A Cathedral’s Voice Jonathan
Ryan plays the three-manual organ completed in Fall, 2011, by Parkey
OrganBuilders of Norcross, Georgia, at the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans
in Shreveport, Louisiana.
J. S. Bach: Prelude & Fugue in D Major, BWV
532 William Byrd: Three Settings of Clarifica me
Pater
George Oldroyd: Three Liturgical Improvisations
Petr Eben: Studentenleider from Faust
Robert Schumann: Canonic Etudes, Op. 56: No. 4 in
A-flat Major; No. 5 in B Minor; No. 6 in B Major
Zachary Wadsworth: Resignation (composed 2012,
premiere recording)
George Shearing: Come Away to the Skies
Al Travis: Amazing Grace
Charles Tournemire: Fantasie sur le Te Deum et Guirlandes
Alleluiatiques
Marcel Dupré: Placare Christe servulis,
Op. 38, No. 1
Jonathan has made a YouTube demonstration of the Parkey organ to promote this CD. View it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SZCIWi2vabQ Reviews Jonathan Dimmock in The Journal of the Association of Anglican Musicians, April 2013:
". . . Ryan presents a very interesting program of pieces masterfully
played . . . Ryan demonstrates exceptional technique, considerable depth
of musicianship, imagination, and passion. This is a player to watch! .
. . The organ sounds beautiful and is very well recorded."
Reviews Alastair Johnston in Choir and Organ, July/August, 2013: "Performer and instruments project very effectively in nice acoustics on this recording, with skilled and communicative playing, imaginative programming of interesting repertoire and an exciting modern organ. Alongside 'standards' by Bach, Schumann, Dupre and Tournemire is some Byrd (surprisingly working quite well here), a set of newish American hymn preludes, some ecclesiastic George Oldroyd and a riotous extract from Petr Eben's Faust. This is a good recital of known and less-known music played stylishly on an interesting organ that must surely contribute much to the cathedral's liturgy. Production is as ever excellent from Raven."
Reviews James M. Reed in The Diapason, June, 2013: Jonathan Ryan is one
talented organist! Matched as he is on this CD with the new 54-rank Parkey
organ in Shreveport's Catholic Cathedral (see The Diapason, January 2012) and some superb previously unrecorded
music (as well as plenty of old favorites), this is much more interesting than
the average run-of-the-mill organ demonstration disc.
Ryan opens with a lively
and spirited performance of Bach's Prelude and Fugue in D (BWV 532) in which we
are quickly introduced to the performer's technical skill and the organ's
varied musical palette. After three charming settings of Clarifica me Pater by
William Byrd, the disc moves to the first of several most interesting musical
selections—the first recording of the Three Liturgical Improvisations by the
English church musician George Oldroyd (probably best known to most parish
musicians as the composer of the Mass for the Quiet Hour), and although these
performances here are divorced from the highly ritualistic Anglo-Catholic
liturgical activity that they would almost certainly have been improvised to
cover, they are played with tremendous feeling; the expressive, singing lines
of Oldroyd's rich harmonic framework soar under Ryan's skilled fingers as he
captures exactly the essence of this great emotive liturgical music. This is extremely
beautiful, soulful music (particularly the first improvisation) and one can
hopethat these three fine pieces will be heard more often in concerts, or
perhaps as preludes to services of Choral Evensong.
After an extremely capable
performance of Petr Eben's Studentenlieder (the fifth movement from Faust,
adapted by the composer himself for the organ) the recording turns to the last
three of Robert Schumann's Six Canonic Etudes (op. 56): No. 4 in A-flat, No. 5
in b, and No. 6 in B-flat. Ryan captures the lyrical quality of these lovely
studies, working the romantic nature of the Parkey organ to extract
well-controlled and appropriate crescendos and diminuendos. (It is regrettable
that only the first three studies were included here, as all six performed by a
player of Ryan's skill would make for a most compelling purchase.)
