Frederick Swann, organist.
Mr. Swann was well known in New York as organist and music director at Riverside Church in Manhattan, where he began playing in the 1950s.
In 1982 he reached a much wider audience when he moved to the Crystal Cathedral in Garden Grove, Calif., home base of the Rev. Robert H. Schuller, the television evangelist. There he appeared each week on “Hour of Power,” one of the most widely watched religious programs in the country, with a viewership in the millions.
Before retiring in 2001, he also served for three years as organist at the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles, which has one of the largest pipe organs in the world. He also played thousands of recitals all over the United States and beyond.
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“Fred was a genius at controlling and maximizing the potential of very large pipe organs,” the organist John Walker, who succeeded Mr. Swann as music director at Riverside, said in a phone interview. “Every organ is absolutely unique. They are custom-made works of art, and Fred was so uniquely skilled at uncovering the timbres in each instrument that he was regularly invited to give inaugural recitals” — that is, the first public performance on a new or rebuilt organ.
He filled that role in 2004 for the formidable organ at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, a 6,134-pipe instrument designed by Frank Gehry. His program that night included pieces by Bach, Mendelssohn and Josef Rheinberger.
“In all three,” Mark Swed wrote in a review in The Los Angeles Times, “the stirring deep pedal tones produced a sonic weight that seemed to anchor the entire building, while the upper diapason notes were clear and warm. The delicate echo effects in the slow movement of Mendelssohn’s sonata spoke magically, as if coming from the garden outdoors.”
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Mr. Walker said that Mr. Swann held four centuries’ worth of music in his head and generally played from memory. He played recitals of all kinds, sometimes as the featured attraction and sometimes accompanying a vocalist, and released numerous albums. Mr. Walker said his playing for religious services was particularly poignant.
“In playing a hymn,” he said, “he would be able to express the meaning of an individual word in such a poignant way that I would just immediately tear up.”
Brad William Henke, former NFL player and actor.
Wait, wait: “Orange Is the New Black” was a comedy? By the way, he was also “Coover Bennett” in season 2 of “Justified” (working opposite Esteemed Character Actress Margo Martindale).
Frank Vallelonga Jr. Other credits include “The Sopranos” and “The Birthday Cake”.
I mentioned that I attended Bible college in the early 1980’s. It was called Grand Rapids School of the Bible and Music. It is now part of Cornerstone University, which combined G.R. Baptist College and GRBSM. One of the Professors there, Wendall Babcock, was similar to Fred Swann, in that he would go to various places when they put a new or rebuilt organ into service, to play in its inaugural performance.
Such was the case at the church that I was attending when we purchased a new organ to go with the new building after arson destroyed the old building. The arsonist was just some mentally ill person who wanted to be sent back to the place he had been kicked out of, instead of being considered cured.
I saw the obit about Fred Swann, and it brought to mind Dr. Babcock. Not only was he a gifted musician, but he was my Old Testament professor. And he was TOUGH! But man, did I learn from him. He expected an adult to not only read the material assigned but to also answer honestly on tests that they had either read the material or not. What an unusual concept, to actually expect honesty from adults.
He would make us memorize the tribes of Israel, the plagues of Egypt, etc. Not that hard, except when you are also the husband and father of 2, working full time plus. And driving an hour each way to school. Looking back, I don’t know how I did it, for as long as I did. Young men can do a lot, I guess.