CELEBRATING 30 YEARS OF PERFORMING THE 1847 FERRIS TRACKER PIPE ORGAN
Thomas Dressler's exciting, passionate performances on the organ and harpsichord combine warm musicality with historic techniques. He has been performing for more than thirty years, often on historic instruments, including some of America's oldest and most historic organs.
He has appeared on local television in NY, the Poconos, and Philadelphia. Audience members described his performance at the opening concert of the 150th-anniversary celebration of the Round Lake organ as "riveting" and "stunningly elegant." In August of 2001, he recorded the 1847 Ferris organ at Round Lake, NY, and the CD was released in 2003; it received a feature review in The American Organist magazine. In 2012, he released a CD recorded on the Paul Fritts organ at Princeton Theological Seminary which was featured on Pipedreams on National Public Radio. Officers of the Central New Jersey chapter of the American Guild of Organists have said, "Mr. Dressler is an organist with solid technique, well known for his exquisite rendering of Renaissance and Baroque music."
But he does not only specialize in "early" music. He also spends much time exploring performance practices of the 19th century, trying to uncover possible modern misconceptions about this music and present it in a manner the composers would have recognized. As a teenager, Mr. Dressler studied organ with James Boeringer and practiced on an 1894 Felgemaker organ. During this time he developed a strong interest in historic "tracker action" organs. He also began to have an interest in historic performing practices (using the information available in old treatises to attempt to play music in a way similar to how the composers may have originally heard it.) When historic fingerings and articulations are matched with the music being played, it is possible to infuse it with a degree of emotion and excitement not possible using purely modern techniques. He pursued these techniques throughout his college years, earning a Bachelor of Music in Organ Performance, cum laude, from Susquehanna University, and a Master of Music in Performance, with honors, from Westminster Choir College. At Westminster, he studied organ with Mark Brombaugh and Joan Lippincott.
Mr. Dressler has held prominent church positions in Philadelphia and New Jersey, where he earned the title of choral director. He currently works as Organist and Director of Traditional music at First Presbyterian Church of Allentown, PA. He speaks as a lecturer teaching Performance Practices of the Baroque Era, various topics in music history and appreciation, and Music and Holistic Health. His combined ability to communicate as a speaker and performer creates a memorable event where audiences respond enthusiastically. A reporter from a local newspaper in Pennsylvania has said, "Dressler interacts with the audience on a very personal level, appealing to young and old alike. One comes away from each program knowing they have learned something.”
Learn More: thomasdressler.com