June 2018Treasurer’s Corner

June 2018
Treasurer’s Corner

Hello.

Today I am writing my last report as Treasurer of our Chapter! I’ve spent 3 years in the role and will be transitioning my responsibilities to Richard Spears.  I’ve enjoyed my role on the Board, first as a member and then as the Treasurer.  I’ve met some fabulous people that I am pleased to call my friends.

In May we received membership renewals from Bryon Anderson, Eileen Baumgarten, Richard Clemmitt, Steve Folkers, Alan Hommerding, James Janossy, Christine Kraemer, Lillian Ng, and Derek Nickels.  We thank Alan, James, and Derek for their contributions to our North Shore Chapter.  Total income for the month was $595.00.

In May I payed $412 for 5 months of our Webmaster support and $139 for expenses for the 60th anniversary banquet.

Our ending balances are:

Checking Account    $3,052.90

Scholarship Fund     $5,517.64

Savings Account      $22,522.73

Total                           $31,106.93

Have a great summer and I look forward to seeing you at events for the coming year!

Laurie Stivers headshot

Laurie Stivers

CIOA Service Playing Skills

 

Online Classes In Service Playing Skills

Chicago International Organ Academy (CIOA) will launch a new series of practical classes this August that are designed to assist organists of all levels in improving their service playing skills and in preparing for AGO certification exams.

As a pioneer in high-level instruction delivered online and in person, CIOA will begin to offer these options for one-hour weekly classes in:

Transposition — Hymn-Playing — Anthem, Solo, and Psalm Accompaniment — Sight-Reading — Organ Repertoire — Harmonizing Melodies — Modulation — Improvisation — Musicianship — Score Reading — Figured Bass — Adapting Piano Accompaniments to the Organ

For a complete schedule and to register, please visit the SPS Classes page on the CIOA website. Every student, whether attending in person or online, will have opportunities to ask questions and to interact with the instructor and other students for immediate, live feedback and personalized help.
Students may attend in person at 77 W. Washington St., Chicago, IL, or online via video conference.

Please share this information with your colleagues and constituents so they will know about this new resource for professional development and certification exam preparation.

Please direct all questions to info@cioa.global or call 773-309-1769.

May 2018Dean’s ColumnLooking Back, Looking Ahead

May 2018
Dean’s Column
Looking Back, Looking Ahead

NSAGO Dean Andrea Handley

Andrea Handley

What a magnificent final anniversary celebration we had this past Sunday, first with a dean’s recital at First Presbyterian Church of Evanston and then a delightful banquet and program at the Crystal Ballroom in Evanston. Please make sure to scroll down to read a detailed review and see pictures of the event. The program included a video presentation of our chapter’s history, which can be viewed at this link: https://youtu.be/t0RtiE5RVrE

But wait, there’s more! Please plan on joining us on Saturday, June 2 at 5pm for our final program of the year, which will be a chapter picnic being hosted by our new dean, Judy Kohl, at her home in Lake Forest. (630 S. Green Bay Rd, Lake Forest, IL 60045) It will be a great time to bask in the memories of our year of celebrations and to look ahead to next season.

And there is also life after the 60th anniversary!  We have been busy planning our next season’s events, and in our next issue will roll out some great programs we have planned, including a hymn festival, and two collaborative recitals with the Chicago Chapter featuring recitalists Olivier Latry and Marie Rubis Bauer.

Thanks to all who attended on Sunday, and I look forward to seeing many of you on June 2!

Andrea Handley, Dean

 

May 2018Inspiration from Paris, Riverside, and Evanston

May 2018
Inspiration from Paris, Riverside, and Evanston

David Lornson

I’ll let you in on a little secret:  my greatest joy as an organist is playing hymns.  To be sure, I enjoy the repertoire of our    instrument, but I also find the experience of leading a choir and congregation in the great hymns of the church to be a   pleasure both gratifying and profound.  