Three preludes on early
American hymn tunes follow: Resignation by Zachary Wadsworth (receiving its
first recording here, it is an interesting little piece with a constant sense
of motion, and the well-known melody played on a soft solo reed stop), George
Shearing's Come Away to the Skies, which begins with a delightful (almost)
dance-like section, before transitioning into a somewhat comic theatre-organ
style second half! The last of these three preludes is the lovely, gentle and
meditative setting of Amazing Grace by Al Travis, organist of Broadway Baptist
Church in Fort Worth, Texas.
The final two pieces are,
however, anything but meditative—quite popular works of the French organ repertoire,
both pieces provide a glimpse into the extraordinary technical ability of this
international (multiple) prize-winning organist: Fantaisie sur le Te Deum et
Guirlandes Alleluiatiques of Charles Tournemire, an exciting, free-form
fantasia based on the melody of the Te Deum laudamus; and finally the quite
spectacular Placare Christe servulis (op. 38, no. 16) of Marcel Dupré, played
here with all the great drama and excitement befitting such a cracking
toccata—the Pontifical Trumpet may not compare to the great Cavaillé-Coll
reeds on the organ of St. Sulpice, Paris, over which Dupré presided for many
years, but put aside your purist tendencies, and allow yourself to get caught
up in this incredible performance—Ryan will take your breath away.
Raven has produced another
of their fine booklets, with magnificent photographs and plentiful information
about the repertoire, instrument, and performer; the clarity of their
recordings never fails to deliver the impression of being seated in the room
listening to a live performance, and this recording is no exception.
About the Music
The tenure of Johann Sebastian Bach as court
organist in Weimar, Germany, from 1708 to 1717 saw a
flourishing of his composition for the organ. Encouraged by the pleasure
gleaned from the Duke of Weimar at such works, Bachs writing reached a high
level of refinement and virtuosity. Probably dating from the first several
years of Bach’s time in Weimar,
the Prelude and Fugue in D Major bursts into life with an infamous set
of three ascending D Major scales for the organists feet. Similar to the north
German baroque stylus phantasticus, Bach writes the opening lines of
this Prelude in a free, rather improvisatorial style intentionally designed to
capture the listeners attention. After the invigorating opening section, a
second and more substantial middle section seems to tip its hat to a sprightly
Italian instrumental form. An unresolved final cadence to this middle section
and the ensuing pause leads to the third and final section of the Prelude. This
remarkable and highly unusual short passage features numerous heart- wrenching
suspensions, some wandering of harmonies, and two simultaneous notes for the
organists feet. While many organists interpret this passage with a rather full
sound from the organ similar to the opening of the Prelude, here, I play it in
a mournful, expressive, and somewhat Italian style.
The delightful Fugue centers around a spinning musical
theme whose steady stream of sixteenth notes makes a pedal part for the
organists feet of notable virtuosity, especially by 18th-century standards.
Despite openly maintaining his preference for Catholicism after
Elizabeth I
re-established the Anglican Church when her reign as queen (1558-1603) began, William
Byrd was appointed to the Chapel Royal ca. 1570 and remained in royal
employment for the rest of his life. Previously, he had been made
organist/choirmaster at Lincoln Cathedral at the age of 20. Among his nearly
120 keyboard works are sacred pieces intended for the organ and secular pieces
whose intended keyboard instrument is not always certain. Clarifica me Pater,
a Psalm Antiphon most recently found in Roman-rite liturgy in Lauds during
Passiontide, quotes John 17:5 in its text: Glorify me, Father, with thine own
self with the glory I had with thee before the world was. Byrd’s three highly
contrasting organ settings date from around 1560. Succeeding versets have one
more voice than the previous; the first two reflect styles of earlier English
composers, incorporating a high degree of angular rhythmic complexity. Unusual
for the period, the second verset places the plainchant theme in the soprano
voice. The third verset, demonstrating perhaps a later, more refined writing
style, uses Clarifica me in the alto voice and employs highly imitative
polyphony.
