Alcée Chriss III
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Alcée Chriss III is an American organist, composer and conductor from Dallas, Texas known for incorporating jazz and gospel influences into his performances. Chriss was raised in Dallas, where his father was a United Methodist minister. He was raised around gospel music, learning classical and jazz music on the piano before turning to the organ as a teenager. His interest in the instrument was influenced by watching Catharine Crozier on the '' Hour of Power''. The churches he attended as a child didn't have organs, so he tracked down local organists to ask if they would take him on as a student. He studied at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, where he obtained his bachelor's and master's degrees, before pursuing a PhD in music at McGill University, studying the organ under
Hans-Ola Ericsson Hans-Ola Ericsson (born 1958 in Stockholm) is a Swedish organist and composer. Career Ericsson studied church music at the Royal College of Music in Stockholm, and continued his organ and composition studies at the Hochschule für Musik Freiburg ...
. Chriss appeared in Stacey Tenenbaum's 2019 documentary ''Pipe Dreams'' alongside Yuan Shen, Thomas Gaynor, Nick Cappozoli, and Sebastian Heindl as they prepared to compete in the Canadian International Organ Competition (CIOC). He credits the blending of the pipe organ with jazz music for his win at the competition explaining: "I think the CIOC was looking to choose someone who represented the future of the organ, and I certainly can't say that I'm that, but I can say that I'm trying to do things that haven't been done before." In 2019 Chriss joined Wesleyan University as university organist and artist-in-residence. The same year he was named the Minister of Music at St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in Ridgefield, Connecticut.


Awards

* Canadian International Organ Competition (2017) * Longwood Gardens International Organ Competition Firmin Swinnen Silver Medal (2016) * Miami International Organ Competition First Prize (2014)


Recordings

* ''Art & Rhapsodie'' (2019)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Chriss, Alcée, III American organists Oberlin Conservatory of Music alumni Musicians from Dallas McGill University School of Music alumni Year of birth missing (living people) Living people 21st-century American keyboardists 21st-century American male musicians 21st-century organists