Kimberly Marshall of Arizona State University performs a recital on the UW’s Littlefield Organ.
PROGRAM
Milestones of German Organ Music
Toccata VII, Apparatus Musico-Organisticus.........................Georg Muffat (1653-1704)
Ciacona in E minor, BuxWV 160..............................................Dieterich Buxtehude (1637-1707)
Hoe losteleck.............................................................................Arnolt Schlick (1460-1521)
Maria zart
Ascendo ad Patrem Meum
Praeambulum super mi..........................................................Buxheimer Orgelbuch c1455
Redeuntes in mi
Passacaglia from Organ Sonata 8, op. 132...........................Josef Rheinberger (1839-1901)
Hoppertanz..............................................................................Johannes Weck (c.1492-1536)
Mit ganczem Willen wünsch ich dir.....................................Lochamer Liederbuch c1450
Kochersperger Spanieler.......................................................Hans Kotter (c.485-1541)
Passacaglia in C minor, BWV 582.........................................Johann Sebastian Bach (1685-1750)
ARTIST BIO
Kimberly Marshall is known worldwide for her compelling programs and presentations of organ music. She is an accomplished teacher, giving lectures and master classes worldwide. She currently holds the Patricia and Leonard Goldman Endowed Professorship in Organ at Arizona State University, having previously held positions at Stanford University and the Royal Academy of Music, London. Winner of the Saint Albans International Organ Playing Competition in 1985, Dr. Marshall has been a recitalist, workshop leader and adjudicator at 8 National Conventions of the American Guild of Organists. In the past three years, she has been on juries for international organ competitions in Italy, the Netherlands and the US.
Acclaimed as a specialist in early music, Kimberly Marshall has performed on many of the most significant historical organs in Europe. Her latest CD, A Recital in Handel’s Parish Church, features secular music by Bach and Handel on the new Richards-Fowkes organ at St. George’s, Hanover Square, London.