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  • 25 July 2025 12:28 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    We are very excited to announce the results of the 2025 National Organ Competition:

    1st place - Godfrey Hewitt Memorial Prize ($6,000): Maria Gajraj
    WINNER: Douglas Haas Prize ($1,000), Jan Overduin Audience Prize ($1,000)

    Maria Gajraj is a Montréal-based organist and Doctoral Candidate at McGill University. Her research focuses on 20th-century Caribbean organ repertoire. She is the co-founder of Sapphonix Collective, which promotes women, queer, and racialized classical musicians, and has been featured on CBC Radio. Maria has performed internationally, at venues like Blackburn Cathedral (UK), Maison Symphonique (Montreal), and in series such as Cal Performances and Bergen Orgelsommer. A recipient of the Godfrey Hewitt Scholarship (2022) and other awards, her doctoral research is funded by the FRQ (Fonds de Recherche du Quebec). In her concert programs, Maria is passionate about highlighting women and composers of colour. As Deirdre Piper wrote in “Pipelines”, Maria’s “spirited, clean, and colourful performance lent real meaningful significance” to this music. By creating engaging concert programs, and by featuring the organ in innovative and multidisciplinary contexts, Maria strives to break stereotypes, and to make the organ more accessible to everyone.



    2nd place - Paul Murray Memorial Prize ($3,000): Qing Xu

    Qing Xu is now a doctorate student at McGill University, where she studies with Isabelle Demers. Prior to commencing her studies in Montreal, she completed her bachelor’s and master’s degrees at the China Central Conservatory of Music in Beijing in the class of Yuan Shen, a leading Chinese organist. Her professional career in organ performance began in 2018 when she was selected for the Haarlem International Organ Festival’s “Young Talent” program. The same year, she also won the second prize in Concours International d’orgue de Versailles Jeune Talent (Versailles International Young Concert Organist Competition). In 2021, she won the Special Jury Prize at the 12th International M. Tariverdiev Organ Competition. Ms. Xu has performed the Chinese premiere of numerous works and has given recitals in several cities in China. She worked with composer Chang Qi on her piece Micro-carving, which won the International Kajia Saariaho Organ Composition Competition prize and was performed at the inauguration of the Helsinki Music Centre’s new organ in 2024. As a specialist in late Romantic repertoire, several of Ms. Xu’s articles on this topic have been published in Chinese academic journals.



    3rd place - Muriel Gidley Stafford Prize ($1,500): Isaac Howie

    Isaac Howie, a Vancouver organist, entered UBC at 15, initially to study Forestry. He finished a B.Mus. in May 2025, studying organ with Michael Dirk and harpsichord/improvisation with Alexander Weimann, along with a major in Classics; he also holds an ARCT in piano performance. Since 2021, he has been organist of Holy Family Parish, Vancouver (FSSP), and has participated in workshops with David Briggs, Edoardo Belotti, David Palmer, Marc D’Anjou, and Denis Bédard. Now a sought-after collaborator, he has played with the Vancouver Symphony, improvised for Silent Movie Mondays at the Orpheum Theatre, featured in Saint-Saëns’ Organ Symphony with the West Coast Symphony, and at Holy Rosary; he also participated in the 2nd Internationaler Feith Orgelwettbewerb last year in Blieskastel, Germany and was selected as winner of the 2025 Godfrey Hewitt Annual Memorial Scholarship. Isaac was President of the RCCO Vancouver Centre from 2024 - 25, and his choral work has been premiered by the Vancouver Chamber Choir. In September 2025, he will begin an M.Mus. with renowned historical improviser Sietze de Vries at the Prins Claus conservatoire in Groningen, Netherlands. 



    We would also like to congratulate the three other semi-finalists: Peter Bayer, Samuel Lee and Aron Sipos. The jury commented on the very high standard of all of the candidates who advanced to the last stages of the competition. The semi-final and final rounds were held earlier in July at Organ Festival Canada 2025 in Kitchener-Waterloo-Guelph, Ontario.