Serving as a parish musician at several Anglican parishes
of the Anglo-Catholic persuasion in southern England, George Oldroyd was
no stranger to liturgy or Gregorian chant. The composer of some memorably
beautiful choral music, Oldroyd happily marries the serenity found in post-
Victorian British composition with the naturally uneven rhythm of chant in this
set of quintessential British voluntaries. Originally published in 1938, each
Improvisation quotes a Psalm passage in the score. The first of the three, and
the only one not based on a plainsong hymn, uses an original theme that could
easily have been plainchant, much like the imbibement of chant in compositions
of Maurice Duruflé. The second Improvisation weaves its plainsong theme, the
Vesperal hymn for the early Advent season Creator alme siderum or
Creator of the stars of night, within Oldroyd’s texture of parallel triads. The
third Improvisation is built around its plainsong theme, the hymn Verbum
supernum for Lauds of the Feast of Corpus Christi, throughout and,
employing a steady crescendo, stands as the only one to end with the full
resources of the organ.
The imaginative Czech composer Petr Eben, educated
at the Prague Academy of Music following World War II, spent much of his time
and career in composition though he also enjoyed international acclaim as a
performer. A hero in his own country and decorated with the Czech Medal of
Merit (2002), he also received honors from France
and England.
Religion, especially Catholicism, frequently plays a key inspirational role in
his music, even if at a distance. In 1976, he received a commission from the
Burgtheater in Vienna
to write stage music to Goethe’s play Faust, which he later adapted for
organ solo. The fifth of the nine movements portrays intoxicated students
singing crude drinking songs as Faust and Mephistopheles visit the Auerbach
tavern in Leipzig,
hence the title Studentenlieder or Students songs. As one might
expect with drunken bar songs, the pitch and rhythm are less than solid and
yield an unpredictably amusing, if not also sometimes chaotic, quality to the
music.
Despite falling out of fashion at the time of his death,
the music of J. S. Bach benefited from an enduring renewal of interest in the
19th century, especially by the time of Felix Mendelssohn’s 1829 performance in
Berlin of the
St. Matthew Passion. The consequent influence of Bach’s music extended to many
important composers, including the great romanticist Robert Schumann,
whose captivation with Bach in the 1840s yielded several works in the
contrapuntal form of composition intimately connected with Bach’s works. Among
Schumann’s works from this period are the Six Canonic Etudes, op. 56,
written in April and May of 1845. In each of the etudes, Schumann employs a
two-voice canon as the basis to create miniature marvels of characteristic and
poignant lyricism and beauty. The Etude No. 4 in A-flat Major treats the canon
much like a vocal duet in an art song with a clear solo/accompaniment texture.
The slightly whimsical Etude No. 5 in B Minor and sublime Etude No. 6 in B
Major more subtly place the canon between the tenor and soprano voice.
An award-winning composer born in 1983, Zachary
Wadsworth receives international attention, especially for his vocal,
choral, and operatic works. His compositions have been performed by the choir
of Westminster Abbey, the Washington National Opera Chorus, Boston Metro Opera,
and the Atlanta Philharmonic Orchestra. He received the Douglas Moore
Fellowship for American Opera 2012-2013 and won the international King James
Bible Composition Award (London,
2011). I first met Zach and encountered his work when we both sang in the
Schola Cantorum of Christ Church, Rochester,
New York, during our studies at
the Eastman School of Music. As someone passionate about new music, I was eager
to include a commissioned piece on this recording and am delighted to have one
by Zach. He wrote:
Growing up as a child in Richmond, Virginia,
I always loved the hymn tune Resignation, more commonly known by
its associated text, My Shepherd will supply my need. So when Jonathan Ryan
approached me with the idea of writing a Prelude on this tune, I was thrilled.
As I spent more time with it, however, I realized the challenge of layering
music on this particular melody: of its four phrases, the first, second and
fourth are identical! So, in order to avoid dull repetition, I decided to set
each of the hymn tunes four phrases in a different key. While the melody is
played slowly and confidently in C major throughout, the accompaniment,
reminiscent of Brahms’s op. 122 Chorale Preludes, starts in G major, then modulates
to F major, modified C Lydian, and finally A minor. To me, this ever-shifting
landscape of unstable keys mimics the hymns wandering spirit, which finally
settles in the last cadence, like a child at home.
