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Stephen Dutfield

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Posts posted by Stephen Dutfield

  1. West point is splendid, though...

    Pierre

     

    Perhaps it and others like it are an acquired taste which I have yet to acquire. I just wonder whether the curator of West Point does actually feel that every additional stop adds something musically useful and appropriate to the instrument, or is just pleased to take the money and make the thing just that little bit bigger....

  2. Even on a small scale, one sees once-interesting old organs of a clearly defined style and finds a plaque on the side - "To the Glory of God, the Voix Celeste and Scharffzimbel were added in 1958 through the generous gift of Lady So-and-so in memory of her dog Mr Truffles", and then you arguably have either a ruined instrument or one on which it's open season for others to come along and stamp their identity on it too.

     

    Arguably these "generous gifts" can wreak even more havoc in a large scheme.... summed up in the two words 'West Point' :D

     

    I do know of one otherwise original H & H locally which actually bears a plaque to the effect that the tremulant was provided in memory of some high-profile member of the congregation. Presumably the one who used to stand at the back and sing with a very warbly voice.....

     

    (I also know of a church clock which was installed in memory of someone who was late for church every week!)

     

    S

  3. My own nominations are "God is working his purpose out" and "I watched the Sunrise". Although the words of "If I was a butterfly" are dire, it has a fairly rumpy pumpy tune - I once found myself slipping it into a barn dance medley when playing a session in a great Northern ballroom 20 years ago!

     

    I can't imagine the venue to which you refer Neil - but note the Shakespeare quotation in your sig!!

    (By the way, does your mobile still play THAT tune?)

     

    Steve

  4. What I would do, then, is not raise money but either get other people to raise money, or assemble a band of volunteers with knowledge to come and put the new one up. I'd happily come down for a week - got family down there.

     

    This touches on something I mentioned a few months ago in relation to rejuvenating some of our long-dormant town hall instruments, or any others for which there is no financial contingency. There is much potential for such projects as the one you mention, provided there are willing and able volunteers. I think success would also rely on having supervision and final set-up and finishing from a reputable organ builder, but this would be money well spent and would represent a very considerable saving on the cost of engaging said organ builder to do all the labouring as well.

     

    This is often the way that church bell projects are realised, with work in the tower being carried out by the local band with supervision from a bellhanger. Clearly though the consequences of getting bell-hanging wrong are somewhat more cataclysmic than getting your winding wrong.....!

     

     

    Steve

  5. I personally am pleased Mr. Lucas is staying at Worcester ... Let's all be positive, and discuss the new organ in a positive way, on paper it looks very good indeed.

     

    I fear I may be in a minority of one in not knowing what is planned at Worcester. Perhaps - in the positive spirit of this thread - someone (preferably Adrian Lucas if he feels so inclined) could provide some detail. I would be most interested to find out more.

     

    Steve

  6. .....However, none of these, not even the Kendrick, approaches the depths reached by I Watch the Sunrise, a hymn devoid of any musical and theological content. It seems I have to play it for 9 out of 10 funeral services, and I cannot work out why.

     

    Couldn't agree more Peter. I encountered it first at an RC funeral I was asked to play for, and have sung it several time at funerals since. I like the music at a funeral to leave me feeling uplifted - if not a little hopeful - but the only thing that dirge does for me is make me determined that they're not going to play it at mine!

     

    Strangely though, one of my colleagues (former Convent girl) says it's her favourite hymn. Considering that she has impeccable taste in popular music, I can't for the life of me work out what she sees or hears in hymns that the rest of us don't.

  7. I loved the HW4 interview back at Petersfield, which if memory serves went something like

     

    HG 'How many men work here these days?'

    HW4 'Oh, most of them.'

     

    Or did I dream that?

     

    Tell you what, I bet none of them dare not work nowadays.

     

    I can't remember that bit - but I do hope it's true!

     

    HW4 was interviewed at St. Georges's Hall and explained the importance of 'town hall' recitals in the Victorian and Edwardian era to bring transciptions of orchestral music to those who otherwise wouldn't hear it. Howard Goodall said "A bit like Classics for Pleasure?". Cue long pause from HW4 - along with vacant expression - followed by "I'm sorry - I haven't a clue what Classics for Pleasure is!"*

     

    HW4 seemed from that programme to be a nice enough chap, and the personification of the Victorian eccentric. I liked him - as I liked Fred Dibnah - because I don't think there are nearly enough good old British eccentrics left. The main problem is that most of those we have got are involved with organs in one way or another!!

