Jon Gillock
Organist


Temple Emanu-El

Thursday, July 5, 2007
12.00 p.m.
 
P R O G R A M
   
Fantasie en La-Majeur, No. 1
César Franck
  from Trois Pièces (1878)
(1822–1890)
   
L'Orgue Mystique III, Op. 55
Charles Tournemire
Nativitas Domini Nostri Jesu Christi (Noël)
(1870–1939)
The Birth of Our Lord Jesus Christ (Christmas)
 
II.
  Offertoire: Molto Adagio
 
Livre du Saint Sacrement (1984) *
Olivier Messiaen
 
II.
  La Source de Vie – The Source of Life
  "May my heart ever thirst for Thee, O fountain of life, and source of eternal light!"    
 
Prayer of St. Bonaventure
   
III.
  Le Dieu caché – The Hidden God
  “My eyes cannot bear the splendor of Thy glory. Allowing for my weakness, Thou hidest beneath the veils of the Sacrament.”
 
Anonymous, Imitation of Jesus Christ, Book IV, Chapter XI
 
“On the Cross, His divinity alone was hidden; now, moreover, His humanity is also invisible. Nevertheless, proclaiming and believing both, I make the same request as the repentant thief.”
 
St. Thomas Aquinas, Adoro Te
(1908–1992)
   
Choral No. 1 en Mi-Majeur (1890, Posthumous)
César Franck
   
     
* Commissioned by the 1986 American Guild of Organists National Convention in Detroit.
     
   
Glück New York
New York City (2002)
4 manuals, 135 ranks
Sebastian Glück, organ curator
click here for stoplist and description
 
Dr. Gillock’s performance is made possible by a generous gift
from Messrs. Sebastian M. Glück and William P. LaPiana.
 
  Dr. Jon Gillock
Dr. Jon Gillock
Press and public alike proclaim American organist Jon Gillock for his sensitive and moving performances. Known for his ability to express and interpret the mystical and sublime, the deep and profound, to communicate with and move his audiences, he is especially fond of performing the "French spiritual repertoire". This includes the music of such composers as César Franck, Maurice Duruflé, Louis Vierne, Nicolas de Grigny, François Couperin, Charles Tournemire, and, of course, Olivier Messiaen and Johann Sebastian Bach.

Often a soloist in international festivals, he has also been a featured recitalist and master teacher for conventions of both the American Guild of Organists and the Royal Canadian College of Organists. In 1996 he was chosen to give the opening recital for the National Convention of the American Guild of Organists in New York City, which celebrated the centennial anniversary of this organization.

Jon Gillock grew up in Oklahoma where he began studying the piano at an early age. He received the BM with high honors and the MM degrees from the University of Arkansas (Fayetteville); his major teacher there was John Cowell. He did graduate study at the College of Church Musicians, Washington Cathedral, with Leo Sowerby and Paul Callaway. He earned his DMA degree from The Juilliard School under Vernon de Tar (organ) and Gustave Reese (musicology). It was while he was still a student there that he began his long teaching association with Juilliard. Later, he studied with Olivier Messiaen at the Paris Conservatory.

Jon Gillock has established an international career both as a performer and as a master teacher.