Wood and Lead and Wind and Tin

Similar documents
New Music Café Performance Part of IWU s New Music Series

First Congregational Church United Church of Christ Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Director of Music. Job Description and Information

Illinois Wesleyan University Magazine

YEAR-ROUND CURRICULUM & AFA IN SCHOOLS

CORO Choral Institute & Simpson College. Master of Music in Choral Conducting Program Details

Requirements for a Music Major, B.A. (47-50)

Principal Pipings. In this Issue. Dean s Message. December 2018, Vol. 74, Issue 5. Happy December!

Illinois Wesleyan University Magazine

James Vasek (JV): Your first name, and will you state your name for me?

C. Anthony Pessarra Sugar Plum Ln, Houston, TX 77062

ABOUT THE QCSYE. generally rehearses on Sundays from 3:30 5:15 p.m.

Bachelor of Music in Music and Worship

FINE ARTS MUSIC ( )

MMM 100 MARCHING BAND

a g r e at s e t o f p i p e s Purchase A Pipe

Masterworks Chorale of Carroll County

Bachelor of Music in Commercial Music

Carol D. Britt. Head, Department of Music, Nicholls. Assistant Professor of Music, Nicholls. Nicholls State University

SPRINGFIELD PUBLIC SCHOOLS HONOR ORCHESTRAS Purpose and Mission

BACHELOR OF MUSIC: THEORY/ COMPOSITION

Prerequisites: Audition and teacher approval. Basic musicianship and sight-reading ability.

Course Descriptions Music

Music Celebrations International Presents the. Choral Festival VIENNA JUNE 9-13, 2020

MASTER OF MUSIC PERFORMANCE Choral Conducting 30 Semester Hours

The Organists Manual. Josh Robinson

OLD CURRICULUM FOR MUSIC TECHNOLOGY MAJOR (for students entering before fall 2011)

hhh MUSIC OPPORTUNITIES BEGIN IN GRADE 3

Fact: An organ s most important stop is the room in which it plays.

Guide to MS062 Olav E. Eidbo papers

Arts & Sciences Music and Music Education Bachelor of Arts

MADISON PUBLIC SCHOOLS. Madison Junior School Band

YEAR-ROUND PROGRAMS SEASON AFATEXAS.ORG. 1718A Lubbock Street. Houston, Texas UNDERWRITING SUPPORT PRESENTING PARTNERS ARTS PARTNERS

Jonas Thoms, horn. Education M.M. University of Cincinnati-College Conservatory of Music, B.M. Eastman School of Music, 2006

NEW PARENT INFORMATION Making an Informed Decision

MTP Music Year 3 The Environment (3 weeks) Humans (3 weeks)

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

MUSIC (MUS) Credit Courses. Music (MUS) 1. MUS 110 Music Appreciation (3 Units) Skills Advisories: Eligibility for ENG 103.

Mike Jones 500 W. 8 th Street (785)

Music in a digital Age Dr. Mario Pearson THE DIGITAL AGE

Beresford Republic Four-part Series on the Watchdog Legacy Project. Grace Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts

Ruth van Baak Griffioen: Excerpts from W&M Student Evaluations

Musicians, Singers, and Related Workers

Music Program. Music Elective Courses. Beginning Guitar Beginning Piano. Beginning Piano History of Music Through Listening

Edie Johnson 8120 Kingsdale Drive Knoxville, TN

Grace United Church of Christ. To my eyes and ears the organ will ever be the King of Instruments ~Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart

Curricular Area: Visual and Performing Arts. semester

School of Church Music Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary

Upcoming Programs For The AGO Milwaukee Chapter

Principal Pipings. Greetings from the dean. Vol. 70, Issue 8 March, Hello AGO Friends,

MUSC 100 Class Piano I (1) Group instruction for students with no previous study. Course offered for A-F grading only.

