.

Councillor Jane Errera spoke of that time when we start pulling in all the stops and find ourselves sitting in the pew rather than on the organ bench. Her retirement considerations included Finance, Fulfillment, Family, Friends, Fitness and most importantly, Faith. With humor and insight, she challenged us to meet our future before it meets us. Jane included a comprehensive bibliography with the number one book being the Bible, or Basic Instruction Before Leaving Earth.

The convention closed with a Grand Finale Concert at Harrisburg’s Forum Auditorium that houses a four-manual Moller pipe organ. Guest artist, Hector Olivera played several exciting organ works on the Moller before switching to his own Rodgers touring organ where he entertained us with his arrangements of famous orchestral music. He was indeed a modern day “one man band.” Maestro Olivera closed the evening with Tchaikovsky’s 1812 Overture complete with “cannons.” He literally pulled out all the stops.

Monday, May 23, 2011

It's Not Rocket Surgery!

On Monday, May 16, 2011, the Potomac Chapter of the AGO met at Christ Congregational Church of Silver Spring, Maryland, for a program entitled "It's Not Rocket Surgery; everything you wanted to know about the pipe organ but were afraid to ask", presented by Gerald Piercey, President of Lewis & Hitchcock Pipe Organ Builders. The program format was:
Organ 101, the history of the instrument and how it evolved
Emergency organ repair, what to do on Sunday morning
Registration
Programming


Here Mr. Piercey is demonstrating the parts of an electro-magnet, which receives current from the console and eventually operates the pipes of the Positiv division behind him.

Here Mr. Piercey is demonstrating the reed tongue, wedge and shallot of an Oboe pipe found on the block inside the boot of the pipe. Finding and pulling a cipher, as well as tuning of pipes was demonstrated using the pipes of the Positiv division.

A feature of the program was the reading of the 29th Chapter of Acts, from the Prairie Home Companion Version by Garrison Keillor.


Following the program there was reception.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Clive Driskill-Smith in Concert February 20, 2011

On Sunday, February 20, 2011, at 4 PM the Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church together with the Potomac Chapter of the AGO presented Clive Driskill-Smith in concert.

This is the 1975 instrument by Reiger of Austria, three manuals and 50 ranks.
The Ruckpositiv was redesigned in 2000 by David Storey, changing it to be smaller in profile and oak to match the chancel furnishings. When not used for concerts, the division is fronted by grille work.

Here is another picture of the Ruckpositiv, which better shows the new 4' Principal facade pipes.


Here the crowd awaits the program. Mr. Driskill-Smith played:
Two movements from the Sonata in A by Mendelssohn
Organ Concerto in F Major by Handel
Fantasia in F Minor, Mozart
Fantasia and Fugue in G minor, J.S. Bach
Salamanca, Guy Bovet
Variations on a Noel, Dupre

I enjoyed the Salamanca because it was totally new to me. It was explained that Bovet was to improvise at a concert in Salamanca Spain, and the tune was given by two members of the cleaning crew, who sang a song in Spanish about a donkey. He wove this tune throughout his improvisation and later wrote it all out.
Interior of the Positiv, showing the creative use of all available space
View from the opposite side
Console
Closer view of the console; push button stop action.
Following the concert: John Brooks, Dean of the Potomac Chapter, AGO; Clive Driskill Smith; Julie Evans, Director of Music of Chevy Chase Presbyterian Church; Len Ralston, Chair, Chevy Chase Concerts Committee.
Gerald Piercey
Editor, Heel & Toe

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Allen Organ for Sale to benefit Potomac Chapter

Many of you may remember how faithful Melva Turpin was to the Potomac Chapter of the AGO. Her family has decided to sell her Allen organ, and to give the proceeds of the sale to the Potomac Chapter, for the Fund for the Education of Young Organists. Here are the details:

Organ FOR SALE –
Estate Sale; proceeds will be donated to the Potomac Chapter of the American Guild of Organists – Fund for the Education of Young Organists.
Allen Digital Computer Organ Renaissance Model R-230 purchased new from Jordan Kitt's music in 2002. 2-manual AGO console, pedalboard, walnut console and bench, MDS-Expander II/MIDI-Division II, built-in speakers, Console Controller, Protégé Chamber Series by Allen CD, manuals/Warranty Certificate, Brooks Power Systems 2-outlet surge protector, organ can be disassembled/reassembled to fit through a standard house doorway. Allen Organ Company Limited Warranty expires April 20, 2012. The organ is in very good condition.

