Romantic to
Modern
Jack Mitchener surveys the evolution of Romanticism in
organ music, ca. 1840-1940, starting with Mendelssohn's first organ sonata and ending
with the modernism expressed by Jehan Alain's Litanies. French and German composers are also represented by
Robert Schumann, César Franck, with three rarely heard but fine works by Guy
Ropartz. He plays the 75-rank Fisk organ in Finney Chapel at the Oberlin
College Conservatory of Music, Oberlin,
Ohio.
Felix Mendelssohn:
Sonata No. 1 in F Minor, Op. 65 Robert Schumann:
Canon No. 2 in A Minor, Op. 56
Robert Schumann:
Canon No. 3 in E Major, Op. 56
César Franck:
Chorale II in B Minor
Guy Ropartz:
Introduction and Allegro moderato
Guy Ropartz:
Theme and Variations
Louis Vierne: Final
from Symphony I in D Major, Op. 14
Guy Ropartz:
Prière Jehan Alain:
Litanies ***** Five-Star Review: Michael Quinn writes in Choir & Organ, March/April 2015: Making much of a sonorous III/75 Fisk organ, Jack Mitchener engagingly traverses the century from 1840 as romanticism gave way to modernism and France displaced Germany as the centre of the organ world. Beginning with the heavy gravity of Mendelssohn's First Sonata (moving easily from solemnity to ecstasy) and a brace of canons (the sublime Second and delightfully airy Third) by Schumann, it segues imperceptibly into the opening two sections of Franck's luminous B minor Chorale. Three pieces by Guy Ropartz vividly bond German muscle with French flair, the finale of Vierne's First Symphony adding a deliciously Gallic flourish. Alain's ardently bright Litanies hint at directions still to come. Mitchener provides excellent notes alongside richly characterised playing. Reviews James Palmer in The Organ, Feb-Apr 2015: Another fascinating release from Raven, although one might query the use of the word 'Modern' in the album title as the cut-off date is 75 years ago: 'modern' is as 'modern' does, but whatever the titling implies, the centenary 1840-1940 is nonetheless a useful peg on which to hang a not entirely unrelated group of pieces. Opening with a very fine account of Mendelssohn's F minor Sonata, the succeeding Canons by Schumann reveals further (albeit distant) connexions between the mid-19th century and the German master of 100 years earlier. Dr Mitchener is particularly successful in the entire 'French' section of his programme - it is good to renew acquaintance with the music of Guy Ropartz, which is not so often encountered in UK recitals, and I must particularly warmly commend Mitchener's account here of Jehan Alain's great Litanies which brings this particularly impressive recital to a thrilling close.
Notes by Jack
Mitchener, Organist
The romantic aesthetic, as it came to be known in the
first half of the nineteenth century, had its genesis in artistic and
philosophical movements in the late eighteenth century. Moreover, the full
power of romanticism was unleashed with the struggles and angst of the French
Revolution. Beginning with the compositions of Germans who bow to Bach and
continuing to French composers Franck, Ropartz, and Vierne, the styles
represented on this recording are clearly romantic of all shades and colors.
The final work shows a shift in the twentieth century to modernism.
At the age of ten, Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) became a
student in composition and counterpoint of Karl Friedrich Zelter (1758-1832),
one of the driving forces behind the Bach revival in the 19th century who had studied with Bach’s pupil Johann
Kirnberger. Mendelssohn also studied the organ with August Wilhelm Bach
(1796-1869, no relation to J.S. Bach). Mendelssohn’s early exposure to the
music of J. S. Bach, as a result of the strong influence of Zelter and A.W.
Bach, paved the way for the famous concert in 1829 in Berlin for which he conducted the St.
Matthew Passion (a Bach masterpiece that had not been heard by the public
for nearly 80 years). This is seen by many as a seminal event in the revival of
Bach’s music in the 19th century. Mendelssohn’s popularity in England also
played a large role in the proliferation of Bach’s music in the
English-speaking world. Moreover, the publication of Mendelssohn’s own organ
music in Germany, England, France,
and Italy had much to do
with the growing interest in the music of Bach and also contributed
significantly to the development of organ playing technique throughout Europe.