     

    (* My favourite quote from the Howard Goodall series involves the Duke of Marlborough explaining the roll player attached to the FW in the library at Blenheim. At the end of his explanation HG chimed in with "So I suppose you could say it's the original 'Duke Box'!")

  8. I have heard tell of Sidney Torch (and of Percy Whitlock's approval of his performances, to name but one) - but how does one get to hear what his playing sounded like?

     

    Anything been re-released - or can anything be linked here?

     

    There are quite a few re-releases available, but for a taster (not necessarily representative of his most memorable theatre organ work) try this site which features him at a number of different instruments. Just scroll down to the 'T's

     

    http://theatreorgans.com/southerncross/Radiogram/UKfiles.htm

     

    Personally, as a lover of light orchestral music, I always think that Torch made the right decision to leave the organ behind and concentrate on his orchestral work. In some of his organ arrangements you can hear ideas which were subsequently more fully developed in both his compositions and arrangements post war. I also think his rhythmic 'dance band' style - exciting though it is - may have dated a lot quicker than did that of some of the more 'traditional' theatre organists, and had he continued he may have found that what was cutting edge before the war had become old hat after it. He was a very shrewd man, and I'm sure he knew exactly what he was doing.

     

    A remarkable musician though, if not the easiest of people to get along with....

  9. ========================

    As Stephen hasn't come up with the goods, I guess he doesn't know the story about Gerlad Moore, the celebrated accompanist.

     

    Now, it's  avery long time since I read the book "Am I too loud?" (the biography of Gerlad Moore), and it is a good 12 years ago since I last included this in a lecture, but I'll try and recall the quote as best I can, with appropriate apologies if I get it too wrong.

     

    Gerald Moore it seems, was a cinema organist for a little while, and in the book, he says someting on the lines of:-

     

    "That instrument of torture, the cinema organ.......the best stop of all on this sordid box of tricks was the Vox Humana, which with the tremulant, produced a sound like the bleatings of a flock of sheep. I used it ad nauseum whenever I could, and never grew tired of it. You couldn't go far wrong with the Tremulant and the Vox Humana!"

     

    I wonder what Cesar Franck and Cavaille-Coll would make of that?

     

    MM

     

    Ah, yes - sorry I was trying to think what the story would have been. Mind you, I did say that good music, well played, crosses boundaries.

     

    Well played in this context might possibly NOT include constant use of the Vox Humana and tremulant!!

     

    :P

  10. Since Quentin Maclean has been a topic of discussion in the RCO thread I thought I'd post a story - possibly apochryphal, but then very possibly not - which proves that good music well played crosses all boundaries.

     

    As you may/may not know, between 1930 and 1939 Maclean was organist at the vast Trocadero theatre, Elephant & Castle. Eyebrows were raised on his appointment as he in his previous posts as Brighton, Shepherds Bush and Marble Arch he had been presenting top notch music (including items from the classical organ repertoire and transcriptions of major orchestral works) to then relatively top-notch audiences - Shepherds Bush had a slightly different population demographic in those days!

     

    Arriving at E & C, rather than play down to his audience of tough dockers, through his modest character, softly spoken verbal introductions, and thorough musicianship, he succeeded in raising their musical aspirations, taking a whole generation of South Londoners on a exploration of music which they otherwise would have been unlikely to have experienced. In turn his audience took him to their hearts and became very possessive of him. He was THEIR organist.

     

    That's the background - the story - short that it is - goes like this. Somehow or other a quite well-turned-out young couple found their way south of the river one evening to see a film at the 'Troc'. In a minority of two, they were sat right in the middle of a throng of the aforementioned dockers. Having sat through the first part of the programme the time came for the interlude and up came Maclean on the Wurlitzer and began with a transcription of something fairly 'heavy' - history does not record what. The young couple took this as an opportunity to start talking. After a short while the burly Bermondsey docker sat in front of them turned around, grabbed the young man by the tie, pulled him up out of his seat, and said - fairly loudly - "Shut the f*** up, Mac's playing!"

  11. Thank you MM for that excellent and informative post.

     

    Fascinatingly, in retirement, Torch showed little interest in music; keeping his grand piano locked and unplayed, in spite of the fact that he was a true virtuoso pianist. He explained, "Music was my business, and when I retired, I retired from music."

