Category Archives: Articles

January Meeting: Dinner with Seattle and Program with Joseph Adam and Louis Vierne

Plan to join us on January 20, 2019, at 5:30 PM at Farelli’s Pizza in Parkland for a no-host joint dinner with members from the Seattle chapter. This is a great opportunity to catch up with colleagues we may not see very often from both chapters. The address of the restaurant and other details are in the calendar entry.

Following dinner, we will reassemble at Lagerquist Hall where member Joseph Adam will present a lecture-demonstration on the music of Louis Vierne in celebration of his 150th birthday. Mr. Adam is Director of Music at St. James Roman Catholic Cathedral, Seattle; Resident Organist at Benaroya Hall; and Artist-in-Residence at the University of Washington. St. James Cathedral is presenting a recital series of the complete organ music of Vierne over the course of the year 2020, including several performances by Mr. Adam.

The 2019 Christmas Party

Sandy and Dick Tietjen hosted the 2019 Tacoma AGO Christmas party in their beautifully decorated University Place home.

After enjoying a spectacular assortment of holiday food and drink, members were treated to a short performance featuring three very varied manifestations of the musical talent represented. In keeping with our mission, each of the performances involved Fritts Opus 30, a 7-rank house organ.

Wyatt Smith, who serves as the associate director of music and communications minister at Epiphany Parish of Seattle and affiliate artist in organ and harpsichord at the University of Puget Sound, opened the short recital with a selection from Nico Muhly’s O Antiphon Preludes.

Wyatt Smith plays from Nico Muhly O Antiphon Preludes

Satya Jaech organized a pickup choir to perform Puer natus in Bethlehem (Michael Praetorius) accompanied by organ and cello.

Ending the musical review, members Cheryl and Tim Drewes played a set of seasonal music for tuba and organ.

Photo Gallery

Many thanks to Sandy and Dick Tietjen for being wonderful hosts, as always. Thanks also to Rick Jaech for his videography skills.

Christmas Party 2019

Our 2019 Christmas party is at the home of Sandy and Dick Tietjen in University Place on Monday, December 9 at 7 PM. Their address is available in the calendar entry, and requires logging in. The address will also be mailed out to members in a reminder later this week.

If you are able, please sign up to bring a food or beverage contribution. Signing up in advance helps us plan. If you are unable to bring a contribution this year, don’t worry about it and come anyway! The signup sheet is here and does not require logging in.

We are planning a mix of social time, group singing, and a few performances. One performance slot remains, so if you would like to play an organ work on the Tietjens’ house organ, please signup here.

Brombaugh Opus 22: A Landmark in the World of Organ Building

Tacoma AGO members gather for the program. The space above the doorway was designed for organ pipes.

When Tacoma AGO member David Dahl began his 40 year tenure as Director of Music at Christ Episcopal Church in 1970, he played an electronic device because there was not yet an organ in the newly constructed church building. The architect, not having heard of the concept of free-standing organs, had left space above the entryway where the pipes of an electropneumatic organ could be relegated to chambers. At about the same time, organ builder John Brombaugh was researching organs in northern Europe because there were no builders of mechanical organs in the United States, and very few examples of mechanical organs. He was familiar with recordings of European tracker organs by E. Power Biggs, having encountered them when he was an engineering graduate student. At at time when most of the world thought tracker organs represented outdated technology, John recognized quality in those recordings and was drawn to them.

Satya Jaech introduces the panelists

Thus, Satya Jaech, Tacoma AGO board member, introduced two legends in the history of organ building in the United States. Their discussion, preceding the 40th anniversary recital performed by Kraig Scott, was well attended by AGO members from the Tacoma and Seattle chapters, along with church members and others. Mark Brombaugh, former Tacoma AGO dean, and co-director of music at Christ Episcopal Church, moderated the program. The similarity to the name of the organ builder is not coincidental–Mark and John are brothers. Both have had long and distinguished musical careers–John as an organ builder, and Mark as a teacher and performer. Mark played the dedicatory recital for Opus 22 in 1979, as well as the twentieth and thirtieth anniversary recitals, long before there was any hint of his eventually becoming the Christ Church organist.