Mendelssohn’s Six Sonatas, Op. 65, were composed as a
result of a commission from Coventry and Hollier
in England
for a collection of organ voluntaries. Not knowing what a voluntary was,
Mendelssohn asked to publish a set of six sonatas instead. The first sonata begins
with a serious movement in F minor that contrasts contrapuntal writing with the
complete statement of the chorale Was mein Gott will, das g’scheh allzeit (What
my God wills is always right). The second movement, in A flat major, is lyrical
and reminiscent of some of Mendelssohn’s Songs Without Words for piano.
The third movement, in C minor, begins with a single melody in a recitative
style followed by full chords on the main manual. The movement continues with a
dialogue between these sonorities and ends with a quiet passage that leads
directly to the final movement. The Allegro assai vivace, more pianistic
in nature, is filled with arpeggios that provide a sense of crescendo as the
chords become bigger. The mode is F major, but Mendelssohn quickly travels
through an array of key areas to provide intensity. Pedal solos at the end of
the movement create excitement as the sonata comes to a brilliant close.
Following the example of Mendelssohn, Robert Schumann
(1810-1856) expended a vast amount of energy studying and promoting the music
of J. S. Bach. This fascination with Bach’s œuvre reached new heights in
early 1845 when Schumann, along with his wife Clara, set out to glean a more
complete understanding of the polyphonic style. The results of this tireless
effort are evident in several collections of pieces including the Studien
für den Pedalflügel – Sechs Stücke in kanonischer Form (Studies for the
Pedal Piano – Six Pieces in Canonic Form), Op. 56, as well as the four Skizzen
für den Pedalflügel (Sketches for the Pedal Piano), Op. 58, the six Fugen
über den Namen Bach (Fugues on the Name BACH), Op. 60, for organ or
pedal piano, and the Fier Fugen (Four Fugues), Op. 72, for piano. The
Six Pieces in Canonic Form, Op. 56, were written in the spring and summer of
1845 in Dresden
(where one third of Schumann’s complete works were composed) and show a clear
connection to the works of Bach, especially the Inventions. Schumann dedicated
the collection to his teacher and friend Johann Gottfried Kuntzch, the organist
at St. Mary’s Church in Zwickau,
Schumann’s birthplace. Interest in the pedal piano had grown substantially
since about 1800 when Johann Gottlieb Wagner, a musician in Dresden, had begun adding a pedal keyboard to
the square piano. Precedent had been set for such an instrument as early as the
fifteenth century with the pedal clavichord and later the pedal harpsichord,
and these were important practice instruments for organists (including Bach)
throughout the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. Even Mozart had a fortepiano
with independent pedals made for him by Anton Walter in 1785. Louis Schone
built a pedal piano for Schumann in 1843, and it provided both Clara and Robert
an instrument on which they could play the organ works of Bach.
Canonic Study No. 2 in A minor is marked Mit innigem
Ausdruck (With heartfelt expression). The canon, heard on a solo stop in
the treble range, is at the unison pitch and at a distance of one measure.
Schumann’s ability to weave a beautiful melodic line accompanied by splendid romantic
harmony creates a work far more interesting and moving than a strict and
straightforward study in canonic form. Different organ registrations,
especially for the solo lines (such as the Cor Anglais 16’ on the Positif,
played one octave higher), are used for this recording to provide important
changes in color – similar to what one would do on the piano, but with a nod to
the symphony orchestra. Canonic Study No. 3 in E major is in a simple ternary
form. It opens with a brief recitative-like intonation marked Andantino,
but immediately launches into an A section (marked Etwas schneller – a
little faster) in which the main melodic material appears in the soprano with a
canon at the fifth and at a distance of only two beats. The short B section of
eight bars is in A major and is played on a softer registration (the Flûte
Douce 4’ on the Positif). An A-prime section ensues followed by a delightful
conclusion in which material from the opening measures returns.