    The story of him snapping his baton and walking out is certainly true, but I have a feeling that what Sid said he thought about his music in retirement, and what he did actually think were not always the same thing. Bill Davies once told me that Torch did in fact continue to play piano at home during his retirement, and to discuss music of all types (Bill was a frequent visitor) and although he tended to rubbish his organ playing after he'd moved into orchestral work, he did still involve himself in a small way from time to time.

     

    The story of Bill getting him to play the organ during a FNIMN rehearsal is well known. George Blackmore (FRCO - just to keep the thread slightly on track) also caught Sidney jazzing it up on a Hammond one lunchtime in a studio at Broadcasting House, and Sid pleaded with him not to tell anyone. Torch reminisced with Bill Davies quite happily in a phone call relayed over the PA system at the State Kilburn's 50th anniversary celebrations in 1987, and earlier that year, on the morning of the re-opening of the ex Regal Edmonton organ at Barry Memorial Hall, he phoned the team there and sent a message of good luck and congratulations.

     

    In his most recent CD release, Simon Preston plays the restored organ at the Royal Albert Hall (splendidly carried out by out hosts, Mander Organs); the title of the CD being "Organ Restored."

     

     

    Interviewed about the recording, Simon Preston (a non FRCO!) included the following:-

     

    ..... and the other - equally favourite - was Quentin MacLean playing Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue on the organ in the Odeon Marble Arch."[/b]

    Simon Preston then reveals a "trade-secret" which has puzzled many of us for years:-

     

    "At the age of five I could not work out how Quentin MacLean did the opening glissando in Rhapsody in Blue; apparently he used the Siren stop - useful for Cops and Robbers chases in the silent movies - switched the organ on and, when the wind went into the bellows, it produced this very smooth glissando up to the top E flat!"

     

    It is a remarkable recording, and one of my favourites of its type. The syren gliss wasn't done quite like that though. Maclean had designed the Marble Arch organ, and during the process there were quite a few changes specified. In a letter to Herbert Norman dated 22nd April 1928 he asks for a number of such changes and his final paragraph reads:

     

    "In the effects department it would be nice to have two syrens, one quick, & the other slow. One could be played from the manual piston, & the other from the toe piston, no additional control needed."

     

    It is generally thought that it was the slow syren used at the start of the 'Rhapsody in Blue' recording. Perhaps he had this in mind when specifying it!

     

    I am, though, very impressed to think that Simon Preston listened to, and enjoyed, 'Mac' at a theatre organ.

  12. .

    As to Quentin Maclean never having held achurch post in this country,he was at one time assistant organist at Westminster Cathedral

     

    I stand corrected. I knew he had a connection there but didn't realise that he was actually assistant. I am only really familiar with his career from 1920 onwards during which his reputation was built on his performances on the concert platform and in the cinema, marking his rise as a household name - as it was possibly for an organist to become in those days. Since he was interned in Germany during the First World War, I'd conclude that his tenure at the cathedral was relatively short, between 1918 and 1920.

     

    He is certainly remembered chiefly as a concert and cinema organist rather than as a cathedral organist who later turned to lighter music. The opposite is true of Norman Cocker who is most often thought of as organist at Manchester Cathedral who also played cinema organs - perhaps Cocker did it for financial reasons, whereas Maclean did it because he enjoyed it? He certainly coulnd't have chain-smoked in the loft at Westminster as he did in the pit at Shepherds Bush Pavilion!

  13. Apologies for this being another theatre organ related story, but the guts of it could apply to any organ really. It is perhaps unusual in that there were no witnesses to the original event. I'd forgotten about it until yesterday when I met up again with the tuner concerned. For the sake of reputations I won't name him, the venue, or the name or even gender of the 'organist' concerned.

     

    The inverted commas are deliberate because the performer in question is one of a worryingly prevalent breed on the theatre organ circuit who cut their teeth on - and are mainly known for playing - what Robin Richmond used to delight in referring to as a "home plug-in" and known in these parts as a toaster. Whilst apparently an accomplished pianist and well known for toaster work, the said performer is obviously less than knowledgeable on what to expect from a pipe organ, of indeed how to approach playing thereon.

     

    Having arrived at the venue in plenty of time, this very keen performer decided to go right through every stop of the organ to see if there was anything not working, and then to write the results of this careful research in the tuning book - presumably thinking that this was a way to be taken seriously on the organ circuit.

