George
Baker
Biography
A native of Dallas, a young George Baker won the
American Guild of Organists National Competition in Organ Playing in 1970 and
created a sensation in the organ world with his subsequent featured recital for
that organization’s national convention two years later. He then went to
George
Baker has received training with some of the finest organ teachers of the
twentieth-century. He obtained his
Bachelor’s degree from Southern Methodist University under Robert Anderson,
after which he traveled to
In his early years as a musician, George Baker won first prizes by unanimous jury decisions in several major organ competitions including the American Guild of Organists (Buffalo, 1970), the Grand Prix de Chartres (Chartres, France, 1974) and the International Improvisation Competition (Lyon, France, 1979). His recording credits include the complete organ works of J. S. Bach (1979) and the complete organ works of Louis Vierne (world premiere recording, released in 1994, a project he shared with Pierre Cochereau). He has been awarded three French Grand Prix du Disque, two of which were for The Complete Organ Works of Darius Milhaud. In 1995, the eight CD Vierne set won the coveted Grand Prix Spécial du Jury from the Nouvelle Académie du Disque Français. In 2000, the same recording won a critic’s choice award from American Record Guide.
Currently, at Southern Methodist University, Dr. Baker serves as Associate University Organist. In 2003, Naxos released Volume 13 of The Organ Works of Marcel Dupré, recorded on the restored and enlarged Perkins Chapel organ at SMU. In 2007, he recorded a CD of the works of his teacher Jean Langlais on the famous 1888 Cavaillé-Coll organ of St-Sernin de Toulouse. The following year, he recorded three of his own works at St-Sulpice in Paris as part of a CD honoring his former mentor Pierre Cochereau. These two CDs were released on the Solstice label (France). On March 7, 2009, Baker was one of three Cochereau students chosen to play a special concert at Notre-Dame de Paris, honoring the twenty-fifth anniversary of Cochereau’s death. Works in progress include a video workshop with accompanying text on the subject of organ improvisation, which will be released in the Spring of 2010.
George Baker first appeared on the roster of Karen
McFarlane Artists as a young artist, to which he has returned at the beginning
of the new millennium. He was a featured
artist at the 2004 AGO National Convention in
Current as of August 2009