    In addition, we would like to extend our thanks to this year's jurors: Marnie Giesbrecht, Stephanie Martin, Gregg Redner, Lee Willingham and Patricia Wright, as well as the jurors for the preliminary round: Lottie Enns-Braun, Andrew Henderson and Jonathan Oldengarm. Click here to read more about the jury members.

  • 25 June 2025 1:25 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Don't miss these premiere performances of the three prize-winning compositions selected at the inaugural Rachel Laurin Composition Competition! Performances take place during Organ Festival Canada (event details are included below). To purchase concert tickets, click here.

    Variations on Tetris Theme (Korobeiniki) by Zoltán Májer (Hungary) - 1st Prize Winner
    Thursday, July 10 at 4:00 pm
    Basilica of Our Lady Immaculate (Guelph)
    Performed by Alexander Straus-Fausto

    Æther, Double Fugue in F# Minor by Dr. Sandon Lowe (Australia) - 2nd Prize Winner
    Wednesday, July 9 at 11:30 am
    St Matthews Lutheran Church (Kitchener)
    Performed by Martin Jones; composer in attendance

    Toccata-Gigue by Tyler Versluis (Canada) - 3rd Prize Winner
    Tuesday, July 8 at 2:30 pm
    St John the Evangelist Anglican Church (Kitchener)
    Performed by Joshua Ehlebracht; composer in attendance

  • 18 June 2025 1:09 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Materials for the upcoming Annual General Meeting have been posted in the Members Discussion Forum.

    The meeting takes place on Wednesday, July 9, 2025, and will be held in-person at St. Matthews Lutheran Church in Kitchener, ON, and by teleconference via Zoom (a link to join the meeting is provided along with the meeting materials).

    We look forward to seeing you there.

  • 17 June 2025 12:48 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    We are thrilled to announce that Alexander Straus-Fausto has been selected as the winner of the 2025 Sir Ernest MacMillan Memorial Foundation Prize.

    Straus-Fausto was selected from a strong contingent of five applicants from across Canada in a unanimous decision by jury members Neil Cockburn, Isabelle Demers, John Paul Farahat, and Jonathan Oldengarm, who noted the high standard of all the applicants. Read about Straus-Fausto here.

    Foundation member, Dr. Robin Elliott, will present the award on Thursday, July 10 at the Isabelle Demers concert during Organ Festival Canada.

    Congratulations Alexander!




  • 06 June 2025 9:46 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Experience the power and beauty of the organ in an inspiring and exciting concert featuring seven extraordinary organ artists.

    Can't attend in-person? Buy an e-ticket and watch online! "

    Tickets and more info available at https://all-star-organ-concert.eventbrite.ca

  • 14 May 2025 11:01 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Canadian organist/conductor/pianist/composer and current President of the Royal College of Organists, Sarah MacDonald, reflects on the role of the church musician in the education of children and the next generation, from the elite UK boarding choir school to the most ordinary of primary/elementary establishments. Reductions in funding to music (and indeed, the arts in general) in public school systems around the world are worrying for all of us. How can we, as organists and choir trainers, redress the balance, so that these valuable and worthwhile skills are not lost completely? Drawing on her many years of experience as Director of the Girl Choristers at Ely Cathedral and Director of Music at Selwyn College, University of Cambridge, Sarah explores the various ways in which church musicians are filling in the musical gaps left by years of government cuts in the UK. She will be joined by her colleague, Jonathan Schranz, a former member of her choir at Selwyn, who is now Director of Music at St George’s RC Cathedral Southwark (London) and who is responsible for delivering one of the UK’s groundbreaking initiatives to teach singing and musical literacy to thousands of primary-school-aged children in the UK, where music education is all but lost in non-fee-paying schools. Plenty of time will be allowed for discussion about how the various programmes in the UK are potentially relevant/transferable to the musical education of Canadian children.


