That one does seem good; it's description says "piano playing [is] a prerequisite"The Stainer book is good, but there's also the Gleason Method of Organ Playing, which is the one I learned with.
Designed for undergraduate and graduate music courses in organ; piano playing a prerequisite. Based on the author's 35 years of organ teaching and years of research as a musicologist, this reputable and well-documented text provides the musical and technical foundation necessary for mastering the art of organ playing.
I've added the qualifier "some". I hope that's clearer.I profoundly resent your statement about modern music. There is much good literature written by many fine composers. Modern does not equal bad. Nor does old equal good.
The other thing: find a teacher. Really! There are too many skills that need shaping by a teacher. It really helps to have a teacher help you with pedalling.
The other thing: find a teacher. Really! There are too many skills that need shaping by a teacher. It really helps to have a teacher help you with pedalling.
of courseSeconded. There's only so much you can learn from the book. You can learn from the book, but not everything.
Particularly captivating are his fluid, natural, finely wrought melodies. A well-known example of Peeters's art is his Toccata, fuga en hymn op "Ave Maris Stella," op. 28, a powerful, moving, technically brilliant composition that reflected the artist's deep knowledge of Catholic church music and traditional compositional techniques. Scholars have singled out the fugue in this work as an example of flawless contrapuntal organization.
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