Raven OAR-983
Jon Gillock plays the 111-rank Pascal Quoirin pipe organ built at Grace Episcopal Church, Manhattan, in 2011 in three works of Olivier Messiaen, for whose music the organ is optimized. The works: Prelude, Mass for Pentecost, and The Ascension.
An Invitation to a Musical and Spiritual Journey
I
invite you to join me in a musical-spiritual journey, to meditate with
Messiaen (and me) on the religious texts that he chose and which
inspired him to compose these works. Although the inspiration for this
music definitely comes from Catholic-Christian teachings, I also believe
that through the universal language of music Messiaen’s music
transcends this and also speaks of a universal spiritual truth. As with
any great work of art, it can be interpreted on many different levels: I
hope that each of you will be able to find the proper way for it to
speak to you.
It is also interesting to remember these words of
Messiaen himself regarding his music: “I’m a Christian . . . and I think
that in the present age of ecumenism - and, furthermore, in every era -
we shouldn’t attach too much importance to religious differences.
Everyone - Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant Christians, Israelites,
even Buddhists - is seeking God, finding God. My work is addressed to
all who believe - and also to all others.”
Jon Gillock
Prélude, posthumous
A
work probably from the early 1930s, this piece was found “sleeping in a
box” by Yvonne Loriod in 1997. I gave the American premiere in 1999
from that manuscript. In 2002, it was published by Éditions Musicales
Alphonse Leduc, Paris. It is a piece organized in four sections: an
introduction, exposition of two themes, a large developmental section
building to a tremendous climax, and an epilogue. After a short
introduction in which we are immediately placed in a calm,
impressionistic atmosphere, the two themes of the piece are presented,
almost simultaneously, in a slow tempo. Mysteriously, the hands begin
with the first theme. When the pedal enters, it is already stating the
second theme. The following section, in a moderate tempo, delicately and
impressionistically develops both themes alternatively. All this comes
to rest on a pedal point. From this point onward the second theme
dominates in a gradual build-up, becoming more and more urgent, to full
organ and a crushing, triumphant climax in which the first theme
reappears in octaves and in augmentation, punctuated by tremendous
chords. After a pause, the epilogue briefly and simply restates both
themes: the first, again calm and gentle, now in canon; the second,
unaccompanied, pianissimo, haunting, far away, ending on the glowing
harmony of E-major.
Messe de la Pentecôte, 1950
Messiaen
himself gave the first performance of his Messe de la Pentecôte at La
Trinité on Pentecost Sunday, May 13, 1951, during a low Mass, a Mass in
which the organ accompanies the main actions of 4the service rather than
participating in the ordinary (Kyrie, Gloria, Credo, Sanctus, Agnus
Dei). Thus, the five movements of this work accompany the entry of the
priests, the offertory, the consecration of the bread and wine, the
communion, and the departure of the priests. The Day of Pentecost (the
actual date changes every year according to when Easter falls) is the
second Sunday after the Ascension. It is the feast commemorating the day
that the apostles received the power of the Holy Spirit (the third
person of the Trinity).
The piece unites several elements that had
absorbed Messiaen during the preceding years: plainsong, birdsong,
rhythm (including both Greek and Indian), and even the love theme from
Turangalîla (found in Movement IV, Communion). This piece has the added
distinction of being a summary of Messiaen’s ideas on improvisation for
the preceding twenty years. From Conversations with Olivier Messiaen by
Claude Samuel (1967), Messiaen says, “These inspirations went on for a
long time, until the day I realized that they tired me out and that I
was emptying all my substance into them. I then wrote the Messe de la
Pentecôte which is a resume of all my collected
improvisations...moreover, after writing this piece, I’ve never
improvised.” That statement remained mainly true for the rest of his
career, except for the improvised music necessary during the course of
services at La Trinité and at least one notable exception, the one
hudredth anniversary celebration of La Trinité in 1967, in which the
main ideas for Méditations sur le Mystère de la Sainte Trinité were
improvised.
L’Ascension, 1933
Shortly
after Messiaen’s arrival as Organiste du Grand Orgue at La Trinité in
1931, the organ underwent a restoration by the firm
Pleyel-Cavaillé-Coll. The action was completely renovated, the pipes
were cleaned, the existing stops were revoiced, the 4’ flutes of the
Swell and Great were moved from their respective reed divisions to their
foundation divisions, the Positif was given a Barker machine, a 16’
coupler, and an “introduction pedal,” and seven new stops were added: to
the Swell - Bourdon 16’, Cymbale III, Nazard 2’, and to the Positif -
Principal 8’, Cor de Nuit 8’, Nazard 2’, and Tierce 1’.