    Sarah MacDonald is a Canadian-born, UK-resident conductor, organist, pianist, and composer. She is Director of Music at Selwyn College, Cambridge, and Director of Ely Cathedral’s Girl Choristers. Sarah has been at Selwyn since 1999, and was the first woman to hold such a post in an Oxbridge Chapel. She is also Organist to the University of Cambridge, the first woman to hold that historic office. She studied at the University of Cambridge and the Royal Conservatory of Music, Toronto, and her teachers include Marek Jablonski, Leon Fleisher, John Tuttle, and David Sanger. Sarah has made over commercial 35 recordings; her first solo disc, a recording of the Goldberg Variations on the Steinway-D at Ely Cathedral, was released in 2024. Sarah performs internationally every year and is in demand as a conductor, organist, and examiner. She has over 60 published works for choir and/or organ, and has written a popular book about the British choral tradition, a compilation of her column for the American Organist magazine ‘UK Report’, which she has contributed monthly since 2009. Sarah is currently serving as President of the Royal College of Organists. In her spare time, she is a keen amateur photographer. 


    Jonathan Schranz is a conductor based in London. He studied choral conducting at the Royal Academy of Music where he was awarded a Distinction along with numerous prizes. Prior to this he read music at Churchill College, Cambridge, graduating with first class honours in 2015. He was made an Associate of the Royal Academy of Music in 2023.

    He is Director of Music for the Archdiocese of Southwark and at its mother church of St George’s Cathedral, where he oversees the Cathedral Music Department and its four cathedral choirs each week. This includes the Children’s Choir, Junior Choir, Cathedral Consort, and Cathedral Choir of mixed choristers, choral and organ scholars and professional lay clerks. Jonathan is also director of the Southwark Singing Programme, a diocesan music education programme which facilitates whole-class singing in 21 schools across the archdiocese each week. In recent years the cathedral choirs have made two commercial CD recordings and given regular BBC broadcast performances.

    A firm believer in the transformative social impact of choral music, Jonathan is a co-founder and trustee of the charity Sing Inside, which delivers singing workshops in prisons across the country. His master’s thesis, exploring the benefits of choral music within a prison chaplaincy, has been presented at the Universities of Leicester and Oxford.

    When off the podium, Jonathan spends his time in aquariums, zoos and penny arcades.


    This is a free event. For more details, or to register to attend, click here.


    Date: May 31, 2025

    Time: 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm ET on organCONNECT Discord channel


  • 12 May 2025 10:54 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)



    On July 7th Organ Festival Canada is delighted to be premiering a debut piece for augmented organ and choir by Robyn Jacob & George Rahi.

    Robyn Jacob is a composer, pianist, vocalist and educator living and working from the unceded territories of the Sḵwxwú7mesh, Xwməθkwəyəm and Səl’il’wətaʔ Nations, also known as Vancouver. Her compositions include commissions by Grammy winning Third Coast Percussion (Chicago), Architek Percussion (Montreal), Grammy winning Sō Percussion (Brooklyn), Chor Leoni (Vancouver), and the Victoria Symphony, as well as collaborations with visual artists and instrument makers. Her avant-pop project Only A Visitor (Mint Records) has toured internationally and released four albums to date. She has released two albums with her duo project The Giving Shapes in collaboration with harpist Elisa Thorn. Her new solo project Immix explores the emotive narratives of voice and electronics. From 2012 - 2024 she was part of the multi-disciplinary art collective Publik Secrets, whose work includes a variety of public space interventions, performances, installations and ephemeral gatherings, including Gamelan Bike Bike, which she co-led with artist and composer George Rahi for over ten years.

    George Rahi is an artist and composer based in Vancouver, unceded Coast Salish territories. He works with speculative instruments and technologies as a method of exploring acoustic and digital anomalies, modes of listening, and spatial and architectural thinking. His work includes installations, instrument making, solo + ensemble performance, and works for radio, theatre & public spaces. Recent presentations include the Stavanger Concert Hall, Artificial Sonification exhibition (Matera), SPEKTRUM (Berlin), Kunst-Station Sankt Peter (Cologne), Institute for New Music (Salzburg), and Orgelpark (Amsterdam). His work has been supported by awards such as the Canadian Music Centre's Adaskin Prize, Lab30 Audience Award, Canada Council for the Arts Guest of Honour (Frankfurt), R. Murray Schafer Soundscape Award, and through mentorships with artists such as Dewa Alit and Trimpin. He has been an artist in residence at Elektronmusikstudion (EMS), Bergen Centre for Electronic Art, Locus Sonus Research Group (Aix Marseille University), and hcma architecture.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G8Sznab1GFs

  • 09 May 2025 11:12 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    Organ Festival Canada is excited to welcome Alexander Straus-Fausto on July 10th!

