Alan J. Wilson (born 1947), is a British composer of church music.
He was born in 1947, in Nottingham, UK, and won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music at the age of 17. He attended composition classes with Nadia Boulanger and studied on a scholarship at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam early keyboard music with Gustav Leonhardt. [1] From 1974 to 1986 he was Director of Music at the Church of Christ the King, Bloomsbury, for whose choir he originally wrote many of his choral works. In 1976, he became Director of Music at Queen Mary College London; and in 1986, he became organist at the church of St. Mary-le-Bow.
At St. Mary-le-Bow, he has been engaged in researching music by William Babell and John Stanley, while his work at Queen Mary College has engaged him in new compositions, including:
He has also conducted research to restore and edit originally produced songs from the college archives, including the 'Westfield Songbook' (1880 to c.1930). He has set many of the writings of Constance Louisa Maynard (the first Principal of Westfield College) to music, including 'The Downs' (a cantata) and several poems and hymns.
He is one of few composers who has taken seriously the use of synthesizers in the classical medium. Examples include the 'Norwich Mass' and 'Norwich Magnificat and Nunc Dimittis', written for the Norwich Festival of Contemporary Church Music. [1] They were published by Weinberger along with a commissioned work for Christ Church Cathedral, Indianapolis. Inspired by Bells was recorded by Doremi in 1995.
Wilson has also been involved in broadcasting, mainly the BBC Daily Service, where he has directed and also composed and arranged many compositions. [2]
Wilson's Mass of Light was performed in 2010 at St George's Cathedral, Cape Town. [3]
He has received frequent invitations from the heads of dioceses in Germany to run workshops, (for example, at the Wolfsburg Catholic Conference Centre in the diocese of Essen), mainly using his own, often new works. His Magnificat, from 'Christus Rex', [4] has become a major performed work in Germany. This, and many of the works listed in the references (below), appear in 'Freiburger Chorbuch'. [5]
As well as being a recital organist, he has worked in mainstream ensembles as a harpsichordist. He was in the Consort of Musicke for many years, performing with Emma Kirkby and Anthony Rooley. [6]
He received an honorary Associate award from the Royal School of Church Music in Durham Cathedral in May 2010, for his work for the RSCM, and his work as a church composer. [7]
See, also, the list of 'References to other works', below.
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Carl Josef Thiel was a German organist, church musician and professor of music.
The Mass in A major, Op. 126, is a setting of the mass ordinary in Latin by Josef Rheinberger. He composed it in 1881, originally for a three-part choir (SSA) with organ. When he conducted the first performance at the Allerheiligen-Hofkirche in Munich on Christmas Eve, he added a flute and a string quintet. He wrote a version with orchestra later.
The Missa brevis in C is a composition by František Xaver Brixi. The missa brevis is a setting of the Tridentine Mass for SATB soloists and choir, trumpets, timpani, strings and organ. Manuscripts were held in several monasteries in today's Czech Republic, Austria and Germany. It was published by Dr. J. Butz in 2004.
The following references are all to the published sheet music.
The following lists some of Wilson's other works, with bibliographic references (again, to the published sheet music)