Richard Barrick Hoskins

Richard
Barrick Hoskins was appointed Director of Music & Organist of St. Chrysostom's
Episcopal Church, Chicago in January of 1984.
He conducts the 16-voice professional choir, a Children's Choir, and a
volunteer Parish Choir. He is also the
Director of the Music at St. Chrysostom's Concert Series, which he founded in
1985. Since
January 1995 he has been Assistant Professor of Organ & Harpsichord at Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, teaching Graduate and
Undergraduate students. During the 2007-2008 academic year he is the Interim Professor of Organ at Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin. He also directs
and teaches piano and organ for St. Chrysostom’s Music Academy.
He
has played recitals in churches and at universities throughout the Midwest, in Canada, in England at York Minster, in Vienna and in Paris at St. Sulpice and Le Temple
du Saint-Esprit. He has appeared as
soloist with the Northern Illinois University Philharmonic and the LaPorte
County Symphony. He has appeared as Organist with the
Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra, the Grant Park Symphony Orchestra, the Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Andreas Delffs, Carlos Kalmar, James Paul, and Allen Tinkham, as well as with Music of the
Baroque, The William Ferris Chorale, the Asbury Brass Quintet and the Millar Brass Ensemble. During the
2004-2006 seasons he has appeared as Organist for the Chorale on WTTW’s Sunday
evening program, 30 Good Minutes. He has
been heard on the internationally syndicated radio program Pipedreams, playing the Fisk Organ
at St. Chrysostom’s. His faculty recitals at NIU have been
broadcast on WNIU. He served as organist for the Choir of Christ Church, Winnetka, under the direction of
Richard Clemmitt, for the Choir’s residencies at Wells Cathedral (2003), Durham Cathedral (2005), Lincoln Cathedral (2007, and Grace Cathedral (2008), and with the NIU Chamber Choir, under the direction Dr. Eirc Johnson at Worcester Cathedral (2006).
He
began organ studies in Freeport, Illinois with Velma Wachlin in
1971. He received his Bachelor of Music
degree from Northwestern University in 1976. In 1988 he was named the William H. Barnes
Scholar at Northwestern and received a $10,000 award for graduate study. His organ study for both Bachelor and Masters
degrees was with Dr. Richard Enright. In 1989 he was elected to the honorary music
society Pi Kappa Lambda. In
1974 he was the First Place winner of the Young Artists
Competition sponsored by the Society of American Musicians and was presented in
recital by the Society. In
1979 he was awarded two scholarships by the French government for organ study
in France with Daniel Roth, then
Organiste-Titulaire of the Basilica du Sacre-Couer, now Organiste-Titulaire of
St. Sulpice. While there, he made his
Parisian concert debut at the Temple du Saint-Esprit. He also studied with M. Roth at the Summer Academy for Organists in Haarlem, Holland (1977). He
attended the Cambridge Choral Studies Seminar in 1990 at Clare College, studying with John Rutter,
Mary Berry, Timothy Brown, Peter Le Huray and Percy Young.
He
was Assistant Organist at St. James' Cathedral, Chicago from 1976 to 1979 and was
Interim Organist-Choirmaster in 1980. He
then served as Organist-Choirmaster at historic Second Presbyterian Church,
Chicago, and was recorded there for the Tiffany exhibition at the Field Museum. Other recordings include In dulci Jubilo - Christmas at St. Chrysostom's, as Organist for the Choir of the Lutheran Theological Seminary of Chicago, and on the most recent Christmas CD Jubilate from Music of the Baroque.
Roger D. Stanley

Associate Organist at St. Chrysostom’s since 1997, Roger D. Stanley is a native of North Carolina. His undergraduate studies were completed at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro with a Bachelor’s Degree in Organ Performance.
Since moving to Chicago in 1978, he attended graduate school at Northwestern University and has served churches in the Chicago area as an organist and choir director. His has studied organ with Dr. Thane McDonald at Wake Forest University, Dr. Kathryn Eskey at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Dr. Richard Anderson at Bennett College, and Wolfgang Rübsam at Northwestern University.
From an early age, Mr. Stanley’s skills as a choral accompanist have been in demand to provide organ performances of major orchestral and choral scores including Handel’s Israel in Egypt, Handel’s Messiah, Mozart’s Requiem, Brahms’ Ein Deutsches Requiem, Mendelssohn’s Elijah, and numerous Bach cantatas. Most recently he performed Duruflé’s Requiem with the Bel Canto Chorus in Milwaukee.
Sean Knudson
Sean Knudson was appointed Organ Scholar at St. Chrysostom's in February 2008. He is a Junior at Carthage College, Kenosha, where he studies with Richard Hoskins. 

