2-CD set
for the price of one CD Todd
Wilson records on 2 CDs all of the organ music composed by Gerre Hancock, playing the
two famous organs at Saint Thomas Church, New York, where Gerre Hancock was
organist and choirmaster 1971-2004. Kevin Kwan, organist, plays in the duos. The famous chancel
organ at St. Thomas, originally built in 1913 by E. M. Skinner as op.
205 and rebuilt many times thereafter into one of the very great
American organs for Anglican church music as well as repertoire,
especially French repertoire, was removed from the church in May, 2016, to be
replaced by a new instrument by Lynn Dobson. This is the last recording,
and perhaps the best, technically, of the previous organ.
Air:
Prelude for Organ Variations
on Palm Beach, Coronation, Ora Labora Fantasy
on Divinum Mysterium Prelude
& Fugue on Union Seminary Meditation
on Draw Us in the Spirit’s Tether Preludes
on Nettleton, Somerset Hills,
Playford, Bayhead, Hyfrydol. Slane An
Evocation of Urbs Beata Jerusalem A Paraphrase
of St. Elizabeth A Fancy
for Two to Play: Duet for Organ A Laredo
Fanfare Fantasy
on St. Denio Fanfare
on Antioch Trumpet
Flourishes for Christmas Holy Week
(suite) Toccata
for Organ
**** 4-star Review in Choir & Organ Magazine. Writes Rupert Gough: Here in music (and a wealth of written notes) we
have a comprehensive celebration of the work of an organist who left an
indelible mark on American church music . . .
Writes
David Dewar in Organists' Review, p. 65
Dr. Gerre
Hancock (1934-2012) was organist of St Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue, New York,
for some 33 years until 2004. He left a towering reputation as organist,
improviser, and choir trainer; his work as a composer, however, has received
less attention. The accompanying notes to the present collection make the point
that, over that long sojourn at the same church, his style in improvisation and
composition developed symbiotically with the Arents Memorial organ at which he
presided. The interesting quesiton of how his invention and technique might
have evolved in such close relationship with another instrument must, however,
remain unanswered.
Hancock's
influence on the American organ world and through his visites to the UK has
been highly significant. (I recall one stimulating demonstration by him on an
RCCO residential school at Oxford in the mid-90s.) In those contexts,
therefore, the insightful performances in this anthology are greatly to be
welcomed. Compositional style is, as noted in the booklet, rooted in the
Baptist hymns familiar to him from his youth, and in mid-American culture.
Hancock pursued studies in Paris, with Nadia Boulanger and Jean Langlais, and
his harmonic style was thus "further enhanced with elements of Jazz and
the twentieth-century French school." All these influences and
inspirations are translated in the organ works into music of lyricism and
excitement.
Todd
Wilson, Director of Music at Cleveland's Trinity Epsicopal Cathedral and Head
of the Organ Department at The Cleveland Institute of Music, was first
influenced by Gerre Hancock's service playing whilst he was studying at the
University of Cincinnati. The empathetic nature of these performances
illustrates a long association with this music which makes a persuasive
argument for Hancock's organ compositions. That they also show off the
resources of the Arents organ in the church's magnificent acoustics is an added
and welcome bonus. Wilson's sometime student, Kevin Kwan, also deploys similar
virtuosity in several items -- both duet and where two organs are needed. (Using
also the Loening-Hancock Gallery organ.)
The CDs
are accompanied by comprehensive notes on the compositions and their contexts,
notes on the two instruments, biographical notes on the performers, and a
message from Judith Hancock.
Gerre
Hancock's reputation and influence are lasting -- it is thereforme welcome that
these recordings provide an opportunity to view his work comprehensively. This
set, handsomely produced but not expensive, is, I feel, warmly to be
recommended. Writes James Hildreth in an extensive review in The American Organist: ". . . It us truly a treasure to have the complete composed works
recorded on this instrument and preserved for posterity. The recorded
sound . . . successfully captures the full spectrum of sound of both
organs in the ambience of the spacious nave. . . . Todd Wilson's . . . playing captures Hancock's spirit in every way; it could very well be Uncle Gerre himself playing."
The Organ Music of Gerre
Hancock by Brian Preston Harlow Dr. Gerre Hancock left an indelible mark on church music
and the organ profession in America.
