JAMES PRESSLER has a story to tell, and a stirring one at that.
With it, what would have been an otherwise not-too-noticeable
item received for review assumes real importance. Granted, an
op-ed column ought not to replace the reviews elsewhere in this
journal, but the process in this project begs for a word or two
and, in the end, outflanks the results.
Pressler, a Californian since 1952, says he played recitals for
37 years from 1957 to 1994. A stroke finished his live performing.
But since he had acquired technological skills, Pressler tied
his physical recovery to his skill in MIDI. Think about it. How
many of us with MIDI-equipped consoles actually use the technology
to positive benefit? Here's one positive tale.
Pressler, you see, had to learn to do everything in life with
his left hand unassisted. With time, he discovered that encoding
MIDI music would enable him to "play" again on appropriately
equipped consoles. He also located sound fonts replicating the
organ (pretty well) on computers, and synthesized desktop "performances."
Evidence ofthis technological productivity abounds on his several
Web sites (he also develops sites for others). But Pressler's
real breakthrough resulted from collaboration with Noel Jones
in Knoxville. Jones wanted a MIDI encoding of the whole of Bach's
organ music for his Rodgers® Organs dedicated Web site. Pressler
replied by extending his work into a pedagogical project
and making available his Bach MIDI
files with left, right hand, and pedal alone, and in various combinations
(remember practicing the Trio Sonatas with one hand on a silent
manual?). Jones distributed these files through frog music press
(www.frogmusic.com a site about "music, MIDI, support, innovation,
and talk, mostly for and about Rodgers® Organs"). Users have
the option of playing Pressler's sequences on a computer, MIDI
device, or MIDI-equipped organ. Students may practice with these
files (by playing the missing voice or voices with them at whatever
tempo). So Pressler's "learning project" led to a "performance"
in which finished performances of the complete Bach works were
assembled, all from an organist limited to the use of one hand.
Pressler and Jones put the resulting music on a CD entitled Bach
by Immersjon, (Frog Music Press, 3706 Terrace View Dr., Knoxville
TN 37918, or the Web address above). Jones custom-designed and
voiced a Rodgers® for these "MIDI preparations."
Generally, a recording of the Bach jntegrale on an electronic
organ would not reap great attention here. Nor, probably, would
a disc full of MIDI files. If it is Bach one wants, one can select
from dozens of sterling, conversant performances on appropriate
instruments ranging from indigenous to authentic replicas to just
plain wonderful to refreshingly off-center. These qualify as unashamedly
good performances, but not more. Artistic integrity also counts.
Are MIDI encodings performance? The very desktop computer that
produces this commentary holds the software to scan a printed
score of Bach, bring it up as notation, and save it to MIDI, thus
enabling, in the end, a "performance" of the piece on
a MIDI-equipped organ, all without a single human finger depressing
a key. Is that honest performance? Have we altered aesthetic truth?
James Pressler's "preparations" seem honest enough.
They qualify as inventive, fresh, and musical, not the germ-free
metronomic stuff of MIDI sequencing, but more the spontaneous
expression of a live player. True, it is still a digital organ
we hear on the CD, and one may choose not to accept this solution
either ideologically or musically, but Rodgers® technology enabled
the project and deserves to be there at the end. Still, all this
would be unremarkable were it not for the two big overarching
factors.
First, James Pressler, after suffering a limiting disability,
returned to performance as a "virtual organist." Art
is not the act of a victim, it is the expression of an artist.
Whatever it takes to make art, it takes. Second, Pressler looked
at technology in thoughtful and musical ways. In doing so, he
uncovered a valuable teaching tool. The Bach works in MIDI enable
those just learning this axial repertoire just as they enable
Pressler to "perform" again. It looks as if James Pressler
not only returned to the stage, but to teaching.
HAIG MARDIROSIAN
©2004 The American Guild of Organists
Reprinted by permission of The American Organist