From 2008 until 2011, the Orgelpark Research Program included a three-year project on Improvisation. The specific sound character of each organ flourishes optimally in music that is specifically made for it - which is one of the reasons that organists never have stopped improvising. How did the art of improvisation develop through the centuries, what relevance was ascribed to it by, say, musicians such as Johann Sebastian Bach, and how to analyse improvisations? Answers to these and other questions are documented in Orgelpark Research Report #3. This Report contains dozens of music examples, functioning as ever so many "artistic arguments" in the texts.
The three possibilities for reading this Report can be found at the right of this page. These include: online (with audio), offline (without audio) and on papier. To receive the paper version, you will be asked to fill in a form.
Contents
Bruce Ellis Benson
In The Beginning, There Was Improvisation
Peter Planyavsky
Organ Improvisation in the Past Five Decades
European Improvisation History: Anton Heiller
Pamela Ruiter-Feenstra
Bach and the Art of Improvisation
Sietze de Vries
The Craft of Organ Improvisation
Bernhard Haas
Improvisation, C.Ph.E. Bach, César Franck and Albert Simon
Mary Oliver
Analyzing Improvisations: The Constellation Model
Hans Fidom
Listening as a Musicological Tool: Real Time Analysis
Béatrice Piertot
Treatises about Improvisation on the Organ in France from 1900 to 2009
Columba McCann
Marcel Dupré
Gary Verkade
Teaching Free Improvisation
Vincent Thévenaz
A Contemporary Improvisation on a Baroque Theme and a Romantic Organ
Jacob Lekkerkerker
To be a Dancer at the Organ
Giampaolo Di Rosa
The Improvisation Process
Ronny Krippner
English Organ Improvisation in the 20th and 21st Centuries