Although The
Ascension was performed by Messiaen himself at the inauguration of the
“new” organ on May 28, 1935, none of these new stops are featured in
this work. Messiaen shared the program with Marcel Dupré, his only organ
teacher, who played, among works by other composers, Messiaen’s Le
Banquet Céleste, which, of course, featured the new Nazard stop of the
Positif.
While this is Messiaen’s first suite for the organ, it is
practically a transcription of the orchestral version of the same piece
composed in 1932, with the exception of the third movement which is
completely new. Always on Thursday, the Feast of the Ascension is
celebrated forty days after Easter, the period in which Christ
reappeared to his apostles after his resurrection teaching them about
the kingdom of God. The Ascension is his farewell to earth.
Jon Gillock
On
January 15, 1974, Jon Gillock gave the New York premiere of Olivier
Messiaen’s Méditations sur le Mystère de la Sainte Trinité at The Church
of the Ascension. That single performance launched his career as a
concert artist almost over night, giving performances of this work from
coast to coast. The following year, he gave the first New York
performance of Messiaen’s complete works for organ (the Livre du Saint
Sacrement had not yet been written) in a series of five concerts. Soon
afterward, he met Messiaen who invited Gillock to visit him in Paris. In
1977, Gillock went to Paris to study with his maître at the Paris
Conservatory.
In 1978, Gillock performed the Méditations in the
presence of the composer at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, New
York, in a concert honoring Messiaen’s 70th birthday. This performance
cemented a long friendship between the two. Messiaen later wrote to
Gillock about this performance:
Again I remember with emotion
your marvelous performance of my Méditations sur le Mystère de la
Sainte Trinité in New York . . . I was infinitely touched by your
wonderful interpretation: registration, touch, understanding — all were
ideally beautiful. You will never know how much I admired your playing.
Again thank you and bravo!!!
Later, in Claude Samuel’s 1986 book, Entretiens Avec Olivier Messiaen, Messiaen stated:
Certain ones [organists] play it better than me . . . there is the excellent American organist Jon Gillock in New York . . .
Press
and public alike acclaim American organist Jon Gillock for his
sensitive and moving performances. He is especially fond of performing
the “French spiritual repertoire.” This includes the music of such
composers as François Couperin, Maurice Duruflé, Nicolas de Grigny,
César Franck, Charles Tournemire, Louis Vierne, and, of course, Olivier
Messiaen and Johann Sebastian Bach.
Jon Gillock earned the BM and MM
degrees at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville and the DMA at The
Juilliard School in New York City. In addition to Messiaen, other
important teachers were Weldon Marshall, John Cowell, and Vernon de Tar.
Gillock
is especially known for his premieres of several of Messiaen’s works in
New York City, across the United States, and in Japan. In addition to
the first New York performance in 1975, he also gave the first Japan
performance, in 2008 in Tokyo, of Messiaen’s complete organ works. He
also gave many performances of Livre du Saint Sacrement from the
composer’s manuscript before it was published. During 2008, he
celebrated Messiaen’s centenary around the world with concerts,
masterclasses, and lectures. He has also given many concerts of
Messiaen’s music in Paris at Eglise de la Sainte-Trinité, where
Messiaen was the organist. His book, Performing Messiaen’s Organ Music:
66 Masterclasses, was published by Indiana University Press in 2010. It
has been acclaimed internationally for its importance among writings
about these works.
Jon Gillock has established an international
career not only as a performer but also as a master teacher. Now a
resident of Paris, he has been a member of the organ faculties of both
The Juilliard School and the Manhattan School of Music, and Montclair
State University in Upper Montclair, New Jersey. From 2004 through 2009,
he participated as Artist Faculty with Yuko Hayashi in the Boston Organ
Academy. From 2011 to 2013, he served on the faculty, along with Dennis
Keene, in the Ascension Organ Academy at The Church of the Ascension.
He has also served as a jury member of international organ competitions.
Jon
Gillock was named International Performer of the Year, 1999-2000, by
the New York City Chapter of the American Guild of Organists. Among the
awards he has received for his recordings are the Diapason d’Or and the
10 de Répertoire in France and the Preis der Deutschen Schallplatten
Kritik in Germany. He is a member of the Artistic Committee of the
Association Grand Orgue Trinité Messiaen, Eglise de la Sainte-Trinité,
Paris.
In 2011, Gillock began recording Messiaen’s complete organ
works on the Quoirin organ at The Church of the Ascension, the ideal
organ for this project, specifically designed to play Messiaen. This
album, Prélude, Messe de la Pentecôte, and L’Ascension, is the third in
this series. Méditations sur le Mystère de la Sainte Trinité and Livre
du Saint Sacrement are the first and second. Other albums will appear on
the Raven label as they are completed.
