John Knowles Paine

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Synopsis

American composer and organist

  • 1839 born in Portland, Maine to a family of musicians.
  • 1850's took lessons in organ and composition from Hermann Kotzschmar.
  • 1855 completed his first composition, a string quartet.
  • 1857 gave his first solo organ recital, and was appointed organist of Portland's Haydn Society, where he gave a series of concerts.
  • 1858-61 traveled to Berlin, where he studied organ with Karl-August Haupt and composition with Wilhelm Friedrich Wieprecht. He travelled and concertized in Europe as well.
  • 1861 returned to Boston, where he gave a series of organ recitals and public lectures on musical style, forms, and history.
  • 1866-67 travelled again in Germany.
  • 1873-1905 became a music professor at Harvard University, where he helped form the core curriculum for Harvard's new music department. He was the first music professor in America.
  • He was a charter member of the American Guild of Organists.
  • 1906 died in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Paine was heavily influenced by the German music world. His teachers were all German, and he was much affected by the revival of the music of Bach which was occurring in Berlin while he was there. He was also influenced by Schumann and Mendelssohn. Corliss Arnold specifically mentions his Concert Variations on the Austrian Hymn, composed in 1830, as being noteworthy.

For details, see the Wikipedia article on John Knowles Paine.

List of Organ Works

Click to sort by opus number, title, or year of composition or publication
Opus Title Year
Op. 1 no. 2 Prelude and Fugue in G minor 1859
Op. ?? Prelude in C minor year
Op. 2 no. 1 Fantasia and Fugue 1860
Op. 2 no. 2 Doppel Fue über Heil dir im Siebeskranz 1860
Op. 2 Concert Variations on Old Hundred 1861
Op. 3 Concert Variations on the Austrian Hymn 1860
Op. 4 Concert Variations on The Star Spangled Banner 1861
Op. 17 Andante con Variazioni 1863
Op. 13 Fantasie über Ein feste Burg 1869
Op. 19 Deux Preludes 1892
Op. ?? Presto year

Background and General Perspectives on Performing These Organ Works

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Registration and Organs

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Notes

  1. This footnote was entered in the "Registration and Organs" section

This space is for automatic insertion of footnotes. To enter a footnote from anywhere in the article, start by typing the tag <ref> and then enter the text, and type the tag </ref> to end the footnote. The footnote will then appear in this "Notes" section automatically.