Organists and Organ Playing

Marcel Dupré, organist extraordinaire

Marcel Dupré at the console of Saint-Sulpice

When I was seventeen, I had the great fortune of going to Paris and studying with the French virtuoso, Marcel Dupré. Of course, at the time, I didn’t realize how lucky I was to have this experience, and even though I thought I was pretty good at the time, I really knew NOTHING much about playing the organ, compared to now. My teacher in high school, Norman Söreng Wright, organist of the First United Methodist Church of Hollywood, CA, had studied with Dupré for six years in the 1920s and every year after that, sent one of his students back to France to study with the “maître.”

Dupré's organ studio at Meudon.
Dupré's organ studio at Meudon.

I took three lessons a week (Monday, Wednesday, and Friday) at Meudon, Dupré’s home, where there was a four-manual Cavaillé-Coll organ housed in the large organ studio. In the couple of days between lessons I was expected to accomplish a whole week’s worth of “normal” lessons which meant that I spent about six to eight hours a day practicing. I’m afraid I don’t remember much about my lessons except that I do know that they were for the most part, in English. Monsieur Dupré’s English was excellent and he had a gentle and generous personality. Over that summer, I played through many works of Bach, Franck and some of Dupré’s own compositions. Always at the end of every lesson he would ask me, “Well, what will you play next time?” which meant I had to constantly find new pieces to play at every lesson. I didn’t really perfect any piece to “performance level” but it’s amazing that many years later, those pieces are stored in my collective memory and I can still play them with some degree of facility.

Cavaillé-Coll organ at Meudon
Cavaillé-Coll organ at Meudon

Several times he and Madame Dupré invited me to eat dinner with them. They had a granddaughter about my same age, and she and I hung out together at the console of Saint Sulpice where I and other Dupré students listened to him improvise three services every Sunday. The Duprés took custody of their grandchildren because their son and daughter-in-law were tragically killed in an accident.

Inscription on the back of photo
Inscription on the back of photo

 

Last night I watched a video of his playing filmed during the 1960s only six months after I left Paris. When I was there, his hands were severely gnarled by arthritis, but oh! how he could play, and how he could improvise! It was just as though he were playing from memory, with such confidence and with a lot of harmonic color, not the “monster music” improvisations that today’s organists do. The most amazing postludes were the five-voice fugues he improvised.

Last July, Carl and I visited France (he for the first time, and the first time in 42 years for me), and I made a special trip to Meudon to see how much of it I remembered. As Carl said, it was certainly one of the highlights of our trip, if not THE most memorable part.

Seeing the video of Monsieur Dupré last night made it all come alive again.

Letter of recommendation from Marcel Dupré, Aug. 15, 1968
Letter of recommendation from Marcel Dupré, Aug. 15, 1968. (The French don't believe that you can spell "Katherine" with a "K" instead of a "C")

3 thoughts on “Marcel Dupré, organist extraordinaire

  1. My name is Keith, and am now just 70 years old. I saw an advert in the press saying that the Royal Albert Hall was having an evening of organ music to show that the organ was 100years old.
    My wife and her father came along and he enjoyed some of the electronic music,but I had heard of Nickolas Kinniston and he opened the evening.
    There were steps going directly up the front to the organ,but one mans name ment nothing to me,as I was only 23 at the time. Then this man came out and walked up with Nickolas Kiniston and sat at the organ.I could see his name Marcel Dupre and the three peices that he played were amazing,the last being an improvisation which I had never herd the likes of before. I was later to hear that he had died about six weeks later,and soI am so very lucky to have seen this giant of the organ world. I know exactly now who he was and will never forget that special day. Keith John Mansell England.

  2. Dear Mrs Crozier,

    I have been interested to read your article about Marcel Dupré. Of course, I would be so interested to know more about your stay in Paris and the time you had with Dupré.
    I hope you will agree to take time to write a few words (or more!).

    Best regards.

    Bruno Chaumet

    President of the Association des Amis de l’Art de Marcel Dupré

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