Simon John PrestonCBE (4 August 1938 – 13 May 2022) was an English organist, conductor, and composer who was admired as one of the most important English church musicians of his generation.[1][2]
Family and education
Preston was born in Bournemouth, Dorset, to John Preston, an architectural draughtsman, and Doreen Lane,[3] and was introduced to music at an early age. His uncle played the organ at the church that his family attended, and he was inspired to take up the instrument at the age of 5 after hearing a recording of George Thalben-Ball.[1]
Preston left Westminster Abbey in 1987 to pursue a career as an international concert organist.[2]
He was artistic director of the Calgary International Organ Festival from 1990 to 2002, patron of the University of Buckingham, chair of the Herbert Howells Society and vice-president of both the Organ Club and the Organists’ Benevolent League. He also served as a member of the Arts Council music panel and the music committee of the BBC.[5]
Admired as "one of the most important English church musicians of his generation", he died on 13 May 2022 at the age of 83.[1][6]
Compositions and recordings
From the 1960s onwards, Preston composed a number of works for the organ, the best-known of which is probably his Alleluyas, written in 1965 in the style of Olivier Messiaen. Recordings of his organ works originally made in the 1960s on the Argo label were re-issued by Eloquence in November 2017.[7]
Simon Preston with the Yehudi Menuhin Festival Orchestra performing Georg Friedrich Handel's Organ Concerto: No. 4 in F major, Op. 4. No. 4 No. 5 in F major, Op. 4, No. 5 No. 6 in B flat major, Op. 4, No. 6 No. 13 in F major "Cuckoo and the Nightingale" Here on archive.org