Although César Franck (1822-1890) was born in Liège, Belgium,
he lived most of his life, from his teenage years on, in Paris. After his studies and working in
several smaller posts, he was appointed organist of the Basilica of Sainte
Clotilde and professor of organ at the Paris Conservatory. Charles Tournemire,
Franck’s second successor after Pierné at Ste. Clotilde, refers in 1931 in his
intriguing little book entitled César Franck to “an educator full of
fire with a marvelous heart.” He goes on to remark about Franck’s teaching of
contrapuntal improvisation in the Conservatory organ class:
In fugue he was particularly interested in the
construction of the episodes, combining an ingenious tonal plan with the
elegant writing of a counterpoint with imitations in closer and closer stretto.
Every now and then he would sit down at the keyboard and give us an example.
And what an example! While we had difficulty working out one correct counter-
subject, he, in the same time, had found five or six: “See, you can do this…or
else this…or again…” Then, in the most
natural tone: “Come, now choose one and make me a good fugue!”
Franck was remembered by his students as being kind and
generous with his time, and he was somewhat of a father figure to them (he was
affectionately called le pére Franck). But even Franck had his moments
of frustration. D’Indy recalls the maître’s explosive anger: “…when awkward
finger went astray… in some ugly harmonic progression.” And John Hinton, an
English organ student of Franck, remembers that “wrong accidentals in playing
particularly annoyed him…he would shout and rave like a madman if the offense
were repeated.” Guy Ropartz, in an article on Franck, refers to the maître as a
“Christian mystic…whose work will live,” and that the organ pieces “…are really
symphonies, sublimely conceived, magnificently wrought.” In regards to Franck
the organist, Ropartz writes:
"César Franck was himself a remarkable organist, full
of love for his instrument and careful to avoid degrading it, as do, alas too
many of his fellows, to the poor part of entertainer of the swarming crowd that
fills the churches. At Ste. Clotilde, where he was organist for thirty-two
years, crowds of music-lovers would assemble Sunday by Sunday to hear his
admirable improvisations, and had anyone noted them down, art would have been
all the richer by a series of compositions as finely constructed as those which
he so long thought over, so carefully wrote down."
Franck’s Choral II from Trois Chorals
represents the apogee of the composer’s creative genius. Written only months
before the composer’s death in 1890, it is a work rife with the quintessential
elements of romanticism: drama, virtuosity, and lyricism. The form is one of
continuous variation. The main theme, initially stated in the pedal, is the
basis for a melodic ostinato and ultimately a passacaglia of monumental
proportion. Similarities can indeed be drawn between this work and the
impressive Passacaglia in C minor of J. S. Bach. Whatever the influence, Franck
may certainly have been inspired by the baroque masterpiece. Choral II
is clearly divided into two distinct sections, each ending with the “chorale”
theme played on the unique sound of the Voix humaine on the Récit.
Joseph Guy Ropartz (1864-1955), born in Brittany in northwestern
France, was a disciple of César Franck who not only continued his master’s
tradition, but also created works that serve as a bridge to the twentieth
century. Ropartz studied the organ under Franck, yet his primary interest was
composition. He was not a virtuoso organist, but rather spent most of his
career composing, serving as director of the conservatories in Nancy
and Strasbourg
and as conductor of the Strasbourg Municipal Orchestra. Ropartz’s œuvre
is vast and consists of song cycles, choral works (including a large setting of
Psalm 136 and a Requiem), numerous piano pieces, cello sonatas, violin sonatas,
string quartets, and five symphonies (Symphony No. 3 in E major is a
large-scale work for full orchestra, chorus, and soloists with romantic texts
written by the composer). His output for organ consists of eighteen works
composed between 1885-1942. Nearly two thirds of these pieces were written with
specific liturgical needs in mind, and seven of the organ works are more
substantial and seem most appropriate as concert repertoire.
Ropartz’s Introduction et Allegro moderato in D
minor exhibits an architecture that reflects the composer’s studies with
Franck. Following tradition, the form is Sonata-allegro. After a grand
and majestic introduction in the spirit of a French overture, the Allegro
moderato ensues with statements of the two main themes, the first strong
and serious, the second lyrical and melodious. Throughout the exposition and
development of the themes, the influence of Wagner, perhaps through Franck, an
ardent Wagnerian, is apparent – especially in the harmony. It is clear that
Franck served as the catalyst for Ropartz’s interest in Wagner’s music, but the
young Breton made his own serious study of this music and travelled to Bayreuth to hear
performances of Wagner’s great music dramas. The coda in the Introduction et
Allegro moderato signals a return of the French overture elements from the
work’s opening measures. This final section brings a shift to D major and gives
the work a sense of optimism after the preceding rhythmic and harmonic tension.