Lauded for his skills as an organist, improviser, and choir trainer, his
contributions as a composer have been somewhat overlooked in comparison. A
request or commmission usually was required to persuade him to commit ideas to
paper. Apart from the early Air, all of the organ works were composed
for specific occasions, people or anthologies. This body of music offers a
window into the mind of this renowned improviser and teacher; his written work
is remarkably consistent with his treatise on improvisation, Improvising:
How to Master the Art, in its treatment of themes, harmonic language and
musical style. An analysis of his organ music reveals many similarities with
his improvisations. His improvisation students will remember his relentless
attention to counting and phrase length. Simultaneously strict in form yet free
in harmony and expression, these works also reflect his varied background. Born
in Lubbock, Texas, in 1934, Uncle Gerre’s charismatic
personality and musical style was always rooted in mid-American culture and the
Baptist hymns of his youth. Studies in Paris
with Nadia Boulanger and Jean Langlais further enhanced his harmonic language
with elements of Jazz and the twentieth-century French school.
For thirty-three years, Dr. Hancock presided over the
Arents Memorial Organ at Saint Thomas Church on Fifth
Avenue in New
York and maintained a symbiotic relationship with an
instrument that surely influenced his improvisational and compositional style.
In many ways, his style of playing was perfectly suited to this organ, though
it is impossible to know whether his style might have developed differently with
a different organ at his disposal. As an historical document and for the
demands of the music itself there is not a better instrument on which to record
this repertoire. During the prelude to his own Solemn Requiem on February 4,
2012, as several of these compositions were played on the Arents organ, it felt
almost as if he were at the console once more. Todd Wilson’s wonderful
recording ensures that this historic pairing of music and instrument will be
available for future generations to discover and enjoy.
The Music We begin with Air: A Prelude for Organ, his
earliest, and perhaps his most popular, work for organ. Composed in 1960 and
dedicated to Judith Eckerman, whom he married the following year, the piece
contains stylistic traits that would be developed throughout his oeuvre.
Hancock’s organ compositions can be divided into three groups: the Hymn Tune
Prelude, Variation Form, and pieces in other forms, including Song Form. In Air
he employs the simplest version of Song Form as described in his improvisation
textbook, ABA
form. The two halves of the initial A section are distinguished by a change of
register in the solo melody, while the second A section employs canon at the
fifth. These devices of register shift and canon recur throughout Hancock’s music.
The B section develops the opening phrase in imitation and then develops the
third phrase of the melody. The many seventh chords and parallel open
sonorities throughout this section build tension and are typical of his
harmonic language. Other characteristic features already in evidence in his
first organ work include imitative development of motives and the use of
complex chords at important cadences, such as the dominant thirteenth just
before the recapitulation. In the coda, the raised fourth scale degree provides
a Lydian inflection, a favorite of Hancock.
Variation Form It is hardly surprising, given Dr. Hancock’s lifelong
devotion to work in the church, that the majority of his organ compositions and
improvisations were based on hymn tunes. Hymns were fundamental to his musical
personality, and generations of parishioners and church musicians recall the
magic he created through them during a church service. In Improvising: How
to Master the Art, treatments of hymns and the hymn preludes are the first
subjects addressed following introductory chapters. He describes five models of
hymn preludes: 1. the ornamented hymn prelude; 2. the organ hymn prelude
(presenting the tune in long note values); 3. the interpolation prelude; 4. the
point of imitation hymn prelude; and 5. the hymn fantasy. All five models share
a clear organization based on the phrases of the tune divided by interludes and
can be expanded with introductions and codas, within the interludes, or by
linking multiple treatments in succession.
Hancock composed several variation sets that are
essentially sets of short chorale preludes. Each variation contains one
statement of the tune, sometimes with an introduction and coda. Occasionally
the tune is varied or obscured while retaining the underlying phrase and
harmonic structure. Three sets of variations composed between 2000 and 2001
demonstrate this approach: Variations on Palm Beach, an original
hymn tune by Hancock, Variations on Coronation and Variations
on Ora Labora. Each set contains a straightforward statement of the
theme, a scherzo variation, a slow movement, and a final toccata. Variations on
Ora Labora also contains a duo. The slow movement is always a lush aria, of
which the fourth variation of Variations on Ora Labora is a particularly
beautiful example.
