An argumentative duett followed, much to the scandal of the saints and the hilariousness of the sinners, until the pitying organist struck up with great force: "From whence doth this union arise?
Gauntlett, as solo organist and organist in "Elijah," L30.
Mr. James Stimpson was the chorus-master and official organistof the Festival.
And as for the heavy touch, I am sure that I admired yourorganist very much who was able to play a Fugue on them.
To dart round the corner, and grasp the new-comer, was the work of an instant, but it only resulted in his being grasped in return, for the organist was in the hands of the police.
There were grand rejoicings in Duplex Street when Jared obtained official announcement, under the hand and seal of Mr Timson the tea-dealer, of his appointment to the post of organist of St Runwald's, with a salary of fifty pounds a year.
Pellet I found a false key at the bottom of his book-locker when I took the organist of St Chrysostom's to try our instrument.
A bright spring morning, and the organist in the morning costume of a glossy black dress-coat and trousers--Tim Ruggles' cut for a ducat!
Georg Böhm, organist at Lüneburg at the commencement of the eighteenth century.
The harpsichord is treated, in the main, as might be expected from a first-rate organist of that time, and it is difficult at the present day to reproduce what so much depends upon the free co-operation of the performer.
Cambridge; in 1604 he obtained the post of organist in the Chapel Royal, London, and two years later received the degree of Mus.
It has become, in fact, quite a tradition of the cathedral, which I hope no future organistwill ever depart from.
He was a most charming companion; a first-rate organist and master of theory, and a man of large experience and great general culture.
The organist before beginning to play closes a double-pole, single-throw switch (Fig.
The motor pumps air until the bellows is full, and if the organist delays playing, the strip of brass n (Fig.
We employed the organist and three or four blowers to exhibit its merits.
I place anorganist who is master of his instrument, first among virtuosi.
Lustig, organistat Groningen, was published there in 1786.
After being organist in Hereford cathedral, he joined the Chapel Royal in 1585, and in the next year became a Mus.
In 1591 he was appointed organist in Queen Elizabeth's chapel in succession to Blitheman, from whom he had received his musical education.
His first music master was Edmund Baker, organistof Chester cathedral, and a pupil of Dr John Blow.
Before the arrival of the bride the organist plays some bright selection, but on her entering the church and passing up the aisle he plays the Wedding March.
The organist and the music are usually selected by the bride.
The organist is selected by the bride, but the fee is paid by the groom.
Before her arrival, the organist plays some bright selection; but on her entering the church and passing up the aisle, he plays the wedding march.
Two pale-faced, blue-eyed women could not be more dissimilar than the organist and her soprano.
A person who reports of himself that he has escaped from Charleston avers that he has recognized in the organist of St. Peter's the wife of General Edgar.
The attitude he assumed not many hours ago in reference to the organist has added to his consciousness of weight, and to-day he has taken as little pleasure as became him in the choir's performance.
Would the door of the organist of St. Peter's never open but to guests ethereal as these?
He comes slowly, weighed down by his burden of consequences, and, as at one glance, the organist perceives the "situation.
Never had the organist heard such tones from it before; there was volume, depth, purity, such as had been unheard by those who thought they knew the quality and compass of Sybella's voice.
Was nothing ever to penetrate the seven-walled solitude in which the organist chose to intrench herself?
In consequence of this request the organist kept her place till night had actually descended.
Whether the organist remained here after this, or if other words were added to these by the hostess or the guest, there is no report.
So the organist came to the room of Adam von Gelhorn.
But now, while the organist played, and Sybella sat down, supposing she was not wanted yet, she found herself not withdrawn into the indifference she supposed.
Although Tom had indeed deserted his post, the organist was mistaken as to the cause and mode of his desertion: oppressed like every one else with the sultriness of the night, he had fallen fast asleep, leaning against the organ.
In the nineties, there were two men in the choir there, one an exceptional organist and the other, who had a very fine bass voice; he later went to Paris.
She was the organistand choir leader in Christ Church, Georgetown.
As the pupil of the Italian organistand composer, Sammartini, he made rapid progress in operatic composition.
Our musician rapidly became known far and wide throughout the musical centres of Germany as a learned and recondite composer, as a brilliant improviser, and as an organist beyond rivalry.
This celebrated man was born in Auvergne in 1683, and was during his earlier life the organist of the Clermont cathedral church.
Pepusch, who had never quite forgiven Handel for superseding him as the best organist in England, remarked of one of the airs, "That great bear must have been inspired when he wrote that air.
Pepusch had had the leading place, before Handel's arrival, as organist and conductor, and made a distinct place for himself even after the sun of Handel had obscured all of his contemporaries.
His early love of music secured for him instructions from the blind organist of the Franciscan church at that garrison town, under whom he made astonishing progress.
To the dying man was brought the offer of the rich appointment of organist of St. Stephen's Cathedral.
As the pupil of the great organist Zachau, he studied the whole existing mass of German and Italian music, and soon exacted from his master the admission that he had nothing more to teach him.
A stroke of fortune now fell in his way; the place of organist fell vacant at the Busseto church, and Verdi was appointed to fill it.
He had a private chapel, and appointed Handel organist in the room of the celebrated Dr.
He soon found he had outstripped the attainments of his teacher, and contrived to place himself under the tuition of the celebrated Wilhelm Hemser, who was organist at a neighbouring monastery.
The nephew of this excellent woman is an organist in Paris to whom the Marquis de Sallenauve, then in emigration, had confided the care of his son.
I should therefore have passed rapidly through it if the remarkable talent of the organist who was performing part of the service had not induced me to remain.
Perhaps I pronounce the name incorrectly; I mean the organist of Saint-Louis-de-l'Ile.
Monsieur Gaston and Monsieur de Sallenauve accompanied the organistto Saint-Sulpice, where, during the services of the Month of Mary, the Italian woman sings every evening.
After hearing her, the organist said she had a fine contralto that was worth, at the lowest, sixty thousand francs a year.
Of course I have made the acquaintance of the chief organist in Breslau, Herr Köhler; he promised to show me his organ.
Mr. Buchanan served as organist for the Sunday school and accompanist on the piano at the other meetings.
The lady principal served as superintendent of the Sunday school, and as organist and chorister at all the other meetings.
Where and under whom he studied is not known, but in his twenty-first year he was sufficiently advanced and celebrated to receive the important post of organist of the Chapel Royal.
In the following year he became organist of Westminster Abbey.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "organist" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.