TERMS AND CONDITIONS:
Organ can be viewed/played by appointment. Contact Toby M Turpin by email stm_toby7@verizon.net
Disassembly/reassembly and moving expenses from the seller’s residence to buyer's destination are the responsibility of the buyer.

Sale to the highest bidder will occur at Noon April 5, 2011.
Bids should be emailed to Toby M Turpin, Per Rep by email stm_toby7@verizon.net
Certified Bank Check should be made payable to ESTATE OF MELVA RUTH TURPIN in advance of delivery.

In the attached picture the MIDI-Division II drawer is pulled out at the far right side of the organ. When it is pushed in it is out of the way. The external audio and MIDI receptacles are on the rear of the MIDI-Division II. The cables for the internal speakers need to be disconnected if external speakers are used.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Memorial Service for Otto (Bob) Guttmann, February 1, 2011

Otto Jacob (Bob) Guttmann, October 27, 1921 - November 2, 2010


The Celebration of his life was held Tuesday, February 1, 2011
at the Interfaith Chapel of Leisure World, Silver Spring, Maryland


This is from the program:
Otto Jacob Guttmann, know by everyone as "Bob", was born in Hamburg, Germany, the youngest of three. He grew up in difficult times. After Kristallnacht, he escaped from Germany to England with the Kindertransport. In England, he was taken in by the Scanlon family, who supported his study of textiles in Solford. He eventually emigrated to Brazil to join his bother Fritz. There he began a career in textiles, first working in the mills, and later as a salesman of textile machinery. The work took him all over the world, including several years in Korea.

On his first trip to the USA in 1946, he decided that he would like to someday live in New England. In 1958 he moved to New York. In 1962 he met and married Inge Rosenburg. Their three children, Robert, Edward and Lilian, were raised mostly in New England. He loved his family dearly.

Bob had many business ventures over the years, mostly involving textiles in some way. In this retirement years he became extremely interested in the possibilities of alpaca fiber, and he visited every alpaca farm that crossed his path.

Bob loved music all his life. At different points in his life he played the violin, the accordion and the organ. He was always passionate about the pipe organ. In Brazil he would use his daily lunch hour to travel several miles to a church where he could practice. In his seventies he worked part-time at the Lewis & Hitchcock organ factory and served on the board of the Potomac Chapter of the American Guild of Organists.

His pastimes, other than his music, included playing chess, bridge, vegetable gardening, stamp collecting, reading and spending time with his grandsons. More than anything else, Bob was a "people person". He never referred to acquaintances, only friends. And once you were his friend, you were his friend forever.

Carl Schwartz played during the service, which was led by Rabbi Gary Fink. Carl played the "Auf Meines Herzens Gründe" by Johann Christoph Bach, which Bob had played for us years ago in a Members in Recital program. He also played the Ernest Bloch Andante, from "Six Pieces for Organ". Besides having worked with Bob when he was on the board of the Potomac Chapter, AGO, Bob & Inge had been instrumental in arranging for Carl to present a recital on the E.M. Skinner organ for the 100th Anniversary of Temple Emanuel in Greensboro, North Carolina, in November of 2007.

After comments from the Rabbi & family, the service ended with the "Little Prelude and Fugue in D Minor" by J.S. Bach, played by Gerald Piercey, who also had worked with Bob when he was employed by Lewis & Hitchcock.