The remaining two variation sets are large-scale,
continuous works that present multiple variations linked by interludes,
concluding with a fugue and toccata. Fantasy on Divinum Mysterium
(1973) is Hancock’s earliest extended work. It is a composition of great
variety, progressing from the initial statement in the pedal with bold
interjections, through a variation in canon at the third with double pedal
accompaniment, a melismatic second variation over a pedal ostinato, a lively fugue,
and finally a powerful toccata. The coda takes up the plainsong “Amen” and a
final statement of the first phrase played by the right foot rings out over a
tonic pedal, often the coup de grâce at the end of his improvisations.
Prelude and Fugue on Union Seminary (1982)
is a yet more ambitious work with complex textures. The composition is unified
through the opening four-note theme and rhythmic pattern, which are integral to
the first statement, the interludes, the first variation, and the fugue subject,
then appear beneath the final chord. The interludes, while all based on the
same material, are varied each time. It is fascinating to compare them with the
introduction and interlude of the simpler and later Meditation on Draw Us
in the Spirit’s Tether (1998), in which the same melodic incipit yields
quite different results. Prelude and Fugue on Union Seminary uses the
same extended variation form as Fantasy on Divinum Mysterium. Treatments
of the tune include a tuba solo in the tenor, a canon at the octave, melodic
inversion, rhythmic transformation in the fugue, and a brief two-part canon in
the pedals towards the end of the toccata (a device he also uses in the Toccata
for Organ). Considerable rhythmic complexity is generated by the fugue
theme, which includes triplets, dotted rhythms, and sixteenth- and eighth-note
patterns; it is very much like the fugues that Hancock improvised regularly.
Hymn Preludes Four modest hymn preludes are found in the three volumes
of The Bristol Collection of Contemporary Hymn Tune Preludes for organ
(1973-1975), assembled by Lee Hastings Bristol Jr., president of Westminster
Choir College from 1962-1969 and an organist and composer himself. The Prelude
on Nettleton is notable for the unification provided by a motive
based on phrase three of the hymn. Prelude on Somerset Hills is a
study in textures, the voices increasing at each statement of the tune from two
to three, four, and then five voices; the final statement of the tune is a
canon at the octave between the soprano and the pedal. The Preludes on Playford
and Bayhead employ canon at the fourth, florid melodic figures,
inversion and various types of imitation.
The Prelude on Hyfrydol (1979) is in two
continuous sections. A textbook interpolation prelude is followed by a
crescendo to a second uninterrupted statement of the tune in the pedal. Unity
is created by basing introduction and interludes on the third phrase of the
hymn tune. Variety is supplied by variations in tonality. Changes of register
in both parts of the piece highlight the repetition inherent in the hymn tune
and the harmonies, full of seventh chords in parallel motion, are again in
Hancock’s characteristic style. The opening melodic phrase is used to bring the
piece to a conclusion on a jubilant major seventh chord.
An Evocation of “Urbs beata Jerusalem” (2009) is another
interpolation prelude featuring stately interludes filled with warm harmonies.
Faster motion becomes more prominent as the piece progresses. Unusually,
Hancock asks for a different solo reed color for each phrase of the plainsong
melody, assuming quite a large instrument with plentiful reed stops.
A Paraphrase of “St. Elizabeth” (1975), like
the Prelude on Hyfrydol, is built around two statements of the
hymn tune, in this case without interludes between phrases but with a longer
introduction, coda, and central interlude. The phrases in the gentle first
statement are unified by subtle rhythmic alteration to the melody, giving the
beginning of each phrase the same rhythm. The second statement builds in
intensity and a striking climax is created by a deceptive cadence and a
recollection of the first phrase. The climax breaks off on a dominant
thirteenth chord, leading to a tranquil coda based on the last phrase of the
tune. The work concludes with the first six notes of the hymn in the pedal
under a chord with an added second.
Hancock was “asked to write a ‘reasonable facsimile’ to
the recorded improvisation” on the tune St. Denio on his 1990 CD Fanfare.
(Adam Micah Ward, 2009. From Imagination to Improvisation to Realization: A
Study of Pieces by Four Organists, p. 16, DMA diss., University of North
Carolina at Greensboro.) The result, Fantasy on St. Denio (2006),
is really a new piece. Never one to perform the same piece in the same way
twice, Hancock simplifies and slows down the scale patterns from his original
improvisation. Dotted rhythms are smoothed out into flowing eighth notes and
there are fewer flights of fancy in the accompaniment. While the actual notes
are simpler in the composed version, the form is, ironically, more
improvisational. The improvisation uses a symmetrical ABA form, modulating from G major to B-flat
major for the middle section. The melody, only suggested in the outer sections,
is played on a 4' reed in the pedals in the middle section. The manual
registration throughout is on gentle flute stops.
