THOMAS
MURRAY
Biography
Thomas
Murray, concert organist and recording artist, is University Organist and
Professor of Music at Yale University, where he has served on the faculty for
28 years and has taught many of the leading performers of a younger generation. Widely known for his interpretations of
Romantic repertoire and orchestral transcriptions, his recordings are highly
acclaimed. High Fidelity has credited him with “... consummate skill and
artistry in treating the organ as a great orchestra” and American Record Guide said of his Elgar CD: “Murray’s performance and his handling of the
immense resources of the Woolsey Hall organ are beyond superlatives ... the
shape of every phrase, the use of every color ... could not be more perfect.”
Born
in California in 1943, Murray studied with Clarence Mader
at Occidental College. He has appeared
in recitals and lectures at six national conventions of the A.G.O., which named
him International Artist of the Year for 1986.
As the recipient of this award he followed such luminaries as
Marie-Claire Alain, Jean Guillou and Dame Gillian Weir. In 2003 he was named an honorary fellow of the
Royal College of Organists in England, and in 2005 he was awarded the Gustave Stoeckel Award for
excellence in teaching from the Yale University School of Music.
He has appeared in Japan, South America and
Australia, as well as in most countries of continental Europe; his performances
have included recitals for the International Congress of Organists in Cambridge
(1987) and the Lahti Organ Festival in Finland, where he was soloist with the
Moscow Chamber Orchestra, conducted by Constantin Orbelian. As a
soloist in North America he has performed with the Pittsburgh, Milwaukee,
Houston and New Haven Symphony Orchestras, as well as the National Chamber
Orchestra in Washington DC, the Yale Philharmonia and
Yale Symphony Orchestra. In 2008, Prof.
Murray performed at a festival inaugurating the new organ in Magdeburg
Cathedral (Germany); he returned to Europe in September of that year to play
the inaugural recital on the new instrument at St. Johannes Church in Malmö, Sweden. Among
his appearances during the 2008/09 season were the debut recital on the
renovated E.M. Skinner organ in Rockefeller Chapel at the University of Chicago
and recitals for the Anglican Association of Musicians at Disney Hall in Los
Angeles and for the Organ Historical Society at Severance Hall in
Cleveland. In the current season Murray
will collaborate with conductor Simon Carrington and the Yale Schola Cantorum in a performance of
Richard Rodney Bennett’s choral piece The
Glory and the Dream.
Current as of September 2009