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Caruth Auditorium Fisk Organ
To play the organ is a challenge under any circumstance. Manipulating all of those keyboards and pedals and buttons really keeps you on the edge. Can you imagine what must it be like to play the organ in competition? Well, that’s more pressure than I could tolerate, but on our next Pipedreams program you’ll hear nine young artists put it on the line (for prizes of up to $30,000) and hardly bat an eye.
From the delicate tracery of a Bach Trio to the plangent passion of a contemporary toccata, young musicians go for the gold at the world’s most beneficent battle for organists. From the Caruth Auditorium and the Meyerson Symphony Center, it’s the Dallas International Organ Competition 2000, Part One, this week on Pipedreams.
BUXTEHUDE: Toccata in d –Martin Welzel, organ (1993 Fisk/Caruth Auditorium, Southern Methodist University)
BACH: Trio Sonata No. 2 in c, S. 526 –Gunther Rost, Martin Welzel, Joel Bacon and Jeremy Joseph, organ (Fisk/SMU)
HOWELLS: Rhapsody, Op. 17, no. 2 –Joel Bacon, organ (Fisk/SMU)
BACH: Trio Sonata No. 5 in C, S. 529 –Tom Trenney, Yukiko Jojima, Teilhard Scott, organ (Fisk/SMU)
GRIGNY: Pange lingua (3 verses) -James Diaz, Bradley Welch, organ (1992 Fisk/Meyerson Symphony Center)
GUILLOU: Toccata –Gunther Rost, organ (Fisk/Meyerson)
Held every three years and in its second running in March 2000, the Dallas International Competition offers the largest dollar awards of any organ competition in the world. For further information, including biographies of winners and background of the competition, contact The Dallas Symphony Orchestra. For information concerning the two featured instruments, link to C. B. Fisk.