The composed piece modulates to a more adventurous A-flat
major for the middle section, featuring a decorated melody in the left hand and
open fifths in the pedal. Following that, it deviates sharply from the recorded
improvisation, building to full organ through imitative, chromatic passages and
dying away to a coda with the opening passagework. Thus, the composed piece is
more rhapsodic and dynamic, but less unified in some ways than the original
improvisation. As with Prelude and Fugue on Union Seminary and
Meditation on Draw Us in the Spirit’s Tether, differing expositions of a
single theme offer a glimpse into Hancock’s restlessly creative mind and result
in a pair of beautiful settings.
Prelude on Slane (1986), dedicated to his
former teacher Robert Baker and published in The AGO 90th-Anniversary
Anthology of American Organ Music is a wonderful example of the
point-of-imitation prelude with long note values, as outlined beginning on p.
94 of Improvising: How to Master the Art. The composed piece goes one
step further than the examples in the improvisation book because the second voice
in each point of imitation is an inversion of the first. Following the working
out of the point-of-imitation prelude and a cadence on a V9 chord is a free
statement and interpretation of the tune in regular note values over a large
crescendo and diminuendo. The coda returns to a point of imitation, this time
without inversion, and works its way back to the tune in long note values.
Beneath the final added-sixth chord, the pedal plays an abridged statement of
the first phrase of the hymn tune. The serene conclusion of this prelude evokes
the voluntaries improvised by Gerre at the end of Sunday Evensong at Saint
Thomas Church, weaving together elements of the anthem and other music of the
day, and often ending on the softest stops of the organ, as in a benediction.
Fanfares
Several occasional fanfares recall Hancock’s legendary
improvisations, particularly the final minutes of postludes and the
Fugue-Finale form, typically the last movement of his symphonic improvisations.
Hancock’s incredibly fluid technique enabled him to play very difficult and
fast passages of sixteenth notes on manuals and pedals simultaneously. A Laredo Fanfare (2006), commissioned for the
inauguration of the Sharkey-Corrigan Pipe Organ at Texas A & M
International University,
is strongly in the improvisational vein while again making use of the Lydian
mode at times. Two quite different Christmas fanfares were published in
anthologies. Fanfare on Antioch
(1995) is typical of Hancock’s festive hymn introductions. It begins with
an almost obsessive imitation of the first four notes of the tune in three
parallel canonic phrases, each moving up a third, before finally introducing
the second phrase. The final section exploits the rhythm of the fourth and
fifth phrases, “and heaven and nature sing.” The conclusion combines several
phrases at once, including his signature final statement of the first line in
the pedal. This brief piece is a window into Hancock the liturgical organist,
especially the way in which he unified improvisations with motivic development.
The virtuoso showpiece Trumpet Flourishes for Christmas (1978)
was conceived for the new Trompeta Majestatis at The Riverside Church. A series
of free fanfares introduce the first seven notes of Mendelssohn (“Hark!
the herald angels sing”), after which these distinct elements are combined and
developed. The concluding section introduces a new fanfare motive on the solo
trumpet above sustained chords carrying the full first phrase of the hymn. A
fanfare on the melody of “Glory to the newborn King” leads to a coda of fast
octaves and alternating chords in both hands and pedal in a texture reminiscent
of the end of his improvised symphonies, as well as the Toccata for Organ.
This is no simple Christmas postlude!
For Two Organists A Fancy for Two to Play: Duet for Organ
(1991) is, like Air for Organ, an example of simple Song Form. The
structure is perfectly divided into three sections of twenty bars, with the
addition of a four-bar cadenza for two solo voices before the recapitulation.
As with Air, the return of A is varied, in this case through melodic
decoration and variation. Each player plays a solo line on a separate solo stop
as well as elements of the accompaniment in manuals and pedal. The two solo
lines are imitative and at first sound as if they are in canon, but are only
freely imitative. The B section provides contrast in several ways: tonality,
centered on the mediant; texture, with the solo lines on new registrations and
now in strict canon; and harmony, with Lydian and Mixolydian inflections. The
work concludes with a particularly complex major chord, with an added second,
sixth and seventh. Throughout, the texture is rich and rhythmically
interesting, exploiting the many possibilities of four hands and four feet.
