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| Christopher Herrick |
Tuscaloosa, Ala. – The University of Alabama’s Church
Music Conference will feature Christopher Herrick, international
concert organist and lecturer, and faculty from the UA School
of Music, Samford University and the University of Southern
Mississippi at UA’s Moody Music Building on Jan. 29.
Now in its second year, the conference attracts choir members
and directors, hand bell players and directors, organists, clergy
members and persons with a church music concentration interested
in improving their skills for church ministry.
Dr. Faythe Freese, associate professor of music at UA, says, “We
are lucky to have Christopher Herrick, the foremost English organist
and leading interpreter of Bach’s organ music.”
Freese said this is an excellent opportunity for exchange of ideas
with colleagues. The Church Music Conference is a one-of-a-kind
conference in our area and a great opportunity to grow and refresh,
she said.
Mid-winter is a time when people choose their music for Lent,
said Freese. “The conference will have freshly published
music – the latest and newest that is scheduled for publication
later this spring.”
During the conference the following will be offered: organ, vocal,
choral conducting master classes, vocal health and hymnody workshops,
choral reading, children’s choirs and hand bell sessions.
Early bird conference registration through Jan. 21 is suggested
to assure workshop choices. The registration fee is $50 and includes
a boxed lunch. The conference cannot guarantee choral music or
lunches for attendees registering after Jan. 21. Open registration
at the door costs $60 and will begin at 8:30 a.m. on Jan. 29. The
first session begins at 9 a.m.
Herrick will lecture and perform “The Free Works of J.S.
Bach,” an all Bach concert at 3:30 p.m. on the 87-rank Holtkamp
organ in the concert hall of the Moody Music Building.
Christopher Herrick has been associated with some of Great Britain’s
finest musical establishments. As a boy, he sang in the choir of
St. Paul’s Cathedral in London, England and later returned
to be assistant organist there.
For 10 years he was organist at Westminster Abbey. During that
period, he played for many royal and state occasions and in Westminster
Abbey, alone, gave more than 200 recitals. He earned a music degree
from Oxford University and was awarded a post-graduate scholarship
for further study at the Royal College of Music in London.
Since 1984, Herrick has devoted himself entirely to recital, recording
and broadcasting. He performs both as a soloist and with orchestras
throughout the world. During the 1998 Lincoln Center Festival in
New York City, Herrick performed the complete organ works of J.S.
Bach in 14 consecutive daily recitals.
He has recorded the complete works of Bach, as well as a great
variety of other disks on the Hyperion label. In addition to his
career as a concert and recording artist, Herrick now conducts
two, 100-member London church choirs which regularly perform the
major choral literature in important London venues.
For registration, contact Dr. Faythe Freese at 205/348-3329, or
visit the UA organ department website for the complete conference
schedule at http://www.music.ua.edu/organ/events/
The College of Arts and Sciences is the University’s largest
division and the largest public liberal arts college in the state
with 6,600 students and 360 faculty. Students from the college
have won numerous national awards including Rhodes Scholarships,
Goldwater Scholarships, and memberships on the “USA Today” Academic
All American Team.
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