My fascination with hymns began even before I became a church organist at age 13.  For me, it was a “good Sunday” at my childhood church when at least two hymns were fun to sing.  After completing a bachelor’s degree in organ performance from Lawrence University Conservatory of Music (Appleton, WI), I studied in Paris.  There, I enjoyed the international experience of hearing the congregation of Saint-Séverin sing stanzas of the hymn tune Lobe Den Herren (Praise to the Lord) in three languages (French, German, English) simultaneously with support from the clear colors of that Kern organ. 

I returned to the United States in 1984, started my career as Music Director at the First Congregational Church of Evanston, and began graduate studies in organ and sacred music at Northwestern University.   That December, I also attended the Service of Lessons and Carols at St. Luke’s, Evanston.  I remember being musically overwhelmed at the end of the first stanza of the first hymn, “Hark! A Thrilling Voice is Sounding” (Merton) – and the service had only begun!  What a glorious experience hearing that Skinner organ, the Pitzen Brass Ensemble, and Richard Webster’s hymn arrangements during that service.    

Soon afterwards, I began serving on the board of the North Shore AGO; and during my time as sub-dean, we observed our chapter’s 40th anniversary. For this event, we invited founding members to participate in a celebration at First Methodist, Evanston.  Austin Lovelace shared his wit and entertained us with the program “Hymns Jesus Would Have Hated.”  Who knew there were so many gems to share, including:  “The bells of hell go ting-a-ling-a-ling for you but not for me.  O death where is thy sting-a-ling-a-ling, O grave thy victory?”   Fred Swann concluded that program by leading an elegant setting of the hymn “When In Our Music God is Glorified” (Engelberg) on that church’s Austin organ. 

During the Centennial Conventional of the AGO in New York City, Fred Swann played a wonderful recital on the large Aeolian-Skinner organ at The Riverside Church.  As an encore, he led us in a thrilling setting of the hymn “Our God, Our Help in Ages Past” (St. Anne) which included an interlude before the final stanza.  His improvisation incorporated excerpts from the Bach/Fox setting “Come Sweet Death” which he played earlier on the recital. I hoped at that moment that my playing would inspire my congregation in the same way that I was inspired during the singing of this hymn.   

Reflecting on 34 years as Music Director at the First Congregational Church, many wonderful memories come to mind, including these two events.  One Sunday after the postlude, I was greeted by two visitors who, as it turned out, were staff members at The Riverside Church.  They inquired specifically about the arrangement of “God of Grace” (Cwm Rhondda) we sang that morning. They wanted to use this hymn setting during their Fall homecoming service, since that hymn text was written by Riverside’s founding minister.  I was happy to send the setting which I had composed, and was pleased to receive a note from John Walker after the service which included my arrangement.  Another Sunday morning before going upstairs to play the prelude, I was adjusting my choir robe and stole while a long-time church member was standing near and drying his hands.  He turned and asked rather seriously, “How are we supposed to sing those hymns….with the choir, the organ, and those descants? How are we supposed to sing with tears in our eyes?”  I could only acknowledge with a smile and a gentle nod; and in that moment, I was gratified for the affirmation of my greatest joy fulfilled at the First Congregational Church of Evanston.  

David Lornson

May 2018
Treasurer’s Corner

Happy May!

I am delighted to report that Mildred Johnson, Rich Spears, and Richard Spantikow have joined us for another year.  We thank Rich and Richard for their contributions to our Chapter.

In addition to receiving membership monies, we also received $1,640 in reservations for the 60th anniversary banquet.  And in anticipation of expenses, I moved $500 from the savings account into the checking account.

Expenditures in April were $1,900 for postage and dinner expense tied to our 60th anniversary.  We also spent $85 on “office expenses” for storage containers, file folders, etc.

As a part of our 60th celebration, our chapter made a $250 gift to The Margaret McElwain Kemper Music ministry Scholarship fund in recognition and appreciate for Maggie’s contributions to both National and our chapter.

Here is a summary of our accounts:

Checking                $3,009.06

Scholarship             $5,317.50

Savings                  $22,522.16

Total                      $33,019.33

Laurie Stivers headshot

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Laurie Stivers, Treasurer