Rochdale Observer

Organ’s baroque qualities are explored in neighbouri­ng town

- BY DR JOE DAWSON

ORTOA (Oldham, Rochdale and Tameside Organists’ Associatio­n), whilst the Rochdale Town Hall organ is out of bounds due to renovation, held their annual memorial recital at St Chad’s, Rochdale Parish Church -with The Brereton Memorial Organ Recital - soloist Philip Rushforth on Saturday, October 8.

The Brereton Memorial Fund was founded in memory of Philip and Gwen Brereton who died in December 2000.

They were lifelong volunteers for the Incorporat­ed Associatio­n of Organists, the Royal College of Organists and ORTOA.

Their daughter, Organiser Jude Brereton reported that this year it had awarded £1,150 in small grants to individual­s attending courses and organ lessons; and larger grants to organisati­ons that aimed to support organ and choral music across the UK.

Philip Rushforth was an admirable choice as guest soloist.

He has a long associatio­n with Chester Cathedral as a chorister, organ scholar, Assistant then Director of Music.

Meantime he was organ scholar at Trinity College

Cambridge, assistant organist Southwell Minster and awardwinni­ng recitalist and recording artiste.

In 2020, he was awarded an honorary Associates­hip of the Royal School of Church Music, for work of national significan­ce.

Not just for organ aficionado­s, his varied programme consisted of gems that made exciting use of St Chads’ noteworthy instrument.

A bright and jolly opening with Festal Offertoriu­m and a delicately flowing Fountain Reverie by Percy Fletcher establishe­d that this was going to be an organ recital out of the ordinary.

Philip explored the instrument’s Baroque qualities with variations on a Lutheran hymn tune by JS Bach, and then the Romantic with a meditative Cantabile by Cesar Franck.

Alec Rowley’s Four Winds was a characteri­stic suite based on texts (helpfully printed in the programme): North with ‘a fine loud wind’ (Izzard); South ‘leaves hang trembling’ (Christina Rossetti); East ‘his weapon is a dagger’ (Conrad); and West was ‘full of bird’s cries’ (Masefield). This made full use of the orchestral qualities of the instrument.

Then, two attractive miniatures by the Afro-american composer, Florence Price before Philip decided to have us sashaying out of the recital with Alfred Hollins’ A Song of Sunshine with its bouncing bass and shades of ballroom and fairground, setting the mood for the nostalgia of the Knightsbri­dge March (BBC’S In Town Tonight, 1939-60) by Eric Coates.

Oldham Rochdale & Tameside Organists ‘Associatio­n (Affiliated to the Incorporat­ed Associatio­n of Organists) For more informatio­n visit: https://iao.org.uk/

 ?? ?? ●●Guest soloist Philip Rushforth
●●Guest soloist Philip Rushforth
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