Ropartz composed the Introduction et Allegro moderato in 1917 and
dedicated the work to concert organist and important pedagogue Joseph Bonnet.
At this time, near the end of the Great War (WWI), Bonnet was sent by the
French government on an official mission to the United States in order to combat,
through his concerts, the influence of German and Austrian artists. As a
champion of Ropartz’s music, it seems likely Bonnet may have performed the Introduction
et Allegro moderato on numerous occasions. There is a sense of searching
and uneasiness in this work that exists in the main themes – perhaps a
reflection of the angst of the time. Yet the conclusion represents a feeling of
hope for the future. The harmonic language is anathema to the trends in
composition in the early part of the twentieth century. Indeed, Ropartz’s work
was composed roughly eight years following Schoenberg’s Pierrot lunaire
and six years after the riots broke out at the Théâtre des Champs Élysées
during the premiere of Stravinsky’s Le sacre du printemps (The Rite
of Spring). Nonetheless, Ropartz has a unique voice that deserves to be
heard. That Ropartz continued to compose in a late-romantic idiom clearly shows
his allegiance to the musical and literary aesthetics of the nineteenth
century.
Thème varié was composed in 1901 as part of the Trois
Pièces (the other two pieces are Prière pour les Trépassés, and Fantaisie).
Thème varié begins with an opening theme in the style of a Breton or
Celtic folk song, although there is no specific reference to one in the score.
As the title suggests, this is a set of variations in which an unaccompanied
theme is first heard in its entirety. This is followed by a harmonization of
the theme with the melody in the soprano. The ensuing variation has the theme
in the pedal with quarter-note motion in the manuals as accompaniment. What
appears to begin as the third variation is actually a fugato with a subject
derived from the main theme. After three voices have entered, Ropartz flirts
with the idea of combining the themes, and after an eight-measure dominant
pedal point and in true Franckian spirit, he does just that with a complete
statement of the main theme in octaves in the right hand while the left hand
and pedal play the fugue subject. The pedal part does not double the left hand
note-for-note, but merely on the most important pitches. The pedal acts as an
extension of the left hand, something that is evident in a number of Franck’s
organ works. Thème varié concludes with a section in the major mode with
the main theme resounding high in the treble range over a tonic pedal and
chromatic harmony as accompaniment. There is an air of mystery to the final
measures as the composer searches for new ways to harmonize the simple melody.
The piece seems to fade away into the mist, a characteristic not uncommon to
Ropartz.
The Prière in E major, the second of the Trois
Pièces of 1896, is in a simple ternary form, A-B-A’. The opening two bars
act as the motivic cell, both melodically and rhythmically, upon which the
entire piece is based. The basic structure of the melodic line (3-2-1-2-3-5)
has a folk-like quality to it, and seems to be in the style of a Breton or
Celtic folk song. The opening bars are a sort of intonation with a harmonic
scheme of I-V-vi-iv-I. Ropartz returns to this with an exact restatement of the
initial measures in the codetta. The Prière, perhaps more than any other organ
work of Ropartz, shows a striking similarity to the organ works of Franck.
There is no obvious model, yet the melodic and harmonic structure of this piece
simply remind one of the Franckian style. Ropartz exploits transposition as
Franck also does in the E major Chorale. The harmonic scheme with emphasis on
third relationships is reminiscent of the third Chorale (For example, the main
theme is stated in E major, then repeated in G major).