The Manton Memorial Organ built by Pascal Quoirin, Saint-Didier, France (2011)
The Church of the Ascension, New York, New York
Mechanical action with 3-manual console, Electric action with 4-manual console
*available solely on the electric console
GRAND-ORGUE Man. 1, 61 notes
16 Montre
16 Bourdon
8 Montre
8* Second (large Cavaillé-Coll-style Montre)
8 Flûte traversière
8 Bourdon
8 Gambe
5-1/3 Gros Nasard
4 Prestant
4 *Second (large Cavaillé-Coll-style Prestant)
4 Flûte ouverte
3-3/5 Grosse Tierce
2-2/3 Quinte
2-2/3 Nasard
2 Doublette
2 Flûte
II Grande Fourniture
IV Fourniture
II ICymbale
VII Cornet MC
16 Bombarde
8 1ère Trompette
8 2ème Trompette (chamade)
4 Clairon
Grand-Orgue *16 *4 *Unison
Tremblant
8 Trompette harmonique en chamade (Récit)
POSITIF Man. 2, 61 notes
16 Quintaton
8 Montre
8 Flûte conique
8 Bourdon
8 Salicional
4 Prestant
4 Flûte conique
2-2/3 Nasard
2 Doublette
2 Quarte de Nasard
1-3/5 Tierce
1-1/3 Larigot
1 Flageolet
IV Fourniture
III Cymbale
16 Basson
8 Trompette
4 Clairon
8 Cromorne
Positif *16 *4 *Unison
Tremblant
8 *Trompette harmonique en chamade (Récit)
RECIT-ECHO (expressif) Man. 3 mechanical console; Man. 4 electric console, 61 notes
8 Bourdon
4 Flûte allemande
2-2/3 Nasard
2 Flûte
1-3/5 Tierce
8 Trompette
8 Hautbois
8 Voix humaine
8 Basson (Cor anglais)
8 Clarinette
Récit-Echo *16 *4 *Unison
Tremblant
8* Trompette harmonique en chamade (Récit)
GRAND-RECIT EXPRESSIF
Man. 3 electric console only, 61 nts
16 *Bourdon
8 *Principal
8 *Flûte harmonique
8 *Bourdon
8 *Gambe
8 *Voix céleste
8 *Aéoline
8*Aéoline céleste
4 *Prestant
4 *Flûte octaviante
2-2/3 *Nasard harmonique
2 *Octavin
1-3/5 *Tierce harmonique
V *Plein Jeu
III *Sur Cymbale
16 *Basson
8 *Trompette harmonique
4 *Clairon harmonique
8 *Basson Hautbois
8 *Voix humaine
Récit *16 *4 *Unison
*Tremblant
8 *Trompette harmonique en chamade
PEDALE 32 notes
32 Bourdon
16 Flûte
16 Principal
16 Bourdon (ext. 32)
16 *Petit Bourdon (Récit)
10-2/3 Grande Quinte
8 Flûte (ext. 16)
8 Violoncelle (ext. 16 Prin.)
8 Bourdon
6-2/5 Grande Tierce
5-1/3 Quinte (ext. 10)
4 Prestant
4 Flûte (ext. 8 Bour.)
3-1/5 Tierce (ext. 6)
2-2/3 Quinzième (ext. 4 Prestant)
IV Plein Jeu
32 Bombarde
16 Bombarde (ext. 32)
16 Basson (Schnitger-type Posaune)
8 Trompette
8 Basson (ext. 16)
4 Clairon (ext. 8 Trompette)
8 *Trompette harmonique en chamade (Récit)
Couplers to Pedal
Tirasse G.O. 8 (thumb, toe) *4
Tirasse Pos. 8 *4
Tirasse Réc. *8 *4
Tirasse Echo 8 *4
Couplers to Grand Orgue
Positif G.O. *16 8 *4
Récit G.O. *16 *8 *4
Echo G.O. *16 8 *4
Couplers to Positif
Récit Pos *16 *8 *4
Echo Pos *16 8 *4
Accessories
Rossignol
*Cloches (Tower Bells)
Expression Pedals
Récit-Echo
*Grand-Récit Chancel Shades
*Grand-Récit Nave Shades
*Crescendo & Annuler toe stud
*Récit Boxes II/I
Combinations
10 General Pistons, both consoles, thumb & toe
*8 Pistons, Grand-Récit, thumb
*5 Pistons other divisions
Piston Sequencer: Previous, Next Pistons in several locations
General Cancel
Tutti