Holy Week (2007) is a suite in three
movements based on Gregorian chant themes and is for two organs. The first
movement, Palm Sunday, is based on the hymn Vexilla Regis.
Dramatic open fifths with initial trills and dramatic diminuendos in one organ
accompany free declamatory figures in octaves in the other organ depicting the
“almost hysterical drama of Jerusalem
on that first Palm Sunday.” The organs trade roles after which the chant
appears harmonized in a neo-medieval style with both perfect and augmented
intervals, foreshadowing the crucifixion. The remainder of the movement
extensively develops the first three notes of the chant, moving through a
number of keys.
The second movement, Maundy Thursday, is based on
the hymn Pange lingua and is in ABA
form. In the middle section, the theme alternates between the two organs and
from tenor to soprano register. The chords accompanying the last two phrases
become more dissonant, foretelling “the unthinkable events to follow on the
next day.” The outer A sections employ harmonies that are simultaneously lush
and unsettled, capturing the ambiguous emotions conjured by the Maundy Thursday
liturgy. The opening melody and initial harmonies are unmistakably similar to
the Andantino moderato theme from George Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue.
The two are even in the same key. Rhapsody in Blue dates from that
period in music history with which Hancock’s harmonic language has so much
affinity and this theme was used to accompany a montage of black and white
images of New York in Woody Allen’s 1979 film Manhattan, an homage to the city in the heyday of
John Andrew & Gerre Hancock’s tenure at Saint Thomas Church.
Given that Hancock was not afraid to play the tune Easter Parade beneath
the hymn “At the Lamb’s high feast” on Easter morning, this might very well be
an intentional tongue in cheek reference.
Movement three, Easter Day,
is a joyous toccata on the Easter sequence Victimae Paschali using most
of the long melody. According to the numbering in The Hymnal 1982,
Hancock uses stanzas 1, 2, 4, 5, and 8. The entire movement is a moto perpetuo
crescendo, with full organ (on both organs!) finally blazing forth in the last
two pages.
Original Themes Toccata for Organ (2003) is one of four
pieces composed on original themes rather than a hymn tune or chant melody.
(The others are Air: A Prelude for Organ; A Laredo Fanfare; and A
Fancy for Two to Play.) It is based on two themes, the first angular with
accented syncopations, constructed of half-steps and minor thirds; the second
legato, comprising larger intervals and employing his favored scale degrees of
the raised fourth and lowered seventh. The two themes combine beautifully and
are easily distinguished because they differ in profile and character. This
toccata does not follow the figuration patterns or forms suggested in the
improvisation book, which is aimed at producing toccatas with a hymn tune cantus
firmus and using the form of a hymn prelude. Instead, this toccata is in a
modified sonata form in B minor, though the first appearance of the second
theme occurs after quite an extensive treatment of the first theme and leads
immediately into the development of the two themes together. The recapitulation
is more clear-cut, with the first theme in the tonic and the second theme in
the tonic major, followed by an extensive coda based on the opening of the
first theme. A pedal cadenza leads to a three-note chord in the pedal and a
final unadorned B-major chord, unusual in its lack of added tones. Toccata
for Organ is one of Hancock’s finest organ compositions, a powerful,
exciting work that demands a relaxed technique.
Thank you, Uncle Gerre, for blessing us with your
generosity in living, teaching, performing, creating, and composing! ©2013
Brian Preston Harlow
NOTE: Todd Wilson plays the works without the use of suboctave and superoctave
couplers, reflecting both Gerre Hancock’s preference and the absence of those
couplers during his tenure at Saint
Thomas Church.
Todd Wilson Todd Wilson is Director of Music and Worship at Cleveland’s Trinity
Episcopal Cathedral, and is Head of the Organ Department at The Cleveland Institute
of Music, where he has taught since 1990. He is Curator of the E. M. Skinner
pipe organ in Severance Hall, and is House Organist for the restored Aeolian
organ at the Stan Hywet Home and Gardens in Akron, Ohio.