Arts & Sciences Music and Music Education Bachelor of Arts Traditional

General Standards for Professional Baccalaureate Degrees in Music

Season Press Kit

Principal Pipings. Greetings from the dean. Vol. 69, Issue 3 November, Hello AGO Friends!

Division of Music. Division of Music Mission. Division of Music Goals and Outcomes. Division Objectives. Proficiencies. Minot State University 1

David Husser Traverse City, MI (231)

Music (MUSC) MUSC 114. University Summer Band. 1 Credit. MUSC 115. University Chorus. 1 Credit.

Course Descriptions Music MUSC

LOWELL MASON. The Father of Music Education

Mark Russell Smith, Music Director And Conductor Annual Report

MUSIC (MUS) Music (MUS) 1

PRINCE GEORGE S PHILHARMONIC 1965 to 2015 A HISTORY

VITA Cammy L. Burkhalter Music Education Coordinator East Texas Baptist University Jenna Guest Music Building, Room 103

CAMELSDALE PRIMARY SCHOOL MUSIC POLICY

Contemporary Chamber Ensemble

1 Hour IAI F Hours

Duke University Chapel. Organ Recitals Organ_Recitals updated.indd 1

STUDENT HANDBOOK FOR THE UNDERGRADUATE MUSIC MAJOR TABLE OF CONTENTS

The Baroque Period. Better known today as the scales of.. A Minor(now with a #7 th note) From this time onwards the Major and Minor Key System ruled.

VCASS MUSIC CURRICULUM HANDBOOK

July 14 July 18, 2014 GENERAL INFORMATION

STEPHEN MICHAEL NEWBY, D.M.A.

Doctor of Musical Arts in organ performance, 1999, Eastman School of Music, Rochester, NY

a german family-owned company has to fight hard to keep producing its world-famous pianos Masters of tone

Exam 2 MUS 101 (CSUDH) MUS4 (Chaffey) Dr. Mann Spring 2018 KEY

Key Stage: 4. Subject: Music. Aims of the subject:

Young Artist Program

Music (MUSIC) Iowa State University

Music (catalog.stmarytx.edu/undergraduate/majors-programs/humanities-social-sciences/music/music-minor)

Geneva CUSD 304 Content-Area Curriculum Frameworks Grades 6-12 Choral Music

Johann Sebastian Bach (bahkh)

Dr. Michael Fuchs, director. Fall Schedule and Chorus Policies

Guide to the David H. Stevens Papers

Master of Music in clarinet performance May 2014 Member of Triano Graduate Wind Quintet, full assistantship in performance and musicianship.

Excellence in. f rther potsdam.edu/academics/crane/admissions/ music education. performance. career success.

Selection Review #1. A Dime a Dozen. The Dream

UMS Choral Union Announces Summer Sings 2017

Baldwin Wallace Bach Festival to begin a new era this weekend

The Baroque Period First Name: ANSWER KEY Last Name: Class Period: Baroque

CHILDREN S CHOIR SCHOOL Parent Guide

This course is a continuation of SPAN 2311 with an emphasis on speaking and listening. SPAN 2306 Spanish Conversation and Composition II

ENCHAMADE. Convention Update FRENCH CONNECTIONS. The Charlotte Chapter presents. AGO Southeast Regional Convention July 1-4, 2015

NURTURING CREATIVITY, CURIOSITY, and VIRTUOSITY

Mellon Middle School Choir Guidelines Mrs. Marlo Rankin, Director x95001

Craig Hella Johnson AUSTRALIA. Sydney Opera House Gala Festival Concert July Featuring a Jake Runestad world premiere.

Teacher s Guide and Suggested Lesson Plans

YSTCM Modules Available to NUS students in Semester 1, Academic Year 2017/2018

Music Theory. Degree Offered. Degree Requirements. Major Learning Outcomes MUSIC THEORY. Music Theory 1. Master of Music in Music Theory

The doctor of musical arts curriculum in conducting prepares students for careers in higher education and in the professional world.

