Neal Campbell – Richard Wayne Dirksen: a Centennial Retrospective
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1 I. Introduction the Worldwide Anglican Communion Is a Collection
I. Introduction The worldwide Anglican Communion is a collection of National Churches with historical roots in the Church of England and in union with the Archbishop of Canterbury. Anglicanism is often defined by a number of characteristics that compose a type of “Anglican ethos” or fundamental character.1 One of the most notable characteristics is the rich musical tradition. In his history of the development of this ethos, the Anglican cleric Frederick Quinn stated that "music remained one of the major contributors to creating a distinctly Anglican ethos" into the twentieth century.2 This is not a tradition of music that evolved in a linear way, but as Quinn says, “more like tracing the strands of a tapestry.”3 The Church of England experienced a great revival of sacred music from the mid nineteenth century forward. Choral establishments were bolstered, musical standards raised, and new compositions enriched Anglican liturgies with beauty, especially in the great Cathedrals and Collegiate Chapels and Churches. Composers such as Stanford, Vaughan-Williams, Britten, and Howells wrote music that has endured in Anglicanism and beyond. During this same period in the United Sates, the Protestant Episcopal Church which is the American branch of the Anglican Communion, also experienced a building and development of programs at many churches including St. Thomas and St. John the Divine in New York City, Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, and the National Cathedral in Washington DC. These Anglican musical establishments were firmly rooted in the musical patrimony they inherited from the Church of England. However, they were no mere slavish copies of British choral 1 Frederick Quinn, To be a Pilgrim: The Anglican Ethos in History (New York: Crossroad, 2001), 3. -
Four Evening Service Settings of Joel Martinson: an American's Contribution to Anglican Evensong Repertoire
FOUR EVENING SERVICE SETTINGS OF JOEL MARTINSON: AN AMERICAN’S CONTRIBUTION TO ANGLICAN EVENSONG REPERTOIRE Gary Adrian Gordon, B.M.E., M.M. Dissertation Prepared for the Degree of DOCTOR OF MUSICAL ARTS UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS May 2019 APPROVED: Richard Sparks, Major Professor and Chair of the Division of Conducting and Ensembles Jesse Eschbach, Committee Member Felix Olschofka, Committee Member and Interim Director of Graduate Studies in the College of Music John Richmond, Dean of the College of Music Victor Prybutok, Dean of the Toulouse Graduate School Gordon, Gary Adrian. Four Evening Service Settings of Joel Martinson: An American’s Contribution to Anglican Evensong Repertoire. Doctor of Musical Arts (Performance), May 2019, 123 pp., 2 tables, 38 musical examples, 5 appendices, bibliography, 46 titles. The Evening Service settings of great British composers like Charles Stanford, A. Herbert Brewer, Charles Wood and Herbert Howells are well known and performed often throughout the world. However, little is known about the body of settings created by American composers. There are currently approximately 75 American composers dating from 1890 to the present, with Evening Service settings in print. Joel Martinson, based in Dallas, Texas, is an American composer, church musician, concert organist, and presenter. Although Martinson has composed four Evening Service settings (Evening Service for the St. Mark’s School 1996, Evening Service for the Incarnation 2000, Evening Service for Church of the Nativity 2002, and Evening Service for the Transfiguration 2015), these works are not widely known outside of Dallas and small Anglican circles, nor is the value of his contributions to Anglican Evensong repertoire recognized. -
Richard Wayne Dirksen: a Centennial Retrospective
Richard Wayne Dirksen: A Centennial Retrospective This monograph was originally published as two separate articles in the March and April 2021 issues of the Journal of the Association of Anglican Musicians to observe the 100th anniversary of Dirksen’s birth. What follows is an expanded, edited, and annotated version of the original. Copyright © 2021 Neal Campbell 1 Part I—Biography Introduction When considering the attributes of Richard Dirksen’s career, “multi-talented” is the term most often used. That is accurate, but incomplete. He could easily have pursued a successful career as a concert organist, conductor, composer, producer, educator, impresario, administrator, organbuilder, church musician . or a clergyman. In truth, he was a 20th century Renaissance Man, though that too is a well-worn cliché. In the final analysis his career was a synthesis of each of these disciplines practiced at a high level of achievement at Washington National Cathedral, where he was to spend his entire career. When Dirksen was appointed in 1942 the physical edifice of the cathedral was but a nascent vision of what it was to become, but it was still a highly visible presence in the city of Washington, throughout the Episcopal Church, and the Anglican Communion—and Dirksen grew as the cathedral grew. Known professionally as Richard Dirksen—that is how he was listed as composer, performer, or conductor—but to family, friends, and throughout the cathedral community, Dirksen was always known as Wayne. Even in his student recitals he was listed as Wayne Dirksen, or R. Wayne Dirksen. The cathedral’s formal ecclesiastical name is the Cathedral Church of Saints Peter and Paul in the City and Diocese of Washington. -
Conference Book
ASSOCIATION OF ANGLICAN MUSICIANS 2014 CONFERENCE :ASHINGTON, DC 1 2 ASSOCIATION OF ANGLICAN MUSICIANS 2014 CONFERENCE :ASHINGTON, DC TABLE OF CONTENTS Letters of Welcome ........................................................................................................................................ 4 Past Presidents of AAM and Past Conference Locations ........................................................................... 12 Officers of AAM ........................................................................................................................................... 13 Schedule ........................................................................................................................................................ 14 Maps and Directions .................................................................................................................................... 19 Sunday .......................................................................................................................................................... 28 Monday ......................................................................................................................................................... 36 Tuesday ......................................................................................................................................................... 65 Wednesday ...................................................................................................................................................