Douglas Bruce was born
in Perth, Scotland, and educated in Edinburgh. While still a teenager, he
was invited to become organist and choirmaster at Augustine Congregational
Church, Edinburgh, by its then minister, the noted hymnologist Erik
Routley. In 1965 he moved to London, becoming assistant organist at St.
Columba’s Church of Scotland, Pont Street. While pursuing a career
in accountancy he took up organ studies with Noel Rawsthorne at Liverpool
Cathedral, and obtained the ARCO, ARCM (with honours) and LRAM diplomas in
organ performance.
Since 1974 he has lived in Switzerland, where he became Deputy Chief
Accountant at the Bank for International Settlements, Basel. He has
continued his organ studies under Felix Pachlatko (organist of Basel
Cathedral), and this year participated in master classes under Kevion
Bowyer, Ludger Lohmann and Gillian Weir.
Following early retirement in 2001 from the world of banking, Douglas
Bruce has devoted his time fully to organ playing, becoming a
much–traveled recitalist. In this capacity he has visited eighteen
states of the USA, playing in the cathedrals of Atlanta, Chicago,
Indianapolis, Los Angeles, Memphis, Orlando, Pittsburgh, and San
Francisco, as well as in larger and smaller churches in many parts of the
country. Next month he will play a Sunday afternoon recital at Washington
National Cathedral.
His travels in Canada and Europe have taken him to cathedrals in Berne
(broadcast recital), Bourges, Chester, Dunblane, Edinburgh (both
cathedrals), Freiberg (Saxony), Geneva, Hannover, Karlsruhe, Prague,
Toronto, Truro and Ulm. In addition he has played at Harvard and Edinburgh
Universities, and the at Kelvingrove Museum, Glasgow.
Douglas Bruce is currently principal organist at St Franz Xaver Church in
Münchenstein (near Basel) and assistant organist at the City of Basel
Cemetery.
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Although blind from the age
of two, John Stanley displayed prodigious musical talent as a
child, and under the guidance of Maurice Greene he studied “with
great diligence, and a success that was astonishing” (Burney). At
the age of seventeen he became the youngest person ever to obtain the
BMus degree at Oxford University. In 1734 he was appointed organist to
the Society of the Inner Temple – a position he held until his
death. It was at the ancient Temple Church that his brilliant playing
upon the organ and harpsichord attracted the attention of many fine
musicians, including Handel, who regularly visited the church to hear
him. Although many of his works have been lost to posterity, his
Thirty Voluntaries remain as testimony to his great skill in
composition.
Maurice Greene served as a choirboy at St. Paul’s Cathedral
in London, where he became organist in 1718. In addition to various
honorary appointments, he became professor of music at Cambridge
University, and in 1735 Master of the King’s Musick, the highest
position for a musician in England. His magnificent Twelve
Voluntaries follow the usual scheme of two parts, and are among the
most finished of their kind. Their style closely resembles that of his
friend Handel, being similar to what Handel might have written as
Preludes and Fugues for the organ.
Gaetano Valeri is not well known outside his native Italy. He
served for almost 35 years as cathedral organist in Padua. The piano
works and reputation of Valeri reveal that he was an exceptional
pianist. His organ music employed the use of the complete melodic
range, and several works were published and reprinted during his
lifetime. The present sonata was marked for 4–foot flute
stop (sounding one octave above the human voice).
Eighteen delightful miniatures were written between 1717 and 1723 for a
large standing clock belonging to Leopold, Duke of
Anhalt-Köthen. This device had harp–like strings inside,
activated by a hammer mechanism. The clock stood almost nine feet high
by three feet wide, and contained small barrels (“Walzen”),
which played these pieces. The music is Bach–like and very
charming, although Wolfgang Schmieder originally questioned its
authenticity in the great Bach catalogue. The clock pieces of
Handel were often re–workings of existing keyboard essays
by the composer (while those of Mozart far transcended the limitations
of the pinned–cylinder mechanism!). By contrast,
Haydn’s contributions to the medium &endash; replete with
twittering bird effects – exude a sparkling geniality. The clock
for which they were written comprised a tiny mechanical organ with a
single rank of flute-toned pipes. Father Primitivus Niemecz, who was
librarian to Haydn’s patron, Prince Esterhazy, as well as playing
cello in the court orchestra, constructed it.
The Prelude in c minor was written — like
Bach’s contemporaneous Prelude in b minor —
in the style of a concerto grosso and dates from around 1730. It begins
with large chords in the left and right hands, progresses through
several expressive episodes, and closes with the original statement.