    Alexander Richard Straus-Fausto is known for his exhilarating, clean, colorful, virtuosic, sensitive, and innovative organ performances. He has a broad repertoire of music, dating from early fifteenth-century keyboard music to contemporary organ repertoire. He is a member of The Diapason’s “20 under 30 Class of 2023,” which recognizes the most talented young artists under the age of 30 who have made significant contributions to the fields of organ performance, harpsichord, and church music. His mission is to sell the organ to a much wider audience. He is currently assistant organist at St. George's Cathedral in Kingston Ontario.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggig6-dishc

  • 05 May 2025 12:40 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)



    Organ Festival Canada is excited to welcome Isabelle Demers on July 10th!

    There is no shortage of organists who make their instruments roar; and while her power was never in question,
    Demers made the instrument sing.”
    (Peter Reed, Classical Source.com, England, 2016)

    With playing described as having “bracing virtuosity” (Chicago Classical Review) and being “fearless and extraordinary” (Amarillo-Globe News), Isabelle Demers has enraptured critics, presenters, and audience members around the globe.

    She has appeared in recital throughout Europe, Oman, Australia, New Zealand, the United States, and Canada, including at the Cathedrals of Cologne and Regensburg (Germany); the ElbPhilharmonie (Hamburg); the Royal Festival Hall, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Westminster Cathedral, and Westminster Abbey (London); City Hall (Stockholm); the Royal Opera House of Muscat (Oman); the Forbidden City Concert Hall (Beijing, China); Victoria Hall (Singapore); Melbourne Town Hall (Australia); Auckland Town Hall (New Zealand); Disney Hall (Los Angeles), Davies Hall (San Francisco), the Meyerson Symphony Center (Dallas), the Kimmel Center, and the Wanamaker Organ at Macy’s (Philadelphia); and the Maison Symphonique (Montréal).

    Dr. Demers is in continual high demand by her colleagues as witnessed by performances for numerous regional and national conventions of the American Guild of Organists, the Institute of Organ Builders and International Society of Organbuilders, the Royal Canadian College of Organists, and the Organ Historical Society. She has released multiple CD recordings on the Acis and Pro Organo labels. Her latest CD, recorded at Chicago’s Rockefeller Chapel, was released in January 2020, and includes works of Reger, Laurin, Dupré, Mendelssohn, Tchaikovsky, and Macmillan.  

    A native of Québec and a doctoral graduate of the Juilliard School, Dr. Demers is Associate Professor of Organ at McGill University (Montréal, Québec). She was formerly the Joyce Bowden Chair in Organ and Head of the Organ Program at Baylor University (Waco, Texas).

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-s_9Af-oZo

  • 02 May 2025 1:26 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)


    The RCCO joins with organists around the world to mourn the death of Barrie Cabena in Guelph Ontario last week at age 91 after a short decline. Known and appreciated by people in both English and French milieus, organ builders, organ players, and organ music composers, church liturgists, students and concert performers. There is much of his composing output still to be discovered: Sonatas da Chiesa, Homage pieces that grew out of this Australian’s 1967 RCCO Canadian Centennial Project commission to encompass 100 pieces honouring his colleagues, friends, graduated students and fellow artists. Many organs built by Canadian companies with his collaboration as consultant helped spread the Orgel Bewegung ideas and performance practice tenants through the fabric of Canadian music making. 

    Barrie Cabena's full obituary is available to read here: https://wallcustance.com/acf-death-notices/h-barrie-cabena/

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Address

The Royal Canadian College of Organists

20 St Joseph St

Toronto, ON M4Y 1J9

Contact
Phone: 416.929.6400
Email: info[at]rcco.ca
Adresse

The Royal Canadian College of Organists

20 St Joseph St

Toronto, ON M4Y 1J9


Contact
Téléphone : 416.929.6400
Courriel : info[
à]rcco.ca

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