Organon Novus
Organon Novus
Cedar Falls, IA
The “King of Instruments,” the pipe organ, has a long and storied history. Its long association with the church has been a source of strength but also, in recent times, led to its seeming neglect by contemporary concert composers. Organon Novus is a monumental effort to bring together this hidden slice of American music. Clocking in at over three hours of music, and running the gamut from Adler to Zorn, it includes 25 works from the past 25 years by 25 celebrated composers – composers not often associated with their organ oeuvre.
With 8,565 pipes in 132 ranks available to them, the 1928 E.M. Skinner symphonic organ in Rockefeller Chapel at the University of Chicago is no modest resource for a composer’s imagination (not to mention a player’s active limbs). Randall Harlow, in this marathon tour de force, reaches them all.
Compositional approaches range from the sonic tapestries of Thomas and Zorn, to the linear complexity of Adler and Mamlok; from the full-bodied symphonic approaches of Ran and Tower, to the eclectic and unique voices of Lang, Johnson, Lucier and Wolff.
The album concludes with the premiere of Aaron Travers’ monumental Barlow Prize work, Exodus. Exploring the extremes of what is possible on the organ, the work offers a way forward for the instrument in contemporary art music, an exit from the common modern associations of the organ with churches and staid liturgical Gebrauchsmusik.
Organon, “the device”: the original Greek word for the pipe organ from the third century BCE.
Novus, “the new.” From its beginnings as a noise maker to its apotheosis as a contrapuntal keyboard-controlled orchestra, all coupled with the acoustic and architecture of its location, the organ can be many things. This musical snapshot is both a chronicle and a revelation.
Performer-scholar Randall Harlow has long dodged conventional expectations. As a performer, he eschewed the competition circuit, choosing instead to explore the outer reaches of the organ repertoire. A specialist in contemporary music, Harlow was the first organist to be awarded a coveted New Music USA Project and an Aaron Copland Fund Recording Grant. His numerous firsts include the North American premiere of Karlheinz Stockhausen's Himmelfahrt, the First Hour of KLANG; premieres of solo works by John Anthony Lennon, John Liberatore, Shulamit Ran and Aaron Travers; and works for organ with live-electronics by Steve Everett and Rene Uijlenhoet. Also an avid collaborative musician, his concerts include extemporization on mechanical Baroque organs with the Cornell Avant Garde Ensemble (CAGE). Harlow is currently Associate Professor of Organ and Music Theory at the University of Northern Iowa.
“Clocking in at over three hours of music, and running the gamut from Adler to Zorn, it includes 25 works from the past 25 years by 25 celebrated composers – composers not often associated with their organ oeuvre. With 8,565 pipes in 132 ranks available to them, the 1928 E.M. Skinner symphonic organ in Rockefeller Chapel at the University of Chicago is no modest resource for a composer’s imagination (not to mention a player’s active limbs). Compositional approaches range from the sonic tapestries of Thomas and Zorn, to the linear complexity of Adler and Mamlok; from the full-bodied symphonic approaches of Ran and Tower, to the eclectic and unique voices of Lang, Johnson, Lucier and Wolff. The album concludes with the premiere of Aaron Travers’ monumental Barlow Prize work, Exodus. Exploring the extremes of what is possible on the organ, the work offers a way forward for the instrument in contemporary art music, an exit from the common modern associations of the organ with churches and staid liturgical Gebrauchsmusik.” [FULL ARTICLE]
"With this monumental project that unfolds over three CDs, the American organist Randall Harlow aims to give a significant insight into contemporary production for an instrument, the pipe organ, normally associated with the classical musical tradition, especially Baroque, and especially religious. In reality, the organ repertoire of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries is quite large, so much so that Harlow has opted for three criteria for selecting the material to be performed, focusing on pieces (1) composed between 1990 and 2015 (2) by American authors (3) non-organists. This last criterion is adopted in order not to limit the composers' imagination, almost pushing them to transcend the limits of the performer. This is particularly evident in the pieces signed by the so-called experimentalists, such as Wolff, Lucier, Zorn, Polansky. But, alongside acoustic and timbral experiments, there is something for everyone: from neoclassicals like Adler, Walker to post-modernists like Daugherty, Sierra, passing through neo-romanticists (Highdon, Larsen, minimalists (Lang, Muhly, Johnson) Beyond the great stylistic variety, one can also appreciate a generally high level of writing, which spurs Harlow - already addressed, according to what we read, to new "organ" enterprises - to a passionate and impeccable interpretation." [FULL ARTICLE] - Filippo Focosi