Read more
Studies in English Organ Music is a collection of essays by expert authors that examines key areas of the repertoire in the history of organ music in England. The essays on repertoire are placed alongside supporting studies in organ building and liturgical practice in order to provide a comprehensive contextualization. An analysis of the symbiotic relationship between the organ, liturgy, and composers reveals how the repertoire has been shaped by these complementary areas and developed through history. This volume is the first collection of specialist studies related to the field of English organ music.
List of contents
Part 1 Instruments 1. The English Organ - An Overview
Nicholas Thistlethwaite Part 2 Liturgy 2. Changes in the Fortunes and Use of the Organ in Church, 1500 - 1800
John Harper 3. Organ Music and the Liturgy from 1800
Nicholas Thistlethwaite Part 3 Repertoire 4. English organ music, 1350-1550: a study of sources and contexts
Magnus Williamson 5. Continuity, change and the emergence of idiomatic organ repertoire in seventeenth-century England
David J. Smith 6. Composed and Improvised Voluntaries in the Eighteenth Century
Peter Lynan 7. The Organ Concerto: Some considerations of evolution and context
Peter Lynan 8. The Organ Music of Samuel Wesley and William Russell: Context, Content and Style
John Kitchen 9. From Adams to Wesley: the transition from late Georgian to early Victorian organ music
Peter Horton 10. Romanticism, pedagogy and the English organ - the discourse of concert and ecclesiastical repertoire: Best, Stainer, Stanford and Parry
Jeremy Dibble 11. The British organ sonata and its context, 1895-1945
Andrew McCrea 12. British Organ Music in a secular age - a personal survey
Peter Dickinson
About the author
Iain Quinn is Assistant Professor of Organ and Coordinator of Sacred Music at Florida State University. He holds degrees from the University of Hartford, Yale University and the University of Durham. He has been a Visiting Fellow at Harvard University, Visiting Composer in Chapel at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, a Fulbright Scholar, and a fellow of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust. Scholarly writings have been published in
Tempo,
MLA Notes,
Journal of Victorian Culture, Interpreting Historical Keyboard Music, and in editions of
Samuel Barber (G. Schirmer),
Carl Czerny and John Goss (A-R Editions). He is the author of
The Organist in Victorian Literature (2017) and
The Genesis and Development of an English Organ Sonata (2017, RMA Monograph Series) and has recorded thirteen CDs as a soloist or conductor on the Chandos, Hyperion, Naxos, Paulus, and Regent labels.
Summary
Studies in English Organ Music is a collection of essays by expert authors that examines key areas of the repertoire in the history of organ music in England. The essays on repertoire are placed alongside supporting studies in organ building and liturgical practice in order to provide a comprehensive contextualization. An analysis of th