See you again next year! RCO courses hit the spot in Oxford and London

See you again next year! was the verdict of many students on two of the RCO’s flagship courses – The Organ Scholar Experience, this year based around the colleges and organs of Oxford, and the Summer Course, with over fifty organists rushing from their base in St Giles, Cripplegate around the City of London’s churches, for classes, private practice, and performance.

Playing the repertoire on Classical French instruments

Privileged access to historic places and instruments is a feature of RCO courses and classes, but it doesn’t get much better than sitting at the sky-blue and gold organ of the Royal Chapel at Versailles. Eleven organists visited Paris to play the Classical French repertoire on instruments of the period on an RCO study trip in June this year, under the tutelage of the organist at the Royal Chapel, Jean-Baptiste Robin.

If you can manage a cathedral organ, you can manage an international airport

It’s not uncommon for professional musicians to also maintain a job in a non-musical field, but Paul Griffiths, spectacularly, holds one of the top positions in the aviation industry, as well as being an international concert organist and recitalist, and a Vice President of the RCO. With a recital at Westminster Abbey coming up on 13th August, he describes his practice routine, and how important both his occupations are.

Inspiration for young organists – the Organ Scholar Experience

The RCO’s Organ Scholar Experience is the essential summer course for young organists. Held in Oxford this year, from 18th to 23rd July, it introduces teenage organists to the life of an organ scholar. Come and listen to choral evensong and choral compline in Oxford Colleges taken by the course students, and recitals from the top-flight recitalists who are their tutors for the week.

Freezing moments in musical time – the Archive of Recorded Church Music

“500 uploads on YouTube!” tweeted the Archive of Recorded Church Music, triumphantly, last week. Colin Brownlee who runs the archive has been gathering recordings – LPs, 78s, cassettes, reel-to-reel, CDs, commercial and private – for 15 years, and has created a collection of cathedral and church choral music which is now seen as definitive, illustrating the changes in choral sound since 1902.

Ten ways to find non-stop organ listening

Opportunities to hear the organ uninterrupted on UK network radio are few. But did you know that if you transfer to pure internet radio, there’s a wealth of sources dedicated to quality organ music out there? All it needs is a computer, smartphone or tablet with an internet connection and speakers, plus a slight change of approach and listening habits.

Making keyboard skills a pleasure

For teachers of all keyboard instruments, it can be an uphill task to find teaching material for keyboard skills – realising figured bass, score reading, transposing, harmonising and improvisation. Two books of graded exercises have just been published by RCO tutors Anne Marsden Thomas and Frederick Stocken to help students of every standard improve their keyboard skills.