Vexilla Regis Uploaded by: giwro Composer: Demessieux, Jeanne Organ: 1877 Wm. A. Johnson & Son, Opus 499 Software: Hauptwerk VII Views: 53
Vexilla Regis prodeunt Uploaded by: Andrea75 Composer: Improvisation over Hymn Organ: AB Santa Maria delle Grazie al Naviglio, Milano Software: Hauptwerk IV Views: 40
Toccata sopra Vexilla Regis Uploaded by: alberto63 Composer: Carlotta Ferrari Organ: Laurenskerk - Transept Organ - 1959 Marcussen & Son Software: Hauptwerk IV Views: 85
Vater unser Uploaded by: Milan Composer: Böhm, Georg Organ: Salisbury Cathedral Father Willis Software: Hauptwerk IV Views: 1113
Marche aux Flambeaux Uploaded by: pasztor Composer: Scotson Clark Organ: Salisbury Cathedral Father Willis Software: Hauptwerk IV Views: 871
Ye Watchers & Ye Holy Ones Uploaded by: Mktwest Composer: Stearns, Peter Pindar Organ: Salisbury Cathedral Father Willis Software: Hauptwerk IV Views: 347
This is the third of the set and dedicated to Francis W Snow.
On the score are the words-
The royal banners forward go.
The cross shines forth in mystic glow,
Where He is flesh, our flesh Who made,
Our sentance bore, our ransom paid.
All the organ music by Titcomb is on ISMLP
The music of Everett Titcomb (1884-1968) occupies a unique niche in the catalogue of sacred organ and choral works by 20th-century Anglican composers in the United States. His compositional voice was clearly influenced by the Bostonian giants of his youth (Eugene Thayer, Dudley Buck, George Chadwick, Horatio Parker--who's mother once had Titcomb as a border) as well as his affinity for French music; yet at the same time his work is informed by his vast knowledge and understanding of plainchant and the polyphonic style of the 15th and 16th century Italians. An Anglo-Catholic who spent fifty years nearly to the day (1910-1960) as organist and choirmaster at Boston's Church of St. John the Evangelist in Bowdoin Street, his best organ works are based on plainchant tunes making them of more value to the Roman Catholic organist of the time than to the majority of Episcopalian ones and some of his best polyphony is in the form of Latin motets which while used at St. John's and other Anglo-Catholic parishes were perfectly at home sung at a Roman Mass.
Notes by Agnus_Dei