George
Ritchie
Biography
George Ritchie
has performed to critical acclaim throughout the United States and Canada. He has
been a featured artist and lecturer at National Conventions of the American
Guild of Organists and at the International Congress of Organists in Montreal. Through his performances and recordings,
critics have recognized him as one of the leading interpreters of the organ
music of J.S. Bach, with comments such as: "This is Bach as Bach
intended his music to be heard" (The Diapason); "These
performances are ripe with a depth of scholarship, musicality, and
knowledge" (The American Organist); and "This is certainly the
finest Bach performance I have heard in a long while" (England's The
Organ).
His set of
eleven CD’s, surveying the complete organ works of J.S. Bach, has now been
released and has received international praise. At the midway point of the
recording project, Simon Fitzgerald (The Organ) wrote“…once the remaining
volumes are released I know that all other discs of Bach in my collection will
be obsolete." Recorded on significant recently built American organs
based on organs of Bach's time, these recordings are now available on the Raven
label. His recordings for Titanic include
Organ Works of J.S. Bach, Four New American Organs by Bedient, and New
Music for Organ and Percussion, with Albert Romeo, percussionist.
Dr. Ritchie is
co-author with George Stauffer of the book Organ Music: Modern and Early,
published by Oxford University Press. He is in frequent demand throughout North America for
lecture-demonstrations, workshops and master classes, often focusing on Bach
performance practices and on modern and early playing techniques. He has
been an adjudicator for national organ playing competitions.
George Ritchie
is the Marguerite Scribante Professor of Music and Head of the Organ Department
at the School of Music of the University of Nebraska at Lincoln.
Recently, he received the university-wide Annis Chaiken Sorensen Award for
Distinguished Teaching in the Humanities. Dr. Ritchie came to his current
position from Duke University, where he held
the post of Chapel Organist. A native of California, he has
bachelor’s and master's degrees from the University of Redlands. He also
holds the Master of Music degree from Union Theological Seminary in New York City and the Doctor
of Music degree from Indiana University. In
addition, he has done specialized study in Frankfurt under a German
Government Grant with the eminent Bach specialist Helmut Walcha and in Paris with the
acclaimed French organist André Isoir. He was also a National Endowment
for the Humanities Fellow at Harvard University, studying with
the noted Bach scholar Christoph Wolff. His organ teachers in the U.S. have been
Raymond Boese, Leslie Spelman, Robert Baker, Vernon de Tar and Clyde Holloway.
Current as of August 2005