31 July 2013

Out and about on Sunday

This week I'll be playing at St Aloysius, Caulfield.  Here's what I have planned.


Prelude (Op. 51, No. 3) -- Carl Nielsen
Allegro Moderato from Sonata in C (Op. 38, No. 1) -- August Reinhard
Larghetto (Op. 38, No. 1) -- August Reinhard
Elevation -- Louis Vierne
Allegro (Op. 38, No. 1) -- August Reinhard

24 July 2013

Out and about on Sunday

This week I will be starting a stint with the Anglican Parish of South Darebin through to around the end of August.  I am covering for two centres, St James, Thornbury, and All Saints, Northcote.

The upside is that I get to have two cracks at the organ music for each week, with two very different instruments.  The downside -- having to move rapidly from one suburb to another.  Still, it's not like I haven't done anything like that before!

Here's the organ music I have planned for this week.

Air from Water Music -- G.F. Handel
Interludium (Op. 14, No. 3, II) -- Sigfrid Karg-Elert
Hallelujah Chorus from Messiah -- G.F. Handel, arr. T. Dubois

23 July 2013

Concert coming up this weekend

The annual National Trust Open House weekend is coming up over next Saturday and Sunday.  Many buildings around the city will be open for people to come and visit, and to see parts of these places that are generally closed to the public.  Last year I provided a day's worth of organ music for St Peter's, Eastern Hill, and this year I'm providing a short programme for the Melbourne Town Hall.

If you happen to be in the CBD over the weekend, there will be a series of organists providing music in the Melbourne Town Hall.  Admission is free, and you are welcome to come and stroll in the balconies of the main auditorium and enjoy the music.

I will be playing last of all, at 3.30pm Sunday 28 July.  For programme details, click here.

14 July 2013

12 July 2013

Out and about over the weekend

Over the coming weekend I'm fulfilling a couple of my smaller regular commitments.

On Saturday night I will be playing for the vigil Mass at St Mary's Catholic Church, West Melbourne.  It will be the usual fare of good solid hymns in English and Latin, along with some organ music.

On Sunday morning I will be returning to Holy Trinity, Port Melbourne, where I play the piano for services occasionally.  This will be the first for a little while, thanks to many other commitments elsewhere.  Again, the usual fare of solid hymns and a spot of piano music by Mozart.

A Song Map

Last week I spent three days teaching for the annual winter intensive at the Australian Youth Choir.  It has sort of become one of the fixtures of my year since I began working for the AYC, partly because it's a really good opportunity to try out slightly different approaches to teaching repertoire.

I started exploring the idea of song maps a couple of years ago in response to a complex score layout.  One of the advantages of teaching from a map rather than a score is that it provides a really good opportunity to talk about musical structure without having to sound like a Schenkarian analyst.

Gary Barlow and Andrew Lloyd-Weber produced Sing as a diamond jubilee gift to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth in 1952.  The pieces was composed with the aim of encouraging people to join in and (as the title suggests) sing.  The melodic profile of the piece is very nice, and lends itself well to using solfa handsigns and rhythm syllables to teach the pitch and rhythm elements of the piece.  Most of the elements of the song are repeated at least twice, and here is the catch: the words are slightly different each time.

I decided to base my map on another event in the diamond jubilee celebrations, the River Thames Diamond Jubilee Pageant.  The choice was pure free association: the score contains two bridges, which prompted me to think of a river connected with the diamond jubilee, hence the Thames.  Here is the map.


Some of the London geography is a bit on the iffy side, but here's how the map is meant to be read:
  • Starting at the top left the song begins.  There are two phrases, each ending on a different solfa handsign.  Memory words are assigned so we remember which line goes with which handsign.
  • The first bridge contains more handsigns, representing the repeated bits of melody.  For compactness, the words of each repeated motif are represented by their first letter.  There's another repeated motif on the road to the right of the bridge, again with the first letter of each word.
  • The first chorus is 'under' the bridge.
  • Down the river is the next verse, again with handsigns and memory words.
  • The second bridge contains the repeated handsigns with their words.
  • The next chorus is under the second bridge.
  • The next verse has a slight variation with the second phrase ending on Reh (previously Lah).
  • The coda has a long sequence of handsigns, boiled down to the first pair plus the words...and there's a chorus.
The map evolved over two days, and allowed for choristers to recall the sections learned in the first session before adding landmarks from further down the river.  By the end of the second session the choir was well familiarized with the song, and managed a completely finished performance at the end of the final day.

Here's a performance of Sing -- watch the map as you listen, and see if it all fits together.


10 July 2013

Why one piece is enough

One of the big cultural changes with weddings in the last ten years has been the increasing expectation for two pieces to mark the beginning of a wedding ceremony. There are good reasons for this.  Many weddings now happen in gardens, on beaches, in function centres -- all locations notable for not being the natural habitat of pipe organs.  This way of using music is one way cultural change is coming to church weddings.

I think there's a lot to be said for how music is done in these places.  It can be used to provide a sense of anticipation, and to comment on the progress of the bridal procession -- Pachelbell means the bridesmaids are floating in, while the cross fade-switch to Wagner now signals the arrival of the bride.  This is easy to do because the music is most likely coming from an iPod, which makes these quick transitions easy and effective.

One latent idea in all of this is liturgical movement, and how music can be used to express it.  Processions are liturgical movements, and you can find them in any sort of public ceremony, even a wedding on a beach.  It's just that in a church service we think about it in a very direct way, and have an inherited approach to how music expresses movement.