Some have considered the “inner beauty” and a certain
austerity to Ropartz’s musical voice. That his music may sound austere perhaps
can be attributed to his life experience – he suffered very early by losing his
father and two brothers before the age of fifteen. As a result, he developed
strong Christian beliefs and remained a faithful Roman Catholic throughout his
life. He sought through his sacred compositions, including masses and motets as
well as works for organ, to provide music of a serious caliber worthy of the
divine liturgy. Just as he described Franck, he also was a “Christian mystic”
whose faith was a foundation for his life and work. In addition, Guy Ropartz is
remembered for his faithfulness to the culture of Brittany. Its folklore, the sea, the
mist-filled pastoral scenes of nature – all appear as important characters in
his drama. For him, Brittany
was his paradise.
Louis Vierne (1870-1937) was born in Poitiers, France,
almost completely blind. After his family moved to Paris,
he became a student at the Institution National des Jeunes Aveugles (National School for Blind Youth). All students
there had a strong musical education and were required to study violin and
piano, and to sing in the choir. Vierne later studied the organ with César
Franck, but only for a period of less than two years. In 1892, Vierne was
appointed assistant organist to Widor at the Church of St. Sulpice,
and he was named Widor’s assistant at the Paris Conservatoire in 1894. Only two
days prior, he won his coveted First Prize in Organ from the Conservatoire. In
1900, Vierne was appointed organist at the Cathedral of Notre Dame, a post he
held until his death – literally, since he died at the console of the organ at
the beginning of a concert.
The Symphonie I, Op. 14 dates from 1899 and
represents the beginning of Vierne’s contribution to a genre that Widor had
already firmly established in the 19th century. The first symphony of Vierne
opens with a Prélude et Fugue in D minor. The ensuing movements, Pastorale,
Allegro vivace, and Andante demonstrate the full range of
dynamics one would expect from a French symphonic work. The sixth and last
movement, Final, is a stirring and exuberant piece in D major that is
intended to display the full resources of the organ. A work in sonata-allegro
form, this last movement opens with toccata-like figuration in the manuals with
the first theme in the pedals. After a transition, the second theme is heard in
the dominant key of A major and in canon between the soprano voice in the right
hand and the pedal (a technique Vierne would have honed with Franck who used
canon extensively). The form of the piece is straightforward as the development
explores different key areas and employs various techniques in thematic
extension. The recapitulation shows a triplet figuration in the manuals as the
main theme returns. The same transition occurs, but is followed by the second
theme played on full organ and in the tonic key. The coda is exciting and
brings the work to a brilliant conclusion.
Jehan Alain (1911-1940), was one of the most original and
creative musical minds of the twentieth century (Jehan is the old French
spelling and is pronounced as if the h were omitted). Alain, with
Langlais and Messiaen, was among a generation of innovative organist/composers
whose works illustrate the epitome of modernity in French organ composition.
Like Nicolas de Grigny of the 17th century with whom he is sometimes compared,
Alain left this world much too soon – he was killed by members of the German
army on 20 June 1940 at age 29 near Saumur, France, at the beginning of World
War II. Jehan Alain composed Litanies, JA 119, in August of 1937 when he
was 26. His younger sister, the eminent organist and pedagogue Marie-Claire
Alain (1926-2013), recalled hearing fragments of Litanies before August
of 1937 and, in fact, passages of the piece appear in an earlier work written
in 1936, Fantasmagorie, JA 63. This rhythmic figuration may, as
Marie-Claire Alain suggests, represent Jehan’s memory of the train rides from
his suburban home in St. Germain-en-Laye to Paris. The chords in the left hand illustrate
the irregular motion and accents of the train wheels on the track. This section
in many ways serves to give the piece an element of humor (known as “the train
motive”). This rhythmic figuration may also reflect influences from jazz and
eastern cultures.
The original title of the work was Supplications; Litanies
may have been applied shortly after its composition. The work may have
served as a source of comfort for Jehan as he suffered the death of his beloved
sister Marie-Odile who died on 3 September 1937 as the result of a
mountain-climbing accident. Jehan’s expression of mourning is reflected in the
inscription he attached to the beginning of Litanies: “When the
Christian soul no longer finds new words in its distress for imploring the
mercy of God, it repeats incessantly the same prayer with a fervent faith.