The Windline Susquehanna Valley Chapter - ATOS web site:

Transcription:

Volume 14 Issue 4 Winter 2005-2006 Illinois Wesleyan University Magazine Article 1 2005 Wood and Lead and Wind and Tin Thomas Columbus Illinois Wesleyan University, iwumag@iwu.edu Recommended Citation Columbus, Thomas (2005) "Wood and Lead and Wind and Tin," Illinois Wesleyan University Magazine: Vol. 14: Iss. 4, Article 1. Available at: http://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/iwumag/vol14/iss4/1 This is a PDF version of an article that originally appeared in the printed Illinois Wesleyan University Magazine, a quarterly periodical published by Illinois Wesleyan University. For more information, please contact iwumag@iwu.edu. Copyright is owned by the University and/or the author of this document.

Wood and Lead and Wind and Tin These are the ingredients that Jeffrey Dexter 85 uses to shape the magnificent sounds of a Schantz pipe organ. Story by Thomas Columbus Photo portrait by Jo McCulty To Jeffrey Dexter 85, a pipe organ is a wondrous machine. So, too, is a fire engine. Both machines have captivated him since childhood. In 1969, when I was 7, he says, my parents church had a fire and then had a new organ installed. I was fascinated because I could see some of the pipes. Then there was the time his father took him to watch firefighters put out a lumberyard blaze. He marveled at how fire engines, covered with soot and grime after a fire, were quickly restored to their immaculate condition. It was, Dexter says, a testament to the civic pride those engines engendered. As a boy, he also became enraptured with performing music. But even as he studied piano and, later, organ, Dexter says he was always fascinated by the mechanical aspect. How does it make this sound? How does it make a sound like another instrument? And how is this all controlled by one person?

And now he is the person who controls that sound, not just as an organist, but also as a maker of organs. As vice president and tonal director of the Schantz Organ Company, Dexter has his office complete with a collection of more than 100 die-cast model fire engines in Orrville, Ohio. But he is often away from home, drawn by his other fascination, most recently by the 4,081 pipes installed this past summer in Mees Hall Auditorium at Capital University in Columbus, Ohio. No two of those pipes, Dexter says, are the same. Each is its own windblown instrument. Arranged in 70 groups or ranks, they are controlled by a myriad of stops and three keyboards or manuals. Putting it all together, he says, is a task of subjective musical decisions. To explain the scope of the task, Dexter likes to use the comparison of a child opening a new crayon box. It s like the difference, he says, between the box of eight Crayola crayons and the box of 64 with a sharpener all those different hues. Similarly, with a pipe organ, you can color and shade and create different effects through the use of wood and lead and tin and wind. Capital University s new organ goes beyond a metaphoric connection of the aural with the visual. In the nearly 80-year-old auditorium, the large pipes on each side of the stage s proscenium arch are decorated with stencils, a technique that Dexter said was done in the late 19th century but has been little-used for many years. Working with a consultant, his Above, a display case full of model fire engines is a centerpiece of Dexter's office. (Photo by Ric Snyder) Schantz team used a laser to cut crisp stencils out of sheets of Mylar, then applied the stencils to the burnished copper pipes and painted them by hand. The colors and geometric designs reflect those on the proscenium arch and the ceiling, so that at a performance the audience will have its eyes as well as its ears filled with harmonies. The team that worked on Capital s organ installation extended the efforts of a larger group based at Schantz s Orrville headquarters, where each organ piece was crafted by hand. Reflecting on the collaborative nature of his business, Dexter says, Pipe-organ building is like life. It s about we, not I. My position gets a lot of attention. But 89 people work for us. It s not about individual personalities; it s about the whole. We ve been building pipe organs for 134 years. We re stewards. When you realize all the skills that made that (organ) happen, it s rewarding and humbling. It will last long after we re gone. He compares his own task as tonal director, of seeking and shaping the sound that each wondrous machine will produce, to that of leading a church choir. It s not about you, he says. It s about getting the lesson across. This lesson, that it s not only about oneself, Dexter may well have learned from his wife, Daphne Liggett Dexter, who graduated from Illinois Wesleyan in 1987. A piano pedagogy major, she took six semesters of organ, enough to give her an understanding of her husband s fascination. She s given up two very good positions to follow my career in organ building, says Dexter. She s a really supportive person. The couple who have two daughters, Lindsay, 19, and Polly, 9 met in the School of Music s library. I worked summers there, Dexter recalls. Daphne came in as an incoming freshman looking for information for a class she was going to take. They wed in 1985, bearing the added distinction of being only the fourth couple to marry in the newly constructed Evelyn Chapel. After college, the newlyweds found jobs in Bloomington. She became a teacher in the University s preparatory piano department and he was director of music ministries at Wesley United Methodist Church. During Dexter s

