Lunchtime Organ Recital: Jonathan Bunney (St Giles-in-the-Fields)
- Occurring
- for 30 mins
- Venue
- The Temple Church, London
- Address The Temple Church, Temple, London, EC4Y 1BB, United Kingdom
Dieterich Buxtehude (1637-1707)
- Praeludium in C BuxWV147
Klaas Bolt (1927-90)
- Variations on 'Mijn God, waar zal ik henegaan' (‘My God, where shall I go’)
Naji Hakim (born 1955)
- Variations: O filii et filiae (‘O sons and daughters’)
Toon Hagen (born 1959)
- Shalom
Petr Eben (1929-2007)
- Hommage à Dietrich Buxtehude
Jonathan Bunney was awarded a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music in 2000. His teachers included David Graham and Margaret Phillips. During his time at the RCM, he won the major prizes for organ.
In 2004 Jonathan became Director of Music at St Giles-in-the-Fields and in 2008 returned to the RCM to study for a Masters in Advanced Performance, achieving a distinction. He was also awarded the Walford Davies Prize for his performance of Louis Vierne’s Sixth Symphony. Since graduating, Jonathan has worked as a freelance musician and is currently Director of Music at Bassett House School and an accredited teacher for the Royal College of Organists.
Jonathan has made several broadcasts on radio and part of his CD ‘Let the Pealing Organ Blow’ (produced by Regents Records on the historic organ of St. Giles-in-the Fields) was broadcast on BBC Radio 2. He has given organ recitals at several cathedrals including Winchester, Liverpool, Southwark, Chichester and St. Paul's Cathedral.
The Temple Church organ
The organ in the Temple church was built in 1924 for the Castle of Glen Tanar, Aberdeenshire, and installed in 1954 in the rebuilt church (following war damage), the gift of Lord Glentanar. The organ case was designed by W. E. Godfrey and installed in 1966 and is modelled on drawings of the Temple’s Father Smith organ of 1688, showing the crests of Inner and Middle Temple. The organ was rebuilt in 2013 by Harrison and Harrison of Durham and has 66 stops over four manuals.
Future recitals – Wednesdays at 1.15 pm
22 April – Charles Andrews (Temple Church)
29 April – Rupert Gough (St Bartholomew the Great, Smithfield)
6 May – Miriam Reveley (Jesus College, Cambridge)
13 May – no recital
20 May – Yvette Murphy (Temple Church)
27 May – Steven Grahl (Trinity College, Cambridge)
3 June – Charles Andrews (Temple Church)
10 June – tba
17 June – tba
24 June – Martin Ford (The Guards’ Chapel, Westminster)
1 July – Pingping Chen (Royal College of Music)
8 July – Gavin Phelps (Oundle Recital Award)
15 July – Simon Hogan (Southwark Cathedral)
22 July – Charles Andrews (Temple Church)