Edward George Power Biggs (March 29, 1906 – March 10, 1977) was a British-born American concert organist and recording artist.

Biography

Biggs was born in Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex, England; a year later, the family moved to the Isle of Wight. Biggs was trained in London at the Royal Academy of Music, where he studied with G. D. Cunningham. Biggs immigrated to the United States in 1930. In 1932, he was appointed to a post at Christ Church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he resided for the rest of his life. His position as an organist, however, did not last long; believing that his concert work conflicted with his job, the rector dismissed him from the position. As one of the boy choristers (Charles Fisk) noted: “I went to choir practice, Mr. Bigs wasn’t there".

Biggs did much to bring the classical pipe organ back to prominence, and was in the forefront of the mid-20th-century resurgence of interest in the organ music of pre-Romantic composers. On his first concert tour of Europe, in 1954, Biggs performed and recorded works of Johann Sebastian Bach, Sweelinck, Dieterich Buxtehude, and Pachelbel on historic organs associated with those composers. Thereafter, he believed that such music should ideally be performed on instruments representative of that period and that organ music of that epoch should be played by using (as closely as possible) the styles and registrations of that era. Thus, he gave significant impetus to the American revival of organ building in the style of European Baroque instruments, seen especially in the increasing popularity of tracker organs—analogous to Europe's Orgelbewegung.

Among other instruments, Biggs championed G.Donald Harrison's Baroque-style unenclosed, unencased instrument with 24 stops and electric action (produced by Aeolian-Skinner in 1937 and installed in Harvard's Busch-Reisinger Museum, Cambridge, Massachusetts) and the three-manual Flentrop tracker organ subsequently installed there in 1958. Many of his CBS radio broadcasts and Columbia recordings were made in the museