Moscow mourns its foremost organist

Moscow mourns its foremost organist

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norman lebrecht

November 11, 2016

Harry Grodberg, solo organist of the Moscow Philharmonic for 60 years, has died at 88.

More than anyone, he re-established the art of organ playing in a secular republic.

harry-grodberg

Comments

  • MWnyc says:

    “More than anyone, he re-established the art of organ playing in a secular republic.”

    Mind you, the organ didn’t play a huge role in Russia when it was an officially Orthodox Christian monarchy: musical instruments (excepting bells and, in some traditions, drums) are generally forbidden in Eastern Orthodox church music.

    Some Orthodox congregations in the West, as their immigrant members assimilated over the years, have added organs. I’m still mildly scandalized whenever I encounter one.

    (I keep thinking: You folks have this marvelous long tradition of sacred music of your own! Don’t adulterate it!)

    • Olga says:

      You are right as far as it goes for Orthodox church music. However, concert hall at the Moscow Conservatory of music and Tchaikovsky concert hall have big organs, and, besides, services are held in Catholic cathedral in Moscow. Also concert halls in other big cities have organs and organ music is rather popular. Harry Grodberg was a well-known musician even in the Soviet Union. Besides giving concerts in Moscow, he played organ in Baltic republics. He often played in the Dome Cathedral of Riga in Latvia.

    • Malcolm Rudland says:

      In 1982, Gosconcert invited me to the USSR for 10 organ recitals in 14 days. When I arrived in Irkutz I found Harry Grodberg had arrived to play my two recitals. However, my name was on the posters, so I stayed and Harry flew back to Moscow, but not before we had had an uproarious meal together!

  • Malcolm Rudland says:

    In 1982, Gosconcert booked to play 10 organ recitals in 14 days. When I arrived in Irkutz to play two recitals, I found Harry Grodberg had also arrived to play them as well. But my name was on the posters, so I stayed to play them, and Harry flew back to Moscow, but not before we had an uproarious meal together!!

  • Dalia Novotny says:

    I was listening to him for the last time in Klaipeda in the new church with one of the best new organ in Europe. It was a tremendously touching concert because everybody knew – it was the last one. We will allways remember You, God bless your soul!

  • Keith Aldred says:

    I heard him play in Moscow in 1990 during a school exchange visit.
    My Russian colleague seemed to know numerous musicians and introduce me to Schnittge Genaddhi R too, both unforgettable experiences .

  • Alla Zektser says:

    All my life is full of recollections of his concerts in Tchaikovsky Hall….Started going there at 15, alone…
    It was always the greatest enjoyment….Bach, organ and Harry Grodberg are inseparable for me!

  • Klemperer says:

    I have never heard him play, but was so happy as to find a second hand LP where Grodberg played “festive organ music”, recorded in the Moscow conservatory. De Santa Maria, Isaac, Frescobaldi, Corelli (a transcription), John Stanley and Buxtehude and Pachelbel. When I heard “Veni redemptor gentium” by Michael Praetorius as played by Grodberg I really started to shiver, and this impression never seems to fade away. We all have pieces of music we would not like to be without, and Grodberg playing Praetorius is one of them for me.

    Later I found a LP with Bach Toccatas, but otherwise it seems hard to find anything about Grodberg. Not even a “wiki” entry.
    Even on record, what a poor replacement for an actual live concert, an unforgettable organ player.

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