     

    Cut ahead a few weeks and our heroic tuner arrived to give the instrument its regular once-over. As always he started by checking the tuning book. The recent note from the hero of the story began thus....

     

    "Accompaniment Vox Humana 16' tc - no notes working in bottom octave.

    "Accompaniment Contra-Viole 16' tc - no notes working in bottom octave.

     

    etc. etc. throughout the whole organ!

     

    I must confess to having had some personal fun at the expense of this same performer who has a reputation for arriving at a venue and asking who was playing last month, then trying that organists's pistons (remember we're talking about oldish organs, most of which have setter boards not multi-channel capture systems) and saying "I'll use those - they'll be fine." One day, whilst awaiting the arrival of this person I decided I'd had enough of this, so - along similar lines to GTB and Thieman - set to work on the setter board.

     

    In due course the great person arrived and, true to form, the first question was "Who was here last month?" I replied to the effect that it had been one of the former Blackpool luminaries, which produced a smile and "That's fine." The great one then sat at the console and started jabbing at pistons before looking at me and saying "The pistons aren't working!" I said, "No, they're fine but I've set everything to OFF because it'll be much easier to put your settings on if we start with a clean sheet! Now, let's start with No. 1 on the Solo - what do you want?"

     

    The look of panic was a delight.... said person eventually managed to suggest three similar sounding registrations for one manual, then - having the look of someone drowning - gave up and said "Oh, it's alright - I'll hand register."

     

    Better still I was working that afternoon, so had a genuine and valid excuse not to stay for the concert ;)

  14. Nice, ain't it!

     

    The 'blacking' took forever to do, but worth the trouble and effort I think.

     

     

    It's absolutely beautiful, and the sort of thing that makes me think it would will me to play better if I were sat at it!

     

    Just as a point of interest - and not asking you to give away any professional secrets - how do you achieve that highly polished 'ebonised' look?

  15. I do not work for the BBC nor do I know anyone who does....

     

    .....the premuim pay the BBC will need to pay its engineers to work on a ?Sunday

     

     

    It's probably not as straightforward as that, since the BBC, like most broadcasters, is what is known in popular culture as a 24/7 organisation That is to say for those who work on the operational side of things there's no such thing as a weekend - they're just two more working days.

     

    Since engineers and other transmission staff are habitually required to work at all sorts of hours of the day and night, any day of the week, they are generally in the position of having this compensated for in their salary and therefore don't get paid any extra for working weekends. Clearly football matches would cost a fortune to rig and de-rig if this were the case!

     

    Very early mornings and very late nights can be a slightly different case, but I don't imagine CE being rigged before 6am or de-rigged after midnight.

  16. As far as cinema-organ playing goes, then there are a few lesser known names who had both cathedral connections and cinema appointments; the most respected being Quentin Maclean of course. However, Osborne Peasgood, while at the Abbey, played at  a cinema in Acton. Norman Cocker has been mentioned of course, but there was also Charles Saxby, whom I believe to have been O & C at Bridlington Priory, who also played at the Paramount Cinema, Leeds.

     

    G.T. (George) Pattman who was at St. Mary's Cathedral, Glasgow between 1904 and 1916 left to tour concert and music halls with a large transportable pipe organ (built by Harrisons I think) before settling into regular cinema employment in the London area. He returned to church work in the 1940s.

     

    Also, I have a feeling that Fredric Bayco was at Holy Trinity, Paddington after his cinema career. He was also working for the BBC as a radio music producer, so perhaps he doesn't count. He broadcast wearing both hats, but his appearances at the BBC theatre organ were under the name Peter Keane.

     

    I don't think Quentin Maclean ever held a high profile church post in this country, although after the war he was O & C at an important Roman Catholic church in Toronto until his death in 1962. He's a good example for this thread though, because - having studied under Reger amongst others, and being highly sought after as a recitalist in churches, cathedrals and concert halls, he never felt the need to take the FRCO diploma, which he presumably felt would have been superfluous to his impressive CV. As if to prove that he could have got it, he was once selected by the RCO to give a recital of the year's examination pieces to the entrants prior to the Fellowship examinations. Although I don't suppose it would have bothered him (he was reputed to be a very modest and shy man) it's a pity they didn't see fit to endow him with an honourary FRCO. Although on reflection it may have done his reputation no good, it might have shut up the lobby who continue today to protest that he was inferior to the also very popular Reginald Foort simply on the grounds that Foort held an FRCO.

