Graduate Music Students Receive Grant to Compose, Perform New Work for Organ
A composer-organist pair of graduate students in the received a $1,000 grant from the American Guild of Organists (AGO) to compose and perform a new piece for organ. Composer Ryan McQuay Meredith and organist Joseph Maxwell Ossei-Little were among four pairs selected for the grant from the AGO鈥檚 this year. The students used the opportunity to explore the vast capabilities of the organ, pushing its limits.

Meredith鈥檚 composition, 鈥淧olluted Skies,鈥 consists of two movements, 鈥淐louds鈥 and 鈥淪tars.鈥 The piece mimics a cloudy sky that eventually opens into a starry night.
A massive mechanical instrument, the organ always fascinated trombonist Meredith. Housed in Crouse College鈥檚 Rose and Jules R. Setnor Auditorium, a 3,823-pipe Holtkamp Organ is part of what attracted him to 性视界 University. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of magic tricks you can pull off on the organ,鈥 says Meredith. 鈥淪pecifically with our organ, there鈥檚 a lot of options where you can have one hand do an orchestra鈥檚 worth of what you want.鈥
The completed composition broadened organist Ossei-Little’s musicality, allowing him to play with unique rhythms and contribute his own voice to the growth of the organ community. 鈥淲hat really got me interested in the project is this whole idea that my professor has been championing about expanding the repertoire of the organ,鈥 he says. A composer-organist pair themselves, Setnor Associate Professor Anne Laver and Assistant Professor Natalie Draper guided the students throughout the project.
The creation of new compositions can have a large impact on the evolution of the instrument, Ossei-Little notes. When large chords became commonplace in compositions, organ builders reacted, making it easier for players to meet the needs of the pieces.
Available on video via the AGO website this summer, 鈥淧olluted Skies鈥 will highlight all the organ has to offer. Ossei-Little plans to premiere it at his scheduled for Saturday, April 13, at 5 p.m. in Setnor Auditorium. 鈥淚t’s a very wonderful opportunity for us to showcase what the organ can do,鈥 Ossei-Little says. 鈥淣ot just what it used to do in the past but what it can do now.”