How to learn the organ

Learning to play the pipe organ feels a bit like those early driving lessons – overwhelming awkwardness bordering on mild panic, convinced you will NEVER get the hang of it, though of course, you do.   But also like driving a car, you will make better progress with a few initial one-to-one lessons if you can possibly afford them.

Out of Covid has come a complete transformation in online organ teaching, once considered difficult if not impossible.  You are still required to jump through a few hoops in terms of connectivity, a suitable instrument and so on, but it’s no longer a ‘second-best’ option.  See what RCO-accredited teacher Robin Harrison offers, for example, on The Maestro Online.  More online options from many of the links below:

Find a teacher

The organist at your local church (or one of your local churches or cathedral – be prepared to travel a bit) may give organ lessons.  Just start asking: if they don’t actually teach themselves, they will probably know someone local who does.

The Royal College of Organists in the UK has a searchable database of accredited teachers

The American Guild of Organists (AGO) has a listing for finding an organ teacher in the United States

Due to the remoteness of populations in Canada, the Royal Canadian Organists Association (RCCO) has a well-developed distance learning programme

Local Organists’ Assocations in the UK run their own training schemes: search their individual websites via the IAO Regions map.  Often the schemes are aimed at training the next generation of church organists, and sometimes they include bursaries or other financial help for young organists.

 

Teaching yourself

Learning to play the organ from a book is a bit like trying to learn to drive using a book – though you can learn lots from books once you have a grasp of the basics.  Organ tutor books by the great and the good of the organ world from the nineteenth- and early twentieth-centuries lurk online and in secondhand listings, but should be treated with caution.  Although sound in many ways, they hold to ideas about music which have been superceded by wider modern attitudes to organ repertoire and performance practice.

Probably the best current organ tutor book for teaching yourself is The New Oxford Organ Method, published in 2020, by Anne Marsden Thomas and Frederick Stocken (both RCO Accredited Teachers).  It teaches technique through appropriate pieces right from the beginning, and is suitable for the beginner as well as someone who who wants to refresh their organ-playing skills.

YouTube tutorials? Yes, be totally inspired by performances you find on YouTube! – we all are.  But a YouTube tutor isn’t watching over your shoulder as you play, checking your posture, correcting your hand and pedal technique, pointing out the wrong notes, commenting on your choice of registration… the organ is such a complex instrument to master, that thinking you can learn just from watching videos is a recipe for a certain amount of false confidence – certainly until you develop the skills and experience to accurately critique your own performances – and you can unwittingly develop a whole load of bad playing habits which a face-to-face tutor will have to help you unlearn later.

 

Emergency skills

The following will help you survive, and develop your confidence as a performing organist, if you’re thrown in at the deep end:

My pianist to organist resources on repertoire, and playing for services, weddings and funerals for the first time

Philip Norman’s Organists’ Toolkit for beginner organists

The Reluctant Organist focusses on developing your pedal technique, and hymn playing, for beginner church organists