Panelists John Brombaugh and David Dahl, with moderator Mark Brombaugh

David Dahl and John Brombaugh met in The Netherlands in the early 1970’s. David was attending an organ institute at Haarlem, and had purchased a Fiat convertible to bring home. Instead, David delayed his return and took a road trip with John to see some historical organs. David also visited Brombaugh organs in Ohio and Washington, and came to the conclusion that John Brombaugh would be at the top of the list if Christ Church were ever in a position to hire an organ builder.

However, at the time David was starting his career at Christ Church, the prospect of getting a real organ was bleak. Even though the room, with its extraordinary acoustics would have been a perfect setting, the debt on the newly constructed building was $285,000–substantial at the time. In July 1975, during a sermon, the rector announced that an anonymous donor had paid off the mortgage. Six weeks later, David had organized an organ committee.

It is rare for an organist and organ builder to have a good working relationship, according to David, and that is, in large part, why the organ at Christ Church has been so successful. Each of them brought strengths to the table, and each of them brought a desire to fill Christ Church with the magnificent sound of a mechanical action organ in a case–like those played and recorded by E. Power Biggs.

The Christ Church organ is not a copy of an existing organ, but its European heritage is clear. John was most influenced by a Marcussen organ in Denmark that he heard on his wedding trip. That Danish organ served as the prototype for three Brombaugh organs, including opera 20 and 21. Opus 22 is unique in having Harfenregal and Krummhorn stops.

Panelist David Dahl and Moderator Mark Brombaugh talk before the program

At age 10, the organ needed a few changes. The original original Fagott pedal reed was replaced with a Posaune. David also wanted to add an Erzähler stop, a soft string, and its accompanying celeste. John initially said that he couldn’t do it without replacing the chest, which would have been financially prohibitive. The third time is a charm, however, and the third time David asked him, he said there might be a way–which there was.

The organ has aged well. After 40 years it is still a landmark, still drawing curious organists from all parts of the globe, and still rewarding its audiences in church services and concerts. The credit for its success goes to to David Dahl and John Brombaugh–for their vision, their perseverance, and their recognition of the value of classical organs. David lists five factors that make a good organ, and points out that the Christ Church organ scores high in every category:

  • The pipes that produce the sound have to be voiced for beauty of tone color and ability to blend.
  • A good organ has a sensitive, responsive playing action.
  • A good organ has a flexible, responsive wind system that responds to the music being played.
  • The organ should be in a free standing case such that the case is able to blend and focus the sound.
  • An organ needs a good room.

John Brombaugh has a more succinct summary: “It was nice being in the Pacific Northwest at a time when most of the rest of the U.S. knew nothing about tracker organs. The old fashioned mechanical organs caught on here.”

John Brombaugh catches up with Tacoma AGO member Nancy Ferree-Clark

November Meeting at Christ Episcopal Church

On Sunday, November 10, Christ Episcopal Church in Tacoma is celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Brombaugh organ with a concert performed by organist Kraig Scott at 4:00 pm. Before the concert at 3:00 pm in the Christ Church sanctuary, the Tacoma AGO is hosting an informal conversation with David Dahl, Minister of Music Emeritus, and organ builder John Brombaugh about the building of the organ. Mark Brombaugh, current organist at Christ Church, will moderate the discussion.

John Brombaugh

David Dahl, the founding father of the revival movement for mechanical action organs in the Pacific Northwest, was Director of Music at Christ Church from 1970 – 2010. It was David’s vision, together with support from committed members of the congregation, that inspired this organ project. John Brombaugh, internationally renowned organ builder, brought this vision to life in what we now know as his Opus 22. Today, organists from all over the world visit Christ Church to play this magnificent instrument.

Christ Church organist and Co-Director of Music, Mark Brombaugh, will continue the organ’s 40th Anniversary celebration with a Third Friday Concert on Friday, November 15 at 12:10 pm.