All three hymn tunes in the set of preludes on this
recording were first seen in the landmark shape-note hymn book Southern
Harmony, originally published in 1835 by South Carolinian William Walker
(1809-1875), a major figure in hymnody. A shape-note hymn was a popular
19th-century American manner of musically notating hymns in which different
note shapes, such as a triangle or square, correspond to the notes pitch to
assist singers in reading the music.
The text most commonly associated with Resignation,
My Shepherd will supply my need, was written in 1719 by Isaac Watts (1674-1748)
and paraphrases Psalm 23. Spending his adult life in greater London
as a teacher and pastor of an independent church, with well over 700 published
hymns, Watts remains an especially well-known
English-speaking hymn writer. The first verse:
My Shepherd will supply my need: Jehovah is His Name; in
pastures fresh he makes me feed, beside the living stream. He brings my
wandering spirit back when I forsake his ways, and leads me, for his mercy’s
sake, in paths of truth and grace.
The hymn prelude by jazz piano legend Sir George
Shearing was published in 1977 in a set of nine pieces on early American
hymn tunes transcribed from recordings made by Shearing during breaks on his
concert tours. The youngest child of a blue-collar family in the southwest side
of London, with only a few years of formal music study, Shearing managed to
achieve considerable fame as a pianist, first in jazz and later in classical,
and has numerous award-winning records to his name. In 1947, he moved to the United States,
and was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in 2007 for his contributions to music.
Shearing’s recent passing in New York
City left a life of rich accomplishment and
inspiration.
The tune Middlebury also appeared in the
1835 Southern Harmony. The Resurrection- oriented text of Come Away
to the Skies was written in 1755 by Charles Wesley (1707-1788), a British
Anglican cleric commonly regarded, with his brother, John, as a founder of the
Methodist church, for his wifes birthday and published a year later in his Hymns
for Families. The first verse of Wesley’s text:
Come away to the skies, my beloved, Arise and rejoice in
the day thou wast born; On this festival day, come exulting away, And with
singing to Zion
return.
Albert L. Travis is well established for his work
in church music, having begun at age 12 to play for services at his home
church, First Baptist in Batesville,
Mississippi. Distinguished
Professor of Organ (Emeritus 2008) at Southwestern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Ft. Worth, Texas, since 1977 and organist at Broadway Baptist
Church in Ft. Worth since 1978, he has numerous choral and organ works to his
name as well as a long career in organ pedagogy and performance in both church
and concert hall. As a recipient of a German Government Grant, he studied with
Helmut Walcha in Frankfurt, and holds degrees from Oklahoma
Baptist University,
Syracuse University,
and the University
of Michigan. His setting
of Amazing Grace was published in 1986 within a set of three
preludes on American folk hymns. The inclusion of a countermelody in the Pedal
throughout yields a particularly active, atmospheric texture in the preludes
middle section in B minor.
Preceding the hymn tune most commonly associated with it
by over 60 years, the text of Amazing Grace was written in late 1772 by
British Anglican clergyman John Newton (1725-1807) and is sometimes viewed as a
kind of autobiography in verse. Published in 1779 in Olney Hymns, it did
not gain significant popularity until early 19th-century revivals in the United States.
William Walker is credited with pairing the anonymously written tune New Britain with Newton’s text in Southern Harmony.
Today, it is known worldwide. The first verse:
Amazing grace! How sweet the sound That savd a wretch like
me! I once was lost, but now am found, Was blind, but now I see.
With multiple symphonies, operas, chamber and piano works
to his credit, Charles Tournemire is best known for his organ
improvisations and closely-linked organ compositions. Serving at important
institutions in Paris,
primarily as professor of chamber music and organ improvisation at the Paris
Conservatoire as well as organist at the Basilica of Ste-Clotilde, Tournemire’s
dramatic temperament vividly manifests itself in his improvisations. LOrgue
Mystique, composed from 1927 to 1932, stands as his largest organ work with
a unique scope comprising written compositions in an improvisational style for
Sunday and Feast Day Masses throughout the ecclesiastical year as based
primarily on Gregorian chants with movements for the Entrance, Offertory,
Elevation, Communion, and an extended postlude.
