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Littlefield Organ Series: Halloween Organ Concert

Sunday, October 28, 2018 - 7:30pm
FREE
  • Halloween Organ Concert Witch

Students of Carole Terry perform spooky organ classics—including Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor—on the UW’s Littlefield Organ.

PROGRAM

Toccata and Fugue in d minor, BWV 565.................................................. J. S. Bach (1685-1750)

Carole Terry

from 24 Pieces in Free Style: “Scherzetto” ...........................................Louis Vierne (1870-1937)

Natalie Bartels

Allegro, Chorale, and Fugue...................................................... Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847)

Samuel Libra

from Pictures at an Exhibition: “The Old Castle” ..................... Modest Mussorgsky (1837-1881)

Natasha Stephensen

Danse Macabre ....................................................................... Camille Saint-Saëns (1835-1921)

Logan Hamilton & Samuel Libra

from Symphony No. 6, Op. 59: “Scherzo” ...................................................................... L. Vierne

Wyatt Smith

Improvisation on a theme by Charlie Clouser ...................................... Charlie Clouser (b. 1963)

Logan Hamilton

Introduction, Scherzo, and Fugue on B-E-A-T-E .................................. Toni Zahnbrecher (b. 1959)

Andrew Koch


 

Carole Terry's career as a renowned performer and pedagogue of the organ and harpsichord has taken her to many cities and universities throughout the United States, Europe, and the Far East. Especially known for her performances and recordings of German Romantic music, she is also an expert on the physiology of keyboard performance -- the subject of her forthcoming academic work.

As a performer and master teacher, Terry participated in the Bamboo Organ Festival, in Manila, Philippines, as well as the Attersee Barock Akademie, Schleswig-Holstein Musik Festival, in Lübeck, Germany. She has also been involved in various summer academies, such as the International Summer School for Young Organists in Oundle, Great Britain and the Mount Royal College Organ Academy and International Summer School in Calgary, Canada. A frequent judge for competitions, Terry has adjudicated the prestigious International Musachino Organ Competition in Tokyo and in 2003, the Third Mikael Tariverdiev International Organ Competition.

In the United States, Terry has participated in conferences and seminars such as the San Anselmo Organ Festival, The Historical Organ in America (Arizona), the Oregon Bach Festival, and the Montreat Festival of Worship and Music (North Carolina). She has been a featured recitalist at many conventions of the American Guild of Organists.

As Resident Organist and Curator for the Seattle Symphony from 2000 to 2003, Terry helped inaugurate the new C.B. Fisk organ in Seattle's acclaimed Benaroya Hall, playing many solo concerti, in addition to monumental works for organ and orchestra. In 2004, she was honored to be the first American organist to perform in Perm, Russian Federation, on the new Glatter-Götz Organ of the Perm Concert Hall. In 2006, Terry performed on the newly installed Wolff organ in Christ Church Cathedral, Victoria, B.C., as part of an international conference sponsored by the Westfield Center for Keyboard Studies and Christ Church Cathedral.Her recent convention and concert appearances include the American Guild of Organists Pedagogy Conference in Knoxville, Tennessee; the McGill Summer Organ Academy in Montreal; and recitals in San Francisco, Seattle, and New York. Terry's recordings include Brombaugh Organs of the Northwest and The Complete Organ Works of Johannes Brahms (based on the Henle edition) for the Musical Heritage label. As a harpsichordist, she recorded works of Albright, Persichetti, Cowell, and Rorem for CRI, and baroque chamber music for Crystal Records (with violist Yitzhak Schotten). Her most recent recording, Carole Terry in Schwerin, is a two-CD set of German romantic organ music recorded on the notable 1871 Ladegast organ at Schwerin Cathedral, Germany.

Terry served as Professor of Organ and Harpsichord at the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle for forty years, retiring in 2019. She is on the Board of Governors of The Westfield Center for Keyboard Studies, a national resource for the advancement of keyboard music, and chairs the Center's Concert Scholar Committee. As a member of the College of Mentors at The John Ernest Foundation, her role is to promote the enrichment of young organ scholars, organ performances, and the encouragement of organ studies.

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