Tag: Organ Music

  • Leif Kayser Danish Composer Centenary

    Leif Kayser Danish Composer Centenary

    Composer, organist, pianist, conductor, priest, husband, teacher – Leif Kayser was certainly a multifaceted individual.

    Born in Copenhagen on this date in 1919, Kayer began his studies at the Royal Danish Academy of Music in 1936. In Stockholm, he studied composition with Hilding Rosenberg and conducting with Tor Mann. In 1941, he made his debut as a pianist, in Copenhagen, and as a conductor, in Gothenburg.

    As a composer, he emerged as one of Denmark’s most promising young symphonists. However, following theological studies in Rome, Kayser was ordained in 1949. He largely abandoned concert music – but you can’t keep a good composer down.

    Over time, he began to write for the organ and gradually he produced another symphony. He served as pastor and organist of St. Ansgar Roman Catholic Cathedral until 1964. Then he left the Church to marry and to teach at his alma mater, the Royal Danish Academy of Music.

    Kayser died in 2001. He is still regarded as one of the leading organ composers of Denmark.

    We’ll remember Leif Kayser, on the 100th anniversary of his birth, with a performance of his Symphony No. 2. It will serve as the spire atop a cathedral in sound, as we also observe the birthdays today of Antonín Vranický (1761-1820), Anton Eberl (1765-1807), and Carlos Chávez (1899-1978).

    That will be me in the cowl, enacting the ol’ switcheroo with David Osenberg, from 4 to 7 p.m. EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


    PHOTO: Kayser pulls out all the stops for his centenary

  • Bach, Schweitzer, Růžičková: Music for the Soul

    Bach, Schweitzer, Růžičková: Music for the Soul

    If there is any doubt that Bach is good for the soul, one need look no further than two spiritual titans whose birthdays we’ll celebrate today.

    Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965) is widely remembered for his humanitarian efforts. A lifelong scholar, a missionary, and a physician who brought medical assistance to the people of Gabon, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1952.

    A frail child, Schweitzer took to the organ as soon as he was tall enough to reach the pedals. His love of music paralleled his development as a philosopher and a theologian. In fact, no less an authority than Charles-Marie Widor was stunned by Schweitzer’s insights into Bach’s organ works, which were informed in part by a Lutheran background he shared with the composer. Schweitzer wrote extensively on Bach, in French, German, and English. In addition, he gave numerous organ recitals in Europe to finance his hospital in Africa.

    A reverence for life was central to Schweitzer’s philosophy. While he continued his humanitarian work in Lambaréné throughout World War II, Zuzana Růžičková (1927-2017) weathered the incomprehensible in several Nazi concentration camps.

    Růžičková survived internment at Terezin, Auschwitz, and Bergen-Belsen. Of the latter, in particular, she recalled, “If ever there was Hell, this was the lowest part of Hell.” Following the war, she stood up for years against political and anti-Semitic persecution under Czechoslovakia’s communist rule. She survived Stalin and lived through the Velvet Revolution, maintaining her integrity and gaining recognition as “first lady of the harpsichord.” Růžičková became the first harpsichordist to record all of Bach’s keyboard music.

    Unlike Schweitzer, Růžičková was not particularly religious, but her spirit was large and her will indomitable. Her love of music was with her always, even in the camps. (At Terezin, she transcribed some of Bach’s music to take with her to Auschwitz.) Both she and Schweitzer were acutely aware of human suffering on a scale that most of us are lucky never to have encountered. Yet they also recognized a greater good. Perhaps it’s no coincidence that they both lived to be 90.

    I hope you’ll join me today as we sample their artistry, among my featured offerings from 4 to 7 p.m. EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • Gordon Turk’s New Heckelphone at Ocean Grove

    Gordon Turk’s New Heckelphone at Ocean Grove

    Organist Gordon Turk can’t wait to be “heckeled.”

    I’m talking about the imminent arrival of a new heckelphone stop, the latest enhancement of the massive instrument at the Great Auditorium at Ocean Grove, NJ. The Great Auditorium sports one of the largest organs in the world. A grand hall demands a grand instrument!

    Read all about it and the magnificent auditorium, an acoustic marvel from the days before amplification – its construction spearheaded by Methodist ministers in 1894 and completed by strapping shipbuilders in only 90 days – in my profile of Turk, now in his 45th season as Ocean Grove’s resident organist, in this week’s edition of U.S. 1 Newspaper – PrincetonInfo, out today.

    http://princetoninfo.com/index.php/component/us1more/?Itemid=6&key=6-27-18turk

  • Arnie Plays Organ Dream Realized

    Arnie Plays Organ Dream Realized

    Interesting item from September 21: Arnold Schwarzenegger fulfills his childhood dream of playing the organ at St. Stephen’s Cathedral in Passau, Germany, located close to the border of his native Austria.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=82pO07e466E

    You’ll find the complete story here:

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4906948/Arnold-Schwarzenegger-plays-organ-German-church.html

  • Autumn Time Music WWFM Classical Radio

    Autumn Time Music WWFM Classical Radio

    “It’s Autumn Time!” I just kicked off this afternoon’s playlist with Leo Sowerby’s organ work of that name. As of 4:02 p.m., we have entered the most glorious season, IMHO. Join me for tea, cookies, and euphoria until 7:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

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