Reason reaches its limit. Faith alone follows its ascension.” Jehan Alain gave
to Bernard Gavoty, author of a biography of the young composer, a detailed
explanation of how to approach Litanies: “…When you play this piece, you
must give the impression of an ardent evocation. The prayer is not a complaint,
but an irrepressible hurricane that overthrows everything in its path. It is
also an obsession: one must fill the ears of men…and of the Good Lord! If, in
the end, you do not feel exhausted, then you will neither have understood nor
played as I want it. Push yourself to the limit of speed and clarity.” Jehan
Alain premiered Litanies on 17 February 1938 in a concert at the Church
of the Holy Trinity (La Trinité) in Paris.
Alain also played for the first time the other works in his Trois Pièces:
Variations sur un thème de Janequin, JA 118 and Le Jardin suspendu,
JA 71. Joining him in this concert were Olivier Messiaen (already organist at
La Trinité) and Jean-Yves Daniel-Lesur. Virginie Schildge-Bianchini, the
dedicatee of Litanies, gave the first performance of the work in the United States
on 16 May 1938.
Jack Mitchener
Jack Mitchener is recognized as one of the leading concert
organists and teachers in his generation. He has been praised for playing that
is technically brilliant, yet expressive and poetic. According to The
American Organist, “Mitchener brings music to life with his supple rhythmic
control, clear phrasing, energy, and sensitivity.” In response to his recording
on the historic Salem Tannenberg organ, Dulcet Tones, a reviewer for the
International Record Review of London
asserted, “Superb…an impressive and rather moving listening experience.”
Dr. Mitchener has concertized extensively throughout the USA, Europe, and Asia,
and many of his performances have been heard in television and radio broadcasts
such as American Public Media’s Pipe Dreams hosted by Michael Barone. He
has performed in notable venues such as the Church of St. Sulpice and the
Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris; St. Thomas Church, New York City; Duke
University Chapel; the Church of St. Augustine (Augustinerkirche) in Vienna;
the Church of St. James (Jacobikirche) in Lübeck, Germany; and the Hong Kong
Cultural Centre. He also has collaborated with renowned musicians such as Nick
Eanet (Concertmaster of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra), the Mendelssohn and
Ying String Quartets, lutenist Paul O’Dette, and composer John Corigliano.
While still an undergraduate student, he was the national winner of the Music
Teachers National Association Organ Competition. Later he was a laureate in the
Philadelphia AGO and Dublin International organ competitions. He records for
the Raven and Albany
labels.
He has performed the complete organ works of J. S. Bach in
a series of fifteen recitals and also has given recitals, lectures, and master
classes for national and regional conventions of the American Guild of
Organists, the Organ Historical Society, the Music Teachers National
Association, the Historical Keyboard Society in North America, the Society for
Seventeenth-Century Music, the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada,
the Association of Anglican Musicians, the Fellowship of United Methodist
Musicians, and the Presbyterian Association of Musicians. He has been a guest
performer and teacher at numerous universities throughout the USA including
Duke, Syracuse, Notre Dame, North Texas, UNC-Greensboro, Kansas, Binghamton,
Pacific Lutheran, among others, as well as institutions in Hong Kong and Japan. He also
has premiered works by Emma Lou Diemer, Dan Locklair, Margaret Vardell
Sandresky, and Robert Ward (winner of the Pulitzer Prize).
His major teachers include Marie-Claire Alain, David
Craighead, David Higgs, John Mueller, and Russell Saunders (organ); Gerre
Hancock (improvisation); James Cobb, Louise Leach, Kimberly Kabala, and Clifton
Matthews (piano); and Arthur Haas and Huguette Dreyfus (harpsichord). He holds
the Doctor of Musical Arts, two master’s degrees, and two Performer’s
Certificates in organ and harpsichord from The Eastman School of Music, University of Rochester. During his studies at the
Conservatoire National de Rueil-Malmaison, France, he was unanimously awarded
the Médaille d’or (Gold Medal), Prix d’Excellence, and Prix de
Virtuosité. His high school diploma and bachelor’s degree are from the
University of North Carolina School of the Arts and he also studied at the Interlochen Arts
Academy in Michigan.
