JUDITH HANCOCK
Biography
Judith Hancock, a leading interpreter of
Romantic organ repertoire, is a member of the faculty of The School of Music at
The University of Texas at Austin where she teaches organ and sacred music. She was for twenty-seven
years the Associate Organist of Saint Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue in New
York, where she assisted her
husband in conducting the Saint Thomas Choir. She was previously Organist and
Director of Music at Saint James’s Church, Madison Avenue, New
York, and the Church of Saint
James the
Less in Scarsdale, New
York. She has also held positions of Organist and
Choirmaster at the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer, Cincinnati, and at churches in Bronxville, New
York, and in Durham, North
Carolina.
A graduate of Syracuse University, Dr. Hancock studied organ with Arthur Poister,
and went on to Union Theological Seminary in New York City, where she earned her Master of Sacred Music degree and
from which she received the Unitas Distinguished
Alumnus Award. Her organ studies at Union were
with Charlotte Garden and Jack Ossewaarde. She has more recently studied with David
Craighead and David Higgs at the Eastman School of Music. In 2004
Dr. Hancock was awarded the degree Doctor of Sacred Music (honoris
causa) by St. Dunstan's College of Sacred
Music, Providence, Rhode
Island.
Dr. Hancock has played many recitals throughout
the United
States,
including several appearances at conventions of The American Guild of
Organists. When the Choir of St. Thomas
Church performed at the AGO national conventions in Washington DC, New
York City, and
Philadelphia, Dr. Hancock accompanied and performed solo organ
works. At the Third International
Congress of Organists at Philadelphia, Dr. Hancock directed the St. Thomas Choir in concert,
performing as organ soloist as well. At
the Fourth International Congress, in Cambridge, England, she played solo organ works during the Choir’s performance
at King’s College Chapel. She also
performed with the Choir at the King’s
Lynn and the Aldeburgh
Festivals, at Saint
John’s College, Cambridge, Westminster Abbey, and St. Pauls’
Cathedral. Dr. Hancock has appeared with
the Saint Thomas Choir on subsequent concert tours of Italy and Austria, performing at the Cathedrals of Venice, Trieste, Vienna, Salzburg, and Copenhagen. She most recently appeared in recital at acclaimed
performances, to standing ovations, at the National Convention of the American
Guild of Organists in Los
Angeles, in
2004.
Dr. Hancock established an on-going series of
solo organ recitals at St.
Thomas Church, performing organ works of various composers. Some of these
concerts included music for trumpet and organ, music for viola and organ, music
for cello and organ, “Two Organists at One Keyboard” (performed with Gerre
Hancock), “The Great German Tradition,” emphasizing works of Bach, Mendelssohn,
Hindemith and Reger, and “The Great French Tradition" featuring works of
Tournemire, Vierne and Duruflé and Dupré.
She has performed the works of Bach in retrospective, as well as the Antiphons of Dupré, Opus 59 of Reger, Sunday Music by Petr Eben, and the
Duruflé transcriptions of improvisations by Tournemire.
Dr.
Hancock performs concerted works of Brixi, Handel,
Haydn, Mozart, Rheinberger, Piston, and Poulenc with
orchestra. She has appeared on discs
produced at Decca/Argo, and Koch International; and she has recently recorded
for Priory Records and also for Gothic Records.
Revised August 2006