Organists and Organ Playing

Tug of war

All School Chapel at Iolani School.
All School Chapel at Iolani School. Can you find me? I’m probably the only one sitting down since I’m on the organ bench up in the front.

This morning, I played for All-School Christmas Chapel in the Lower Gym at Iolani School. The nativity story is narrated by the second grade class, which includes a pageant, interspersed with familiar Christmas carols. Because of my recent post in which I bragged that I could probably play any Christmas carol without looking at the printed sheet music, I toyed with the idea of playing from memory, since the service is basically the same from year to year. However, since there are about two thousand people in the gym for this service, I decided to play it safe and bring the book, which contains the narration script for me to follow.

Right off the bat, though, it was me against 2000 people. What happens when the organist (that’s me!) introduces the opening hymn at one tempo, in this case, Angels we have heard on high, and the students want to sing it faster than you think they should take it?! In fact, it was a slight tug-of-war for all the carols, which included O come all ye faithful, Hark the herald angels sing, Silent Night, What Child is This, Joy to the World and We Three Kings. In all cases, the assembly wanted to sing faster than the tempos I chose, but I stood my ground and tried to keep the tempo steady.

That’s not to say that my tempos were at all slow, in fact, they were quite to the contrary. I’d say that the tempos were pretty brisk and probably faster than I’d take in a normal church service.

It was the final hymn, though, Go tell it on the mountain, in which I really had to keep the reins on. On this hymn, clearly a student favorite, everyone starts clapping on the beat during the refrain. They wanted to push me to go faster and I had to stay with them!

Click here for a description of the service on the school’s website.

The nativity pageant
The nativity pageant