  17. Story 7

    I don't know much about music, but I know what I like'. Not me, in this instance, but the sort of thing one donor could have said. It was certainly his opinion. The kind gent who came forward and paid for the whole of a new organ at Wisbech Parish Church in the first half of the last century had only two stipulations:

    1. It had to be by Harrison and Harrison and

    2. it had to be 'bloody loud'.

    It was/is. Great fun, too. When we recorded it in 1999, we got as far away as possible (right into the recess by the West Door - the organ is at the East end of the South Aisle) even then one reviewer said we had recorded it much too close. They always know best don't they, critics?!

     

    Wonderful!

     

    It instantly reminds me of another story told by a theatre organist friend of mine who, on one of his fairly frequent jaunts to the U.S.A., found himself playing one of those enormous organs in a not-too-large building with not-too-efficient swell shutters.

     

    During the interval when he was outside an exit door exercising his lungs on a packet of Bensons he was taken to task by a large and loud local who yelled at him "Do you HAVE to play that thing so LOUD?"

     

    Somewhat taken aback, he was just composing his thoughts to give a polite and reasoned reply when another equally large and loud lady chimed in "Yes he does - and that's why we came!"

  18. I always remember the story told by a well known organist who had to accompany a Mothers' Union Diocesan service on the Wurlitzer then in the Free Trade Hall in Manchester. The Bishop was to make a grand entrance, so the organist in question decided to use the snare drum followed by a big fanfare. The organist in question then erroneously missed the snare drum piston and the said Bishop made his grand entrance to "cuckoo - cuckoo - cuckoo" etc.

     

    NS

     

    Could have been worse - it could have been the Klaxon!

     

    It is said that when Marcel Dupre played at Wimbledon Town Hall (quite a remarkable fact in itself) he missed the Great to Pedal to piston and hit the bird whistle instead....

  19. The man who taught me to play the Organ had a book called Tales of Organists. It included such delights as the Organist's 23rd psalm ('The Ford is my car, I shall not want another ... it anointeth my head with oil ...' - I can't remember more)

     

     

    Reminds me of the London bus drivers' prayer...

     

    Our Father, who art in Hendon,

    Harrow be thy name.

    Thy Kingston come,

    Thy Wimbledon,

    In Erith as it is in Hendon

     

    etc. etc.

     

     

    I'll get my coat.....

  20. Blimey, Vierne, H.K Andrews, who else?

     

     

    At the other end of the scale I recall reading a memorial attached to the small organ at Hinton Martell parish church in Dorset in memory of the lady organist of many years who had reached her final cadance at the console during Sunday worship.

     

    Sadder still was the organist of St. Mary's R.C. Canton in Cardiff who passed away during a wedding a few years ago.

     

    I can also think of at least two theatre organists who never got to press the 'down' button....

  21. Please spare a thought for the tuner. You might feel the console is up high enough - the tuner keeps on going. The scariest one I ever knew was the old New College, Oxford organ in the days of H K Andrews. Mind you he could be scary enough.

     

    FF

     

     

    The Bath Tuba was pretty scary. It's un-nerving standing on a passage board being able to look down the 32' and being closer to the fan-vaulting than the floor - I only went up there once!

  22. ===================

     

    :lol:  :lol:  :lol:  :lol:

     

    Since when did an Englishman understand the daft Druids?

     

    Now, if Pierre could translate this into Flemish or French, we would all stand a better chance of translating it.

     

    Whenever I travel to Wales, I always take OS maps with me, because I can rely on the visual clues rather than try to make sense of the place-names.

     

    An Englishman should NEVER ask for directions in Wales. If they smile swetly and speak to you in English, the trick is to listen to what they say and then do the exact opposite!

     

    The other bad area is Glasgow, "Aye, well know letma think on it a wee while. Yer tak a leeft 'n they yer go orn a wee while afor takin yer sicund reight, or mabes yer third un. I'm nay so sure, 'cos av ad a wee dram or two, but it's doon ther' anyway."

     

    So much for the United Kingdom!

     

    MM

     

     

    There are some of us Welshmen who don't understand the 'daft druids' too. Being as part of my gainful employment often requires the pronunciation of Welsh place-names in the course of what might be termed public speaking, I've discovered that it's a great idea to make friends with a few of the said Druids, who can point your syllables in the right direction :)

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