Tournemire’s Fantasie sur le Te Deum et Guirlandes
Alleluiatiques is not only appointed for the last Sunday of the
liturgical year, it is also the last of the LOrgue Mystique cycle he
composed. The final movement, typical of those in LOrgue Mystique and
based on the great and ancient hymn, the Te Deum, is a large fantasia in
free form lasting longer than all four other movements combined. The entire
movement, with its modal harmony, grand scale, fiery eruptions, and frequent
patterned accompaniment of a single melody, is quintessential Tournemire.
A great virtuoso organist of the 20th century who was also
a highly influential teacher and composer for the organ, Marcel Dupré wrote
in numerous forms for the instrument, including preludes, fugues, symphonies,
and chorale or chant-based works. Many of these works are not unlike his famous
improvisations at the magnificent Church of St-Sulpice in Paris where he was titulaire organist
for some 37 years. While in his native Rouen
in 1942, Dupré was shown the unmarked grave of Jean Titelouze (c.1563-1633),
who is widely considered the father of the French organ school. Titelouzes
first of only two surviving collections of organ music dates from 1624 and
contains versets on twelve chant hymns from the Divine Office. Inspired by his
visit in homage of this patriarchichal figure, Le Tombeau de Titelouze was
completed the following year and contains comparatively brief pieces on sixteen
Divine Office plainsong hymns, most of which are found in Titelouzes 1624
collection. The last of these sixteen, Placare Christe servulis,
the hymn appointed for Vespers on the Feast of All Saints, bursts into being as
a brilliant toccata in which Placare Christe is heard first in
the soprano voice and then thunderously in the lowest bass voice.
Jonathan Ryan
Jonathan Ryan
Jonathan Ryan is Associate Director of Music at Christ Church (Episcopal) in Greenwich,
Connecticut, and is a concert organist under the management of Karen McFarlane
Artists. Acclaimed for his strong communicative skills in numerous
styles, exceptional use of the organs capabilities, and bold programming,
Jonathan Ryan has received six First Prize awards at international and national
organ playing competitions. His performances at celebrated venues throughout
the United States, Germany, France,
and the United Kingdom
explore a repertoire spanning the 16th to 21st centuries.
In 2009, he received First Prize in the Jordan
International Organ Competition which is conducted only twice in a decade and
awards substantial cash prizes conferred by a highly distinguished jury. At the
2009 Jordan Competition, he also received the Letourneau Prize, given for the
best performance of a newly commissioned work for organ and percussion. He has
also received First Prizes in the 2006 Arthur Poister Organ Competition, the
2006 John Rodland Scholarship Competition, the 2004 Albert Schweitzer Organ
Competition (Young Professional Division), and the 2003 Augustana Arts-Reuter
Organ Competition.
A native of Charlotte,
North Carolina, Jonathan started
playing the organ at age eight. He studied with André Lash before entering the
studio of Joyce Jones at Baylor
University. Studying
organ, improvisation, and church music with Todd Wilson at the Cleveland
Institute of Music, he received a Bachelor of Music degree with academic honors
and also served as Todd Wilsons assistant at Church of the Covenant. As a
student of David Higgs, he received a Master's degree from the Eastman School of
Music where he studied improvisation with William Porter.
Jonathan's solo performances have taken him to numerous
prominent venues including the Cathedral St-Andre in Bordeaux (France), the
Nikolaikirche in Leipzig and the Marienkirche in Lübeck (in a nine-concert tour
of Germany), Truro Cathedral and St. Pauls Cathedral in London (among others in
the UK), the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Houston and many other
concerts in the United States, and major festivals and conventions, including
National Conventions of the Organ Historical Society and the Spotlight Series
of Piccolo Spoleto (Charleston, South Carolina). The Organ
Parkey OrganBuilders completed the pipe organ for the
Cathedral of St. John Berchmans, Shreveport,
Louisiana, as the firm’s Opus 12
in Fall of 2011. The tonal design was the result of a collaboration between Dr.
