Chorale Preludes
- As a Chalice
I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light
Quodlibet on Olivet and Battle Hymn
Reflections
Were You There
Continuous Variations
Medleys
Variation Sets
- All Things Bright and Beautiful
Partita on Beach Spring
Variations on a French Carol
Partita on Immortal, Invisible
Partita on Jesus Loves Me
McKee Variations
Other Solo Works
- Beginnings
Norwegian Suite
Toccata on a French Carol
Toccata on He Never Failed Me Yet
Toccata on Shout to the Lord
Toccata on We Are The Church
All Things Bright and Beautiful
Duration: 7’30″
As a Chalice
Duration: 2’30″
Description: Chorale prelude on the hymn tune Inward Light.
Reflection on Ashgrove
Duration: 4 minutes
Description: A continuous variation set on this familiar tune.
Partita on Beach Spring
Duration: 5’15″
Description: Variation set on Beach Spring.
Beginnings
Duration: 6’20″
Carol Prelude, A
Duration: 3’30″
Christ is Risen
Duration: 3 minutes
Toccata on a French Carol
Duration: 3 minutes
Description:
Variations on a French Carol
Duration: 2’30″
Description: Intended as a postlude, this piece has an ostinato bass in three against the 4/4 meter of the melodic material. The French carol the title refers to is the hymn tune Gloria, associated with the hymn “Angels we have heard on high.” The most recognizable part of the tune is the refrain, here given a robust treatment.
Toccata on He Never Failed Me Yet
Duration: 1’30″
Description:
I Want to Walk as a Child of the Light
Duration: 4 minutes
Description: Chorale prelude on Houston. The left hand provides accompaniment (the eighth-note figuration versus the sustained notes in the same hand is annoying to learn, but fits the hand pretty well; just when it’s going well, the eighth notes move from below the sustained notes to above! I had a little talk with myself about that…). The pedal should not use any 16′ (think cello or bassoon). It actually makes a duet with the right-hand melody for much of the piece.
Partita on Immortal, Invisible
Duration: 8’20″
I: 45″
II/III: 1’35″
IV: 1 minute
V: 2’10″
VI: 1’50″
VII: 1 minute
Description: A set of seven variations on St. Denio. The first 4 were written in 1980 and are primarily a transcription of an improvisation. The last three were written in 2005, when I wanted a more substantial pre-service prelude (the duration of the first four is 3’20″; the last three offer an additional 5 minutes!).
This set works well on small instruments as well as larger. The first movement uses only a 4′ flute; the second adds an 8′ flute; the third, which flows directly from the second, gets fuller and sees the first use of pedal (doing the hymn tune). The fourth is fuller yet, with a flowing, somewhat chromatic constantly descending bass line under slower-moving chords with some chromatic material.
The fifth returns to a softer sound, with a slowly-evolving left-hand ostinato and occasional supporting notes in the pedal against a lyrical free melody based losely on the hymn tune. The sixth movement returns to a fuller sonority, with dramatic fragments based on the tune interrupted by a softer cadenza. The final movement recaptures the softer mood and prepares for the ensuing worship service, with a slow-moving pedal, melody in the left hand, and slow chords in the right.
In Memoriam
Duration: 3’30″
Description:
Partita on Jesus Loves Me
Duration: 2’40″ (3’45″ with optional DS)
Description: A simple, improvisatory variation on this familiar tune. I commented on the piece here.
Variations on Kumbaya
Duration: 3’30″
Description: Our children’s choir, supported by the chancel choir, was scheduled to sing an arrangement of Kumbaya by composer Teresa Jennings. It’s a nice arrangement, with a gently swinging African-inspired accompaniment. Although the musical material of my piece makes no mention of Ms Jennings piece, it was the inspiration for my variations.
Like Teresa’s piece, mine has repetitive elements that pay homage to Africa. The pedal part, which I had intended to be easy, only uses five pitches, and repeats every measure, with slight changes to fit the harmonic flow. The melody unfolds at a slow pace, taking twice as long as one might at first expect. That said, this is a lively piece with a strong buildup. I’ve played it on both a two- and a four-manual organ: it adapted easily to both, and was exciting to play on both.