Wilson
won several competitions, including the Grand Prix de Chartres and the Fort
Wayne Competition. He has served on juries for competitions around the world,
including Nürnburg, Toulouse, St. Albans, Dublin, Calgary, and the AGO Young
Artists Competition.
Wilson performs with major
orchestras including those of Cleveland, Los Angeles, and Atlanta,
and more. He has performed in Japan,
Europe, and extensively throughout the United States, including numerous
national and regional conventions of the American Guild of Organists. He holds
Guild’s Fellow and Choirmaster certificates.
Wilson studied organ with
Wayne Fisher at the University
of Cincinnati’s
College-Conservatory of Music, where he earned both BM and MM degrees (and
where he was first influenced by the service playing of Gerre Hancock). He then
studied with Russell Saunders at the Eastman School of Music.
Previously, he was Director of Music & Organist at the
Church of the Covenant (Presbyterian) in Cleveland
for nineteen years. Before moving to Cleveland,
he served at Organist and Master of the Choristers at the Cathedral of the
Incarnation in Garden City, New York.
In New York he taught on the faculties of
Adelphi and Hofstra
Universities and was
organist of the George Mercer School of Theology.
This recording for Raven is Todd Wilson’s fifteenth
commercial recording, the earlier ones having appeared on the labels
FY/Solstice, Delos, and JAV.
Having grown up in the men and boys choir of Trinity Church
in Toledo, the
choirs and music of the Anglican tradition constitute an important part of Todd
Wilson’s musical life. In 1978-79, he served as a visiting assistant in music
at Canterbury Cathedral under Dr. Allan Wicks. At the Cathedral of the
Incarnation, Wilson
directed a choir of men and boys that remains among the longest in continuous
existence In the United States. He frequently presents workshops on English
choral and organ music, as well as service playing.
An active interest in improvisation led to his popular
improvised accompaniments to classic silent films.
Kevin Kwan Kevin Kwan is the Organist and Director of Music at Christ
and St. Luke’s Church in Norfolk,
Virginia. A native of San Francisco, he studied with Todd Wilson at
the Cleveland Institute of Music, while serving at the Church of the Covenant.
After a year as organ scholar at Gloucester Cathedral, in 2008 he became
Assistant Organist at Saint Thomas Church where
he worked daily with the Saint Thomas Choir of Men and Boys until his 2012
appointment in Norfolk.
The Arents Memorial
Organ
by Lawrence
Trupiano
The story of the Arents Memorial Organ began on February
7, 1955, when a contract between the Æolian-Skinner Organ Company and Saint
Thomas Church, New York City was signed by Walter C. Baker, church treasurer,
and Joseph Whiteford, vice-president of Æolian-Skinner. Funds were given by
George Arents in memory of his wife.
The original specifications were the work of G. Donald
Harrison, Æolian-Skinner’s president, and William Self, organist of Saint Thomas. The organ
was partially finished by Harrison who wanted “this organ to be a monument to
his career.” Unfortunately, Harrison died just
days before the organ was to be publicly exhibited by Pierre Cochereau at the
Sixtieth Anniversary National Convention of the American Guild of Organist on
June 25, 1956.
The organ was completed tonally by Æolian-Skinner
employees, and in October of 1957, Marcel Dupré made two recordings of the
instrument on the Mercury Living Presence label. The people who engineered the
recording were the dynamic team of C. Robert Fine and his wife, Wilma Cozart
Fine. Their talent and skills made this vinyl presentation of the organ and its
environment sound far better than it was in reality.
The 1956 Saint
Thomas instrument was actually a massive rebuild of a
1913 instrument. Harrison elected to retain
most of the 1913 Ernest Skinner windchests, which had been refurbished in 1953,
but started to have issues as early as 1960. Much correspondence between Bill
Self and A-S discusses the leather issues facing New York City instruments and theoretical
solutions. By 1964, two former employees of A-S became the curators of the Saint Thomas instrument:
Anthony Bufano and Gilbert F. Adams, who had formed the short-lived partnership
known as the Adams-Bufano Organ Company. Adams and Bufano did much mechanical
and tonal regulation in the first year they were engaged at the church. Bill
Self wrote to the rector, Dr. Frederick Morris, “that the organ is now in
better condition in terms of tone and regulation than any time since [its]
installation.”
In 1965, the Church decided to act on a proposal from Mr.