The work comprises 144 measures, of which the opening and closing
statement account for 24 each, and occupy a further total of 24
measures interspersed within the second theme. The latter takes the
form of a scale moving upward and back down, and was used by Bach in
his cantata Whoever exalts himself shall be humbled. Recent
research suggests that the Fugue was written by not by Bach,
but by his last student, Johann Christian Kittel. Its subject
alternates with playful episodes that wander off in various directions,
before the work winds up with a noble closing section that would
certainly be worthy of the Thomaskantor himself.
A former child prodigy and a nephew of the Methodist preacher John
Wesley, Samuel Wesley stood head and shoulders above all other
English organists of his generation, and was particularly noted for the
brilliance of his improvisations, of which there are many ecstatic
eye–witness accounts. In the closing days of his life — at
his last public appearance — he and Mendelssohn (then in his late
twenties and, like Wesley, an energetic propagator of the music of
Bach) heard each other play. The series of pieces containing the very
tuneful Air and Gavotte was written during a temporary recovery
from the bouts of depression that Wesley had suffered following a
severe accident early in his career. The set appeared under the title:
“Twelve Short Pieces for the Organ with a Full Voluntary
added, Composed and Inscribed to Organists in General”.
Hans Uwe Hielscher is organist of the Marktkirche, Wiesbaden,
and has performed more than 2500 organ recitals worldwide, including
over 30 concert tours in 39 states of the USA. In 1985, the French
government conferred on him the honour of “Chevalier de l'Ordre
des Arts et des Lettres” in recognition of his worldwide
promotion of French organ music, including his authorship of
Alexandre Guilmant – his Life and Works.
The words of the hymn “Immortal, Invisible” were
written by Walter Chalmers Smith, a former minister of the Reid
Memorial Church, Edinburgh (where today’s recitalist was
appointed organist and choirmaster while still in his teens). Hans
Uwe’s Variations on the theme reflect — perhaps not
unexpectedly — his life-long involvement with the organ music of
France. Written in 1986, they are dedicated to Geoffrey Hannant (a
former organist at St. Edmundsbury Cathedral, UK) and his wife.
Josef Rheinberger is now a virtually forgotten composer except,
perhaps, in the one area in which he excelled – organ music. Born
in Liechtenstein, he lived and worked in Germany in the second half of
the 19th century, and his massive volume of twenty organ
sonatas stands as one of that century’s greatest
contributions to the instrument’s repertoire. Notwithstanding
their consummate musical workmanship, there is a certain lack of
stylistic variety within each work, which is less in evidence when
individual movements are heard separately.
Dudley Buck was born in Hartford, Connecticut, and after study
in Leipzig, Dresden and Paris, took up positions as organist in
Hartford, Chicago and Boston. He is regarded, along with John Knowles
Paine, as one of the first two thoroughly trained organists the USA
ever produced. His compositions include several organ works, including
the Grand Sonata in E-flat, Op. 22, from which the present
Scherzo is taken.
Paul Müller–Zürich was born in Zürich, and
studied at the city’s Conservatory, where at the age of 19 he was
appointed as a lecturer in music theory, remaining there until 1968. As
teacher, conductor, composer and organiser he was one of the most
significant Swiss musicians in the twentieth century. He was awarded
the Music Prize of the city of Zurich in 1953, and in 1958 won the
composition prize of the Swiss Musicians’ Association, whose
president he became in 1960.
As organist of Liverpool Cathedral, Noel Rawsthorne — a
former tutor of today’s soloist — presided for twenty-five
years at Britain’s largest organ. He studied with Fernando
Germani in Siena and Marcel Dupré in Paris, and enjoyed
considerable success as a recitalist in several European countries
(including several visits to Switzerland) as well as the USA and the
former USSR. Since his retirement from active music making, Dr.
Rawsthorne has written and arranged organ music for liturgical
occasions of greater and lesser moment. The spaciously conceived
Aria is typical example from his large corpus of neatly crafted
Gebrauchsmusik.
Born in London, Henry Smart returned there after five years as
an organist in the North of England. During his last 15 years he was
totally blind. He enjoyed a wide reputation as a musician and
improviser, and several of his hymn tunes — notably
“Regent Square” (sung to “Angels from the Realms of
Glory”) — remain in regular use. The March in G Major
is typical of his large output of straightforward, tuneful and
graceful organ works.
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