The theme is never simply stated, although it is pretty clear, if you know the tune, that it forms the foundation. Each of the three statements varies both the melody on a macro level and also previous accompanying figures on a micro level. While strong pedal technique is not required, a strong rhythmic feel is; some ability for independent movement of the feet is very helpful. Overall difficulty level is medium.
McKee Variations
Duration: 7 min
Overture: 2 min
Meditation: 2 min
Finale: 3 min
Description: Like the Passacaglia on Spirit, this work was originally envisioned as a way to strengthen congregational singing of a–for this congregation–new tune. The first movement I wrote was what ended up being the Finale. Becuase I didn’t intend any other movements, it has both a loud, bolder section (the A material) which occurs on either side of a softer, more meditative section (the B material). I thought that the ABA form would be pretty complete. It gave me the opportunity to play with the tune in two different environments, and gave the congregation several opportunities to hear the tune.
I was surprised when I decided that at least a softer introductory piece was needed. This intro, based on a two-measure chord progression that repeats throughout the entire movement, would give a better lead-in to the A material of the next movement. It also allowed me to put the melody in the pedal, a device I enjoy doing. The pedal solo is the B section of this movement, with an unadorned statement of the melody in the right hand making up much of the surrounding A sections (again, an ABA form). During the B section, the right hand presents the melody in a somewhat free canonic form, making a rather neat duet.
But wait! No sooner was this movement nearing completion than I thought of another way to start things off. So my intro became a Meditation, and this new material, which I thought of as an overture, became the actual first movement. Unlike the other two, it is not in ABA form, although it does bring back the opening material twice more in different key areas, so that there is a loose A A’ A’ form. What I find most interesting is that there is no clear statement of the melody, although there are plenty of fragments (after all, I had just written two other movements with plenty of statements of the hymn tune–I wanted something different!). Even though it is the first movement that the congregation hears, it leads to the next movement for a clear statement of the tune.
In keeping with my preoccupation with ABA form, the three movements together hint at this form, with the first and third being louder and more energetic, and the second quieter and more reflective. One result of writing what became the first two movements was that, as I played over the Finale, I found that I wanted to do something more with a couple of the statements of the melody. I started swinging part of the A statements, saving the more complex statement for the second A. It’s a modest homage to the African-American roots of the tune.
The three movements make a nice, extended–if somewhat dramatic–prelude, or can function as prelude, offertory, and postlude (although my congregation wants more than two minutes of prelude!). Overall, this is a somewhat challenging work.
Suite on Norwegian Folk Tunes
Duration: 9’30″
Description: This five-movement set of works on Norwegian folk tunes used as hymn tunes was requested by my cousin Michael Moreskine, himself an organist and composer. In addition to having served a Norwegian churchin San Francisco, he spent the 2005-2006 year working as a church musician in Sandnesjoen,Norway. He wanted a set of pieces that he could use as both a concert work (having in mind an organ dedication in San Francisco) and individual preludes to the hymns using the tunes I wrote on–especially if my settings used minimal pedal.
That latter requirement caused me the greatest difficulty, followed by my lack of familiarity with the tunes (which are quite wonderful to work with). Still, the piece worked out pretty well, being particularly effective on instruments that have some reasonable contrast in registrations possible.
I. Introduction and Promenade
Tune: 850 [Heddal: Hvor er det godt å lande]
Tune: 808 [Vang I Valdres: Se, solens skjønne lys og prakt]
Key: F to C
Pedal: Some pedal
Duration: 3 minutes
II. Toccata
Tune: 808 [Vang I Valdres: Se, solens skjønne lys og prakt]
Key: C
Pedal: None
Duration: 1’30”
III. Interlude
Tune: 844 [Heddal: I himmelen, I himmelen]
Key: G
Pedal: None
Duration: 50 seconds
IV. Meditation
Tune: 268 [Romedal: Herre Gud, ditt dyre navn og aere]
Key: F
Pedal: None
Duration: 1’10”
V. Finale (Hi Fra Norge)
Tune: 850 [Heddal: Hvor er det godt å lande]
Tune: 844 [Heddal: I himmelen, I himmelen]
Tune: 244 [Heddal: Den store, hvite flokk]
Key: A to C
Pedal: Substantial pedal
Duration: 3 minutes
Quodlibet on Olivet and Battle Hymn
Duration: 3’10″
Description: I recently played a memorial service, where I was asked to play My Faith Looks Up To Thee (Olivet) and Battle Hymn of the Republic (Battle Hymn). I didn’t want to just play one hymn, then the other (with at least one verse of the former played on the chimes, per the widow’s request–looking back toward the couple’s wedding decades before), although a nice buildup would have been possible, moving from Olivet‘s reflective character to the more robust Battle Hymn. I was in a compositional mood, having completed my Kumbaya variations earlier in the day, so I sat down at the computer to play–and found some interesting ways to combine the two tunes. Each appears by itself (although Battle Hymn‘s main appearance is softly accompanied by Olivet).