Adams to replace the failing chests in the chancel Grand Choeur with new slider
chests. Upon completion of that project, the church soon moved to replace the
the Swell windchests, which had sustained water damage in April, 1965, with new
Adams slider chests. In addition to the new
wind chests, significant re-voicing of the principal chorus ensued and,
eventually, the Harrison reeds were replaced.
Self’s enthusiasm for the organ’s recent modifications was
shared by a member of the church vestry, Edward C. Weist, a successful banker
who had studied music and was enchanted with pipe organs. Weist corresponded
with several organ builders during the 1930s, in particular Harrison and Walter
Holtkamp. He spoke fluent French and was intrigued by anything French,
including treatises on French music and organ building. Self had a strong ally
in Ed Weist!
The next significant changes occurring in the organ were
revoicing the Trompette en Chamade and a complete rebuilding of the Harrison
Positif organ. Work on the Positif included creating two separate divisions, a
French Positif and a German Oberwerk (which later would be renamed Vorwerk),
each playable from its own manual; and new slider chests, with significant
revoicing of existing ranks and new pipe work, including new Trompettes and a
Cromorne. It was during 1967, with the installation of this new equipment, that
the Positif division lost its ability to be “expressif.” Work on the pedal
reeds and revisions to the Principal choruses of the Grand Choeur and Great
were also undertaken.
These modifications were so dramatically different from
the 1956 instrument, that a letter dated March 21, 1968, arrived on Bill Self’s
desk and noted that “the Officers of the Company would be greatly pleased if
you would be good enough to help us continue to honor the work of the late G.
Donald Harrison by removing his personal nametag from the console… We are in no
way commenting on the present tonal characteristics of the St. Thomas organ, except in all honesty to
say that its character is not recognizable as the work of Mr. Harrison, or the
Æolian-Skinner Company for that matter.” Bill Self responded in April, “The
request from the officers of the Company concerning the nametag of G. Donald
Harrison is indeed well understood. The truth is that we have given this some
consideration ourselves [and to] honor your request, we have proceeded
accordingly.”
Comprehensive revisions continued in the Arents Organ
until the retirement of William Self in June 1971. The Antiphonal organ (which
was partially expressive) was removed prior to the completion of the new (1969)
Loening Memorial Organ in the east gallery, leaving the Swell as the only
division remaining under expression.
As with so many things at Saint
Thomas Church, Ed
Weist was instrumental in hiring Gerre and Judith Hancock, who both attended
Union Theological Seminary and returned to New York
after serving at Christ Church, Cincinnati,
Ohio. During Gerre Hancock’s
tenure as Organist and Choirmaster, he oversaw the tonal finalization of the
Grand Choeur and Great, along with Weist and Adams. Through good times and bad,
the Hancocks made music on the Arents organ for 33 years at the Church.
In 1974, Ed Weist, who had retired with his wife to Vero Beach, Florida,
wrote to Dr. Hancock and Gilbert Adams, “As George Arents foresaw, his organ
will never be ‘finished.’ Internal renewal and improvement will continue to
take place in the years ahead. Things will wear out. Mistakes or expedient
compromises will be corrected. New technologies will be invented, or rediscovered.
Tastes will change. The present tonal design may be corrected, or changed, or
abandoned; but it will be difficult to transcend.”
The specifications of most of the organs serving the
congregation of Saint Thomas Church since 1825 may be viewed online at the New
York City-AGO website; New York City Organ Project (NYCOP), Steve Lawson,
editor.
The Arents Memorial
Organ, Saint Thomas Church,
New York, Chancel 1969 Gilbert F. Adams, New York, and 2005 Mann &
Trupiano, New York
rebuilt from 1956 Æolian-Skinner Op. 205-A, 1948 M. P. Möller Op. 7000, 1945
Ernest M. Skinner & Son, 1913 Skinner Organ Company Op. 205
4 manuals, 119 stops, 160 ranks, electropneumatic
action
Great Man.