tenure there, the church decided to build a new organ an event that provided him the opportunity he d been awaiting since childhood. The church commissioned Austin Organs of Hartford, Conn., to construct its organ. Dexter says, I got so involved with the interchange and interaction with the organ builder that they offered me a job in Hartford. The hourly pay was $4.75. Even accounting for 16 years of inflation, that s $7.40 per hour in today s terms. At Schantz s Ohio headquarters, Dexter (right) checks progress on a church organ console with Fred Robinson, who heads the company s console department. (Photo by Ric Snyder) It was a leap of faith, Dexter says. We gave up two very good jobs. But, he adds, it was the start of a very rewarding career. Dexter traveled the country for Austin, installing organs. That was a great teacher, he says. It was almost like being an apprentice. After 30 to 40 organs, I developed a sense of what works and what doesn t. As he honed his skills, he also developed an awareness of what was happening in Orrville, Ohio. With the support of the family that has owned the Schantz Organ Company since its founding in 1873, its tonal director Burton Tidwell was making changes. Dexter had first encountered a Schantz instrument, a large concert organ, during his Wisconsin high school days at a weekend for organists hosted at nearby Carroll College. During his time at Illinois Wesleyan, he spent many hours of practice, recitals, and chapel services at the Schantz three-manual pipe organ in Presser Hall s Westbrook Auditorium. In 1989, the same year that the Dexters moved to Hartford, Tidwell had become Schantz s tonal director. According to a recent article about the company in Choir and Organ magazine, Tidwell was moving Schantz s tonal direction from the neobaroque leanings of the 1960s and 70s towards a sound characterized by cohesion of ensemble. To Dexter, that direction was leading Schantz into a renaissance in organ building an effort that he was determined to join. He wrote to Victor Schantz, the fourth generation of his family to head the company. Dexter wrote again and again and again. That was to be the end of Daphne Dexter s work at the Hotchkiss School, a topflight boarding school in Connecticut; Schantz finally offered her husband a position in Orrville. I m not sure, Dexter says, that Victor Schantz was convinced of my qualifications or just got tired of writing back to me. Dexter started at Schantz as a voicer, the person who manipulates the parts of a pipe: the foot, the toe (where the air enters), the face, the lip, the body. I was a flue voicer, he explains. I voiced pipes whose method of making sound is similar to blowing across the top of a soda bottle to set the air inside resonating. He also worked as a tonal finisher s assistant, sitting among the pipes and making adjustments as the person at the console decided how it all should sound. Now he is the person at the console, the person who controls the sound.