Following a quiet opening presentation of Olivet, with the melody on chimes, a transition on Olivet increases in volume to the second section, where both tunes are present. An excerpt of Battle Hymn starts in the manuals, against Olivet in the pedal. The tunes reverse locations, with the section closing with a transition similar to the one ending the previous section, except that the material is drawn from Battle Hymn.
The third section is more reflective, with a complete statement of Battle Hymn in the left hand, and an accompaniment based on Olivet in the right hand. A brief closing statement of Olivet is followed by the first section transition into closing material from the refrain of Battle Hymn.
While I consider this work to be more functional than some of my other pieces–written for a specific memorial service to meet specific needs–it may well have broader appeal. There is almost no variation of the tunes; harmonies stick pretty close to familiar versions of the hymns; the combination of the two hymns works very well–it doesn’t require a great deal of focus to hear the two tunes as they play off each other. Listeners who didn’t know the history of the combination liked the work. If I don’t have it posted on my web site, be sure to ask me for it.
Reflections for Organ
Duration: 3’30″
Description: Lurking in the background, but never fully stated, is “How Great Thou Art.” The “for Organ” part of the title is there because I earlier wrote a similar reflection for piano (although they are actually two totally separate pieces). The left hand and pedal provide accompaniment. If you have three manuals, the right hand can alternate between louder and softer solo sounds. With only two manuals, the accompaniment manual provides the softer sound.
Toccata on Shout to the Lord
Duration: 4 minutes
Description: This work was written to serve as the postlude for a service featuring the Praise Team. I wanted some organ presence, but in a way that complemented and supported the guitar-based instrumentation of the team. Shout to the Lord (words and music by Darlene Zschech) was our closing song.
With the exception of one section where the right hand has the melody, the right hand arpeggiates chords, always between E4 and E5, while the left hand acts as continuo, with a simple repetition of the chord (somewhat reminiscent of the Widor 5th–but only slightly). This adds an interesting, if somewhat subtle, pedal tone, as an E always happens on beats 1 and 3 (the piece is in 4/4 and in the key of A Major; the E fits the I and V chords perfectly, and adds a 7th, 6th or 2nd to most of the rest of the chords).
The melody, in augmentation, occurs almost completely in the pedal. It’s a fun romp, with enough tricky coordination issues (mainly rhythmic) to provide some spice. It was well received by the congregation.
Dance Procession on Simple Gifts
Duration: 2’30″
Description: Written for a celebration service with dancers in procession, this work starts quietly and builds to full organ. I think I had Ravel’s Bolero in mind when I wrote this. It can be easily extended and, while it might stand on its own in a concert setting, a visual collaboration works very well.
Soli Deo Gloria
Duration: 3 minutes
Description:
Passacaglia on Spirit
Duration: 2’45″
Description: This work was written for a service where we were scheduled to sing James Manley’s folk hymn Spirit. We wanted the congregation to at least have the tune in the back of their minds…thus this piece, which served as Prelude (It’s a good choice for Pentecost).
An 8-measure bass pattern based on the tune–reminiscent of the start of Pachelbel’s Canon, is treated in typical Baroque passacaglia fashion (including a section where the bass isn’t actually in the bass, but the chord progression continues anyway). Medium difficulty; builds to a big conclusion.
Toccata on We Are The Church
Duration: 3’30″
Description: A fun, upbeat postlude based on themes from a musical setting of Avery and Marsh’s We Are The Church by California composer Greg Murai.
Meditation on Were You There
Duration: 1’30″
Description: An arrangement for organ of an earlier work for oboe and piano. The pedal solo covers the oboe part.