Jim Dorroh of Birmingham, consultant; Justin
Ward, then-Choirmaster at the Cathedral of St. John Berchmans; and Phil Parkey of Parkey
OrganBuilders.
The organ reflects a diversity of tonal design which is
comfortable for use as a service instrument, yet perfectly capable of
performing as a recital instrument. Our focus was to keep the organ flexible
while maintaining integrity of chorus in the development of the tonal
structure. Jonathan Ryan’s excellent skills display the variety of color and
volume ranging from the soft flutes of the Choir Division to the majesty of the
Pontifical Trumpet. He provides an excellent opportunity to hear all facets of
the organ.
We were especially appreciative to Mr. Ryan for his
interest in playing our Opus 12 in his first commercially available recording.
I am certain that his musicianship will be highly respected and heard in the
years to come. We are humbled by his selection of our instrument and look
forward to future events!
Phillip K. Parkey, President and Tonal Director
Parkey
OrganBuilders, Norcross, Georgia, Op. 12, 2011, 57 stops, 54 ranks Cathedral of St.
John Berchmans, Shreveport,
Louisiana
GREAT 61 notes
16 Violone
8 Principal
8 Bourdon
8 Violone (ext. 16 )
4 Octave
4 Spitzflöte
2 Super Octave
IV-V Mixture 1-1/3’
8 Trompete
8 Pontifical Trumpet
Chimes (37 notes digital)
Cymbelstern
Swell to Great 16 8 4
Choir to Great 16 8 4
Chancel on Great
Great/Choir Transfer (moves divisional pistons also)
10 stops, 13 ranks
SWELL 61 notes, enclosed
16 Bourdon
8 Flûte à Cheminée (ext. 16 )
8 Viola Pomposa
8 Voix Celeste GG
4 Principal
4 Cor de Nuit
2 Octavin
IV-V Plein Jeu 2’
16 Basson
8 Trompette
8 Hautbois (ext. 16 )
4 Clairon
8 Voix Humaine
Tremulant
Voix Humaine Tremulant
Swell 16 8 4
13 stops, 15 ranks
CHOIR 61 notes, enclosed
8 Prinzipal
8 Gedeckt
8 Spitzflöte
8 Spitzflöte Celeste TC
4 Octav
4 Koppelflöte
2-2/3 Nazat
2 Superoctav
2 Blockflöte
1-3/5 Terz
1-1/3 Quinte
IV Zymbel 2/3’
8 Cromorne
8 Pontifical Trumpet (Gt)
Tremulant
Harp (digital)
Celesta (digital)
Choir 16 8 4
Swell to Choir 16 8 4
Great to Choir 8
14 stops, 16 ranks
CHANCEL 61 notes
8 Holz Gedeckt
4 Rohrflöte
Chancel on Choir
Chancel on Pedal
2 stops, 2 ranks
PEDAL 32 notes
32 Subbass (12 digital notes)
16 Principal
16 Subbass
16 Violone (Gt)
16 Bourdon (Sw)
8 Octave (ext. 16 )
8 Flötenbass (ext. 16 )
8 Violone (Gt)
8 Flûte à Cheminée (Sw)
4 Choral Bass
4 Flute
IV Rauschquinte 2-2/3
32 Contra Posaune (12 digital)
16 Posaune
16 Bassoon (Sw)
8 Trompete (ext. 16 Posaune)
8 Hautbois (Sw)
8 Pontifical Trumpet (Gt)
Chimes (Gt)
Great to Pedal 8 4, 8 Reversible
Swell to Pedal 8 4, 8 Reversible
Choir to Pedal 8 4, 8 Reversible
18 stops, 9 ranks
Transposer
Combinations 100 Memory Levels
12 Generals: Thumb & Toe
8 Divisionals: Manuals, Thumb
6 Divisionals: Pedal, Toe
6 Chancel Divisionals: Thumb
Previous & Next Pistons for Sequencer, Thumb and Toe
Any Piston Next Sequencer
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