Dexter, two other vice presidents (Timothy Mann and Eric Gastier), and Victor Schantz compose the management team of a company that employs pipe makers, woodworkers, metal workers, assemblers, voicers, and even computer experts. Much of an organ is made the same way it has been for centuries, Dexter explains, but now a computer in the console tells it how to work. All four members of Schantz s management team are church musicians a desirable background, given that most of the dozen or more organs Schantz builds each year are for churches. Other commissions come from universities and concert halls. In fact, one of Schantz s most renowned achievements came into being at Cleveland s Severance Hall, hailed as one of the world s most beautiful concert halls, home of the Cleveland Orchestra, and a spectacular place, Dexter says, to hear music of any genre. The company s task there was not to build an instrument but to conduct a $2-million restoration of the hall s E.M. Skinner organ, considered one of the finest concert organs ever built. Silent since 1976, the restored organ made its debut with the Cleveland Orchestra in January 2001. Every time that organ is used, a member of the Schantz staff is there, Dexter said, just in case the organ decides to be capricious as a 75-year-old instrument can be. Only once has action been needed. Working in academia can also be a fun challenge, as Dexter puts it. Among his more recent projects was directing an update and revoicing of the first Schantz instrument he encountered, the organ at Carroll College. Less typical, he says, are institutions such as Capital University that want to build a pipe organ from scratch a project that can take several years and cost millions of dollars. In a time when many institutions are closing organ departments, he says, Capital s investment seems all the more significant. Years of experience have enabled Dexter to make the necessary adjustments as he tunes Capital s new organ. (Photo by Jo McCulty) Dexter says that Capital, like many other Lutheran colleges, has a proud tradition of singing. The school desired its organ to partner with a number of choral as well as instrumental ensembles. Capital s music curriculum also includes organ classes, but those musicians previously had to train on electronic instruments. As Capital organ instructor Janet Linker told Capital s alumni magazine, the new pipe organ fills both a musical and theological void. Organ and sacred music are an integral part of our mission, to me, she said. For enabling him to create an instrument that can meet those kinds of standards and demands, Dexter credits his college education. I can t imagine doing this without an academic foundation, he says. I can t imagine doing it without knowing what kind of organ Bach would have known, the kind of sounds he would have heard. It is important to know this not to build an organ that would have existed then but to build an organ that can play Bach. Dexter admits, however, that it has taken him 20 years of experience to grasp the whole concept of a liberal arts education. Now he sees the value of clear expression and critical thinking, of being able to integrate fields of knowledge. He can see now why Illinois Wesleyan music professor Robert Donalson forced his students to consider questions such as how Beethoven s life and times would influence him to write his symphonies. Dexter also remembers the late IWU music professor and choral conductor David Nott, who taught me how to

sing and to conduct choirs. I used that from the day I walked out of Illinois Wesleyan and I use it today. What I do is similar to conducting a choir; he was a master at blending sound. And he remembers Nott for more than teaching about voice, for a role-up-your-sleeves-and-get-dirty approach to his hobby of collecting cars. Even more germane to Dexter s future career choice was his interaction with David Gehrenbeck, who was his primary organ instructor at Illinois Wesleyan. Gehrenbeck was himself a consultant to churches looking to commission new pipe organs and often brought Dexter along with him to various organ committee meetings and inspections of new organs around Central Illinois. Dr. Gehrenbeck s kind demeanor and skillful negotiations between organ builder and client would be something I came to value in my own career, Dexter says. At this stage in his career, Dexter knows an immense amount about music and material and sound. He knows lots of facts and innumerable details, but he also knows of blending and connecting and creating a whole. The Schantz Web site talks of building an organ that has the power and character to thrill and inspire. And to thrill and inspire, one must capture the spirit of those who have created the world s great music, not just dryly preserve their works. If someone were to perform a recital consisting entirely of Bach s organ works in a single afternoon, he says, I could intellectually appreciate that. But I wouldn t want any more than the man in the moon to sit through it nor would most people, I suspect. Such an attitude may be a reason why at Capital, one of the opening concerts for the new organ was scheduled to be Todd Wilson, the curator of the organ at Severance Hall, improvising to a showing of the silent film Phantom of the Opera. Builder-of-organs, husband-of-daphne, father-of-lindsay-and-polly, collector-of-fire-trucks, lover-ofwondrous-machines Jeffrey Dexter thought that selection was a good choice: I want people to feel the emotion and have fun.