A former professor at the Oberlin College Conservatory of
Music, he has also served on the faculties of the University of North Carolina
School of the Arts, Salem College, The Eastman School of Music (Community
Education Division) and the Colgate
Rochester Crozer
Divinity School.
Since 2012 Dr. Mitchener has resided in Macon, Georgia,
where he serves as Director of the Townsend-McAfee Institute of Church Music,
University Organist and Associate Professor of Organ in the Townsend School of
Music at Mercer University. He has a full studio of
undergraduate and graduate organ majors from throughout the USA, Europe and Mexico. He also serves as
Organist/Choirmaster at historic Christ
Church, Episcopal, in Macon,
the Mother Church for the Diocese of Atlanta.
For the American Guild of Organists, Jack Mitchener has
been a chapter dean and board member and also a member of the National
Committee on Professional Education. In this capacity, he helped to plan and
execute national pedagogy conferences for the AGO including one held at the Institute of Sacred Music
at Yale University. He also has served as an
adjudicator for numerous competitions including those on the national level for
the AGO as well as the Biarritz International Competition in France. He is a former President of
the Board of Trustees of the Moravian Music Foundation, is a member of the Pi
Kappa Lambda National Music Honor Society, and has been cited in numerous Who’s
Who publications. He is represented by Penny Lorenz Concert Management of
Seattle, Washington. www.JackMitchener.com
Pipe Organ built by C. B. Fisk, Inc., Gloucester,
Massachusetts, Op. 116, 2001
Finney Chapel, Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio
57 voices, 75 ranks, 3,951 pipes
Grand Orgue Manual I
Montre 16
Bourdon 16
Montre 8
Gambe 8
Flûte harmonique 8
Bourdon 8
Prestant 4
Octave 4
Doublette 2
Dessus de Cornet V
Grande Fourniture II
Petite Fourniture V-VIII
Bombarde 16
Trompette 8
Clairon 4
Positif Manual II, enclosed
Quintaton 16
Principal 8
Salicional 8
Unda maris 8
Cor de Nuit 8
Prestant 4
Flûte douce 4
Nasard 2-2/3
Doublette 2
Tierce 1-3/5
Larigot 1-1/3
Piccolo 1
Plein jeu IV
Cor Anglais 16
Trompette 8
Clarinette 8
Récit Manual III, enclosed
Bourdon 16
Diapason 8
Viole de gambe 8
Voix céleste 8
Flûte traversière 8
Bourdon 8
Dulciane 4
Flûte octaviante 4
Octavin 2
Plein jeu III-IV
Basson 16
Trompette 8
BassonHautbois 8
Voix humaine 8
Clairon 4
Pédale
Montre 32 (from 16)
Bourdon 32
Contrebasse 16
Montre 16 (G.O.)
Sousbasse 16 (32)
Violonbasse 16
Flûte 8
Violoncelle 8
Bourdon 8
Flûte 4
Contre Bombarde 32
Bombarde 16
Trompette 8
Clairon 4
Pédales de Combinaison Hook- down pedals in Mode français
Tirasse Grand Orgue
Tirasse Positif
Tirasse Récit
Copula Positif/Grand Orgue
Copula Récit/Grand Orgue
Copula Récit/Positif
Grand Orgue sur la machine
Octaves graves Grand Orgue
Anches Pédale
Anches Grand Orgue
Anches Positif
Anches Récit
Trémolo Récit; Trémolo Positif
Effet d’orage
Coupler drawknobs above Récit available in American Mode*
Grand Orgue/Pédale
Positif/Pédale
Récit/Pédale
Positif/Grand Orgue
Récit/Grand Orgue
Octaves graves GO
Récit/Positif
Récit Trémolo
Positif Trémolo
*American Mode includes a multi-level combination action accessed with thumb
pistons and registration sequencer with both thumb pistons and pedals.
Accessories
Balanced Expression Pedals
Key action: Direct mechanical (tracker)
Kowalyshyn Servo-pneumatic Lever
Stop action: Electric Solenoid
Casework: A single cabinet of oak, incorporating portions of the original organ
case designed by Cass Gilbert, architect of Finney Chapel
Manual compass 61 notes
Pedale compass 32 notes
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