Sundays at 3: David Titterington

Sunday, March 6, 2011, 3:00 pm

Enmax Hall, Winspear Centre

Sundays at 3: David Titterington

2011 Events

  • David Titterington, organ
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Details

Pipe Organ Recital Series

General Admission
$25 Adults
$20 Students & Seniors
All tickets subject to applicable service charges.

Co-sponsored by Orgues Letourneau / Davis Trust Fund

Program Info

Program

Allegro maestoso from Sonata in G op.28
Edward Elgar (1857-1934)
 
Chaconne in d minor BWV 1004 (trans. WT Best)
JS Bach (1675-1750)
 
Three Portraits:
  Victor’s Variations
  Mr Titterington’s Toccatina
  Hugh’s Hornpipe
Barrie Cabena (b. 1933)
 
Allegro vivace from Symphony No.5 in F minor Op 42
Charles Marie Widor (1844-1937)
 
Intermission
 
Choral & Final from Symphonie No.10 “Romane” Op.73
C M Widor 
 
Chaconne in F
Johann Caspar Ferdinand Fischer (1656-1746)
 
Moto Ostinato & Finale (from Sunday Music)
Petr Eben (1929-2007)
 

Artist Info

David Titterington

David Titterington was recently appointed Artistic Director of the International Organ Festival at St Albans confirming his position as one of the world’s most distinguished organists. He made his debut at the Royal Festival Hall in 1986 launching a career that has since taken him to many of the great international festivals and concert halls including Herkulessaal in Munich, Schauspielhaus in Berlin, Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto, Auditorio Nacional in Madrid, Megaron in Athens, and the Musachino Concert Hall in Tokyo. He was a featured artist of the European Festivals Association’s 50th anniversary celebrations in 2002 performing works by Kurtag and Messiaen at the Festival of Festivals in Geneva.
 
Committed to contemporary music he has premiered a number of significant works, in particular Diana Burrell’s 1990 BBC Proms Commission Arched Forms with Bells, and Terce for organ & accordion at the Spitalfields Festival, Hans Werner Henze’s Symphony No.9 at the 2000 BBC Proms with the BBC Symphony Orchestra under Ingo Metzmacher, Toccare Incandescent by Stephen Montague, commissioned by the South Bank and premiered at the Royal Festival Hall to mark the 50th anniversary of the building of the Hall’s organ, and Giles Swayne’s Fourteen Stations of the Cross commissioned for the 25th anniversary of the Cambridge Festival in King’s College Chapel. Other first performances include Lyell Cresswell’s The Blackness of Darkness (New Zealand Festival commission), Petr Eben’s Job (Harrogate Festival commission), and Peter Tiefenbach’s Opening Day (Guelph Festival commission). In 2001 he collaborated with Maurizio Kagel in the London performance of Rrrrrr, and with Jonathan Dove in a premiere performance of Niagara. He gave the New Zealand premiere of Olivier Messiaen’s Livre du Saint Sacrement and the Finnish premiere of Petr Eben’s Organ Concerto No 1 with the Lahti Symphony Orchestra,
 
In addition to CD’s of works by Olivier Messiaen, Petr Eben and Johann Ernst Eberlin, David Titterington has recorded more than thirty programmes for the BBC and innumerable for radio and television networks world-wide, including the complete works of César Franck from the Abbey of St Etienne, Caen.
 
David Titterington was Organ Scholar at Pembroke College, Oxford and continued his studies in Paris with Marie-Claire Alain and Susan Landale at the Conservatoire at Rueil-Malmaison, where he won a unanimous Premier Prix. In 1996 he was appointed Head of Organ Studies at the Royal Academy of Music, London. Since 1993 he has given annual master classes at the Dartington International Summer School and since 1997 he has been Visiting Professor of Organ at the Liszt Academy, Budapest.
 
He has served on many international juries including the Grand Prix de Chartres, Prix André Marchal, BBC’s Young Musician of the Year, the Grand Prix Bach de Lausanne Competition, Graz International Organ Competition, and 1st International Organ Competition Basso Friuli, Italy. In 1992, he was Artistic Director and Chairman of the Jury of the European Organ Festival, and in October 2002 was Artistic Director of the festival Splendour of the Spanish Baroque. He has received several awards and honours, including Honorary Fellowship of the Royal College of Organists in 1999, and an Honorary Doctorate from the Liszt Ferenc State University, Budapest in 2000.
 
Engagements in 2007/8 include Poulenc’s Organ Concerto conducted by Jan Latham Koenig at the Turin Opera House, and the premiere of a new work by Pavel Novak for organ, soprano and trumpet at the Dartington International Summer School, a debut recital at Moscow’s International Performing Arts Centre, and recitals as part of the South Bank’s Messiaen Festival Towards the Canyons and the Stars.
 
The current season includes recitals of Peter Maxwell Davies and Mendelssohn at Dartington, Messiaen’s Livre du Saint Sacrement at the Brompton Oratory, and recitals at the Philharmonie, Luxembourg, in Waldkirch, Germany on the historic Walcher organ and at the BBC Proms.
 
In 2008 David Titterington was awarded Honorary Membership of the Royal Academy of Music.

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