Processions are a regular part of the worshiping round of churches.  Music is generally associated with these, whether it is singing a hymn at the start of a service, or marking the exit procession with a rousing postlude.  Except under very particular circumstances, it is quite rare for a procession in a church service to have more than one piece of music. One reason for this is the need for inclusivenes: the movement of ministers from church door to sanctuary at the beginning of a church service is the capstone in a process of gathering.  If each person had a musical motif that had to be precisely timed for their appearance, we would be focusing on the individual at the expense of the gathered community.

The bridal procession at the beginning of a wedding ceremony typically involves several people.  There's the bride, obviously.  There's also usually a bridesmaid or two.  Sometimes there will be a parent, maybe more than one.  Occasionally there are page boys, flower girls, morris dancers, maybe a druid or two, and so on.  It's very rare for a wedding couple to consider the purpose of the movement, which is simply to deliver the bride to the sanctuary step at the front of the gathering.  All the attendants are there as part of the movement of the bride.  Without her, what would their purpose be?

When the expectation of multiple pieces is raised, I often ask wedding couples how many processions they are expecting at the beginning of their wedding ceremony.  Is the purpose of the music to mark the arrival of the bride, or to provide a commentary on the progress of each individual in the procession?  Unless a ceremonial arrival is being contemplated for the couple's parents, or another significant relative, or if the Governor-General is a guest, or if there is a procession for the priest and sanctuary party at the beginning of a nuptial mass, it's safe to say that nine times out of ten there will only be one procession at the start of a wedding ceremony.  One piece of music will cover the arrival of bridal attendants and the bride, and helps to mark the procession as a single movement.

Another consideration is the practicalities facing the organist.  Contrasts can be achieved on the organ in many ways, but a rapid change from one piece to another depends on having a fully-functional piston system (never guaranteed), or an exceptionally quick change of registration by hand.  Either way, you'll probably find that the organist is in the disheartening situation of creating a dead moment right in the middle of the procession.  Your organist should be working very hard to make your day sound right: expecting them to behave like an iPod might not be the way to get the best out of them.

There are other ways the music can help to build anticipation and set the scene immediately before the start of a wedding ceremony.  Here's one possibility.

You might think about choosing one or two pieces for the end of the prelude, and make sure the titles are printed in the service booklet.  If the choice is recognizable, it provides a very clear signal to your guests that it is time to wind down the conversation and focus on the beginning of the ceremony.  There is a practical side to this: by the time photographs are taken, excess watchers shooed into the church, dresses adjusted, steps ascended, final sorting-out at the door completed, it can take up to ten minutes from the arrival of the car for the bride to be ready to walk down the aisle.  Having someone delegated to let the organist know to play that one or two pieces allows the organist to know when the prelude will be expected to end, and to factor in some expectant silence before the bridal procession begins.  The priest or celebrant will be able to marshal people at the front of the gathering, for which a more deliberate and properly-flagged music choice can be a helpful signal.

If you take this approach, then be sure to choose contrasting pieces.  A quieter piece will blend in with whatever has come before, which can be fine.  A bolder piece will catch peoples' attention and signal that something is about to happen.

Repertoire passions

On my website I've started a page dedicated to some of the organ music I enjoy playing.

Over there you'll find a sampling of pieces from concerts and other events from the last ten years or so.  More will be added as time goes on.

Keep an eye on it if you want to see (and hear) more -- to visit, click here.

08 July 2013

Concert in October

Historic Organs of Richmond Hill

 

Three short concerts of organ music in historic surroundings

St Stephen's Anglican Church
St Ignatius Catholic Church
Richmond Uniting Church (click here for programme details)

3.00pm, Sunday 20 October 2013

Entry by donation (cash or tinned food)
All donations support the Richmond Hill Churches Food Centre

Enquiries: 9427 1282

03 July 2013

Out and about on Sunday

This week I'm back at St Aloysius, Caulfield, for the last time in a little while.  Here's what I have planned.

Ciacona con Variazioni from Sonatina III (Op. 14, No. 3) -- Sigfrid Karg-Elert
Saraband -- G.F. Handel
Interludium from Sonatina III (Op. 14, No. 3) -- Sigfrid Karg-Elert
Allegro moderato from Sonatina II (Op. 38, No. 2) -- August Reinhard

01 July 2013

Too good not to share

OK, time to own up to a  guilty pleasure.  When Game of Thrones first started I was a bit so-so -- after all, it only seemed to consist of a lot of killing and a ton of fornication dressed up as a drama device.  I've come to appreciate the epic-style of the story, given the slowness of the narrative in some episodes.  After the third series there's been quite a lot of character development and a lot of expansion in the storyline.  Oh, and yet more killing, but the fornication has calmed down.  But the same could have been said for House of Cards, so there's nothing really new on the telly on that front.  I'm now looking forward to series four with some anticipation.

Anyway, I've been teaching a medley of songs to a group recently and was wondering how to convey the sense of how it has a series of separate things linked up into a whole.  Like most medleys it includes changes of mood, key, and rhythmic shape.  The arrangement also includes a few sections where soloists or small groups are taking sections of the songs, which needs to be included in the approach to learning.  Incorporating these elements through the learning process helps to avoid the difficulties in stitching the whole piece together later on.   When I first saw the music I thought it might be a candidate for a song map, a bit like something I've done before.

But this one has to take account of there being four songs, of which parts are farmed out to different sections of the whole performing organisation.  For some reason I was musing on Game of Thrones while looking over the score, and it occurred to me that the opening sequence might be a good way of approaching the task.  The reason for this is that the various parts of the landscape are well-defined, and the landmarks rise up out of the map.  Because the castles come up in sections, it's possible to draw them in a way that allows parts of the object to be shaded out to indicate a sense of the sections of each song.


Here's the opening sequence from Game of Thrones, just to give you an idea of where I started, followed by something that was too good not to include here.