I 16 Principal 16 Bourdon 8 Principal 8 Flûte
harmonique 8 Gedackt 8 Violoncelle 5-1/3 Gross Quinte 4 Octave 4 Rohrflöte 3-1/5 Terz 2-2/7 Gross
Septime [sic] 2-2/3 Quinte 2 Octave V-VII Mixture IV Scharf Great 16 4 Positif to Great 8 Vorwerk to Great 8 Choir (Vor & Pos)
to Great 16 4 Swell to Great 16 8 4 Grand Choeur to Great 16 8
Positif
Man. II 16 Quintaton 8 Montre 8 Bourdon 8 Viole 8 Dulciana 4 Prestant 4 Cor de
nuit 2-2/3 Nasard 2 Doublette 2 Quarte 1-3/5 Tierce 1-1/3 Larigot 1-1/7 Septième 1 Piccolo IV Fourniture III Cymbale 16 Basson 8 Trompette 8 Cromorne 8 Clarinette 4 Clairon
Vorwerk
Man. II 8 Spitzprincipal 8 Gedeckt 4 Prinzipal 4 Koppelflöte 2-2/3 Quinte 2 Oktave 2 Blockflöte 1-3/5 Terz 1-1/3 Quinte 1 Schwegel IV Scharf III Terz-zimbel V Cornet de
Récit [g2-d5] 16 Rankett 8 Voix
Humaine Tremblant Choir 16 4 (Vor & Pos) 8 Trompette
en Chamade Swell to Choir 16 8 Grand Choeur to Choir 8
Swell Man.
III 16 Bourdon 8 Principal 8 Flûte
harmonique 8 Bourdon 8 Viole de
gambe 8 Viole
céleste 8 Flûte
douce 8 Flûte
céleste 4 Prestant 4 Fugara 4 Flûte à
fuseau 4 Dulciana 4 Unda Maris 2-2/3 Nasard 2 Doublette 2 Octavin 1-3/5 Tierce IV Fourniture III Cymbale 16 Bombarde 8 Trompette 8 Hautbois 8 Vox Humana 4 Clairon Tremblant Swell 16 4 Vorwerk on Swell, off Choir Grand Choeur Man. IV 32 Principal [1-12 Ped] 16 Montre 8 Montre 8 Bourdon 4 Prestant 3-1/5 Grosse Tierce 2-2/3 Nasard 2 Doublette 2 Quarte 1-3/5 Tierce V Fourniture IV Cymbale IV ranks V Grand Cornet [c3-c5] 16 Bombarde 8 Trompette 4 Clairon Great to Grand Choeur 8 Vorwerk on Grand Choeur, off Choir
Pedal 32 Contrebasse [ext.] 32 Bourdon [ext.] 16 Contrebasse 16 Principal 16 Bourdon 16 Bourdon [Gt.] 10-2/3 Grosse Quinte 8 Octave 8 Spitzflöte 8 Gedeckt 6-2/5 Grosse Tierce 5-1/3 Quinte 4-4/7 Grosse Septième 4 Super Octave 4 Flûte 3-1/5 Tierce 2 Blockflöte IV Fourniture III Cymbale 32 Bombarde [ext.] 16 Bombarde 16 Posaune 16 Rankett [VW] 8 Trompette 4 Clairon 4 Rohr Schalmei 2 Zink Great to Pedal 8 Positif to Pedal 8 Swell to Pedal 8 4 Grand Choeur to Pedal 8 Combinations Grand Choeur Pistons 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Swell Pistons 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Choir Pistons 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Great Pistons 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10 Pedal Pistons 1-2-3-4-5 General Pistons 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9- 10-11-12-13-14 Sequencer Controls + (Next) piston to left of divisional piston no. 1 for each manual and toe stud at right of Swell Pedal - (Prev) and + (Next) pistons below Swell and Choir manuals (right side) and toe studs at far right Loening-Hancock Gallery Organ 1996 Taylor & Boody Organbuilders, Op. 27 2 manuals, 25 stops, 32 ranks, mechanical action
Hauptwerk Man. I 16 Bordun 8 Principal 8 Rohrflöte 4 Octave 4 Spielflöte 2-2/3 Quinte (prep) 2-2/3 Nasat 2 Superoctave V-VI Mixtur 16 Trompet 8 Trompet Oberwerk/Hauptwerk
Oberwerk Man. II 8 Gedackt 8 Quintadena (prep) 4 Principal 4 Rohrflöte 2 Octave (prep) 2 Gemshorn II Sesquialtera IV-VI Scharff 8 Dulcian
Pedal 16 Subbass (poplar) 8 Octave [C1-F6 HW] 4 Octave 16 Posaune 8 Trompet (HW) Spare slide Hauptwerk/Pedal Oberwerk/Pedal
Manuals 54 notes Pedal 30 notes
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