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Improvisation: Evening

Now that school is back in full swing, I have had a few moments to capture another recording.  Since the first six Evening Improvisations were at St. Paul of the Cross Monastery Church and the next three were at Rice, I knew it was time to make a recording on the new Jaeckel Organ at Duquesne’s Chapel.  Installation of the organ was completed last summer but I never really thought to swing by there and make a recording.  It is quite the unique instrument with aesthetics based on the writings of Charles Tournemire.

That all being said, after the visit to Houston, I knew this needed to happen.  The Monastery organ is not the best, though I am very fond of it.  For the exploration of different sorts of effects, having different instruments is necessary.  In the case of this improvisation, only 16′ stops were employed: 16′ Quintaton, 16′ Bourdon, and 16′ Soubasse for the pedals.  Only at the very end is the 32’added (I also use the thud from an earlier improvisation too).  The harmonics from the Quintaton that appear are really cool!

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Composition: Organ

The piece I present today comes from a competition that the American Guild of Organists held.  The National Convention in Houston organized a competition of preludes and postludes based on modern tunes.  As an improviser, I often treat modern tunes in old fashions.  This work is simply an ornamented chorale prelude after the style of Bach.  There are some moments that I particularly like in the work, little moments of my interests interspersed in my impression of Bach.  But the best moment happens at the very end when the B-A-C-H(Bb) appears in the final cadence.  I do not regularly try to be clever, but this one I find enjoyable.

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Composition: Organ

At the beginning of the year, I revisited several older works that I have always found attractive here and here.  Both pieces are fairly simple and do not take much time in the way of expertise, skill, or practice for that matter.  Which is fine!  Complication does not equal quality or success.  That is a fine introduction to an earlier work that is not so easy – Trio, II. Adagio.  I LOVE the Bach trios, the Rheinberger trios, and Hugo Distler’s trio.  They all contain amazing implicated harmony and clear counterpoint.  But that does not make them easy to learn or play even when one is the composer of the work itself.  The outer movements are pretty good but I absolutely adore this inner movement.  I did at one point arrange this for ensemble with two violins, cello, and organ comping.  Someday I may resurrect the arrangement!

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Improvisation: Evening

The last of the three improvisations I recorded at Rice is unlike the previous entries in that it is tonal. Or at least within the confines of scale.  To be completely honest about the recordings, they are actually from a second night of recording rather than my first go at the instrument.  The card in the recorder ran out of space on the first night and I went back for a second go at some of my original improvisations.  It is an interesting exercise to recreate an improvisational idea that was completely spontaneous with a new instrument.  I suspect that my first attempt was better, but this is what I captured in a recording.

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Improvisation: Evening

The eighth Evening Improvisation incorporates something a little fun for me as the performer.  Organists have added elements outside of the notes of the keyboard.  Nicolaus Bruhns was well known for accompanying himself with his feet while playing the violin.  So why not do the same?  It’s pretty easy to figure out what I’ve added and having time on the organ at Rice makes it all that more fun.

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Improvisation: Evening

Sometimes my own excitement gets the better of me.  I say that because the last post was of the brilliant organ at Rice University.  If you follow the numbers though, I went from Evening Improvisation 5 to Evening Improvisation 7.  And here is the 6th Evening Improvisation from St. Paul’s Monastery in Pittsburgh.

I have mentioned in previous posts that I find it wonderfully challenging to improvise on a single sound for as long as possible – liturgically, it can be fairly doable.  This video contains three individual improvisations, something akin to movements using three different timbral combinations.  I originally was going to use them separately but I recorded them at the same time and felt that they made a nice suite.  Here’s the order:

I. Mutations

II. Flutes (2:13)

III. Reeds (5:13)

 

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Improvisation: Evening

Last week I was in Houston for the AGO National Convention and what a blast.  In the coming posts, I will include a recording of the Bayoubüchlein piece performance from the convention.  It will not be the actual performance from the convention as the recordings are exclusive to the convention.  That is an aside though to today’s post!  Because I arrived in Houston a few days early, I was able to get into Rice’s amazing organ recital hall and have a go at their magnificent instrument.

This particular improvisation should be reminiscent of an earlier improvisation where I treated the organ as a percussion instrument.  The Fisk/Rosales organ at Rice is a tracker which allows for a different sort of treatment in its percussive qualities.  I do think the improvisation lacks an awareness of all the subtleties of the instrument – I did only have a few hours after all.  My favorite moment though happens around the 2:45 mark when it sounds like something just fell on the ground.  The next several posts will be more improvisations from this most excellent instrument.

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Improvisation: Evening

When this blog entry is posted, I will be in Houston for the AGO National Convention.  A forthcoming composition is being performed Thursday evening and I am delighted that I will be there for its premier.

The Evening Improvisation 5 is a combination of several different ideas.  The first, one that I do like using regularly, is the tremolo.  The tremolo on the organ can give pitch and rhythm without necessarily giving it pulse.  Another is the spectral manipulation between sounds using the mutations and another base pitch stop.  Lastly, as mentioned in a previous post, I explore ideas that I find interesting while making them my own.  This improvisation is, in a my thinking, I-V-I, or D-A-D as the central areas of exploration.  The function and relation of these areas is based on their tonal relationship, but not in a functional way.  Simplistic movement like this is helpful when other aspects are quite complicated.

 

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Improvisation: Evening

The fourth Evening Improvisation attempts to use the organ as a percussion instrument.  This sort of thing has been done before, but one distinct advantage to this improvisation is the organ itself.  All organs may have similar aspects while still being unique to their space and builder.  To be totally honest, the instrument at the Monastery is not great.  It’s a mediocre 1980 Moller with some nice colors and everything chiffs.   No kidding, even the celeste chiffs.  Then why not use it for something!  The chiffing combined with the slow speak of the lowest register pipes creates something that I think sounds like a musical saw, only much richer (and less silly?).

A small note about the improv: the clicking you hear is my wedding ring hitting the keys.  I was really digging in!

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Improvisation: Evening

The third of the Evening Improvisations also uses a simple progression as the basis for exploration.  Namely, a c-eb moving to a d-f, and an f-g moving to f#-a.  Unlike the last improvisation, where the movement is from one pitch to another unfolding over the entire improvisation, this one gives its cards right from the beginning, with all the material being presented within the first minute or so.  Rather, I let the material get used in as many ways as it wanted to which seemed to be more of an exploration of their simple intervalic relationship rather than something else.  I’ll give away something I like using: the opening registration in the hands, on the swell, is 8′ Celeste and 4′ Flute.  This actually creates something shorter than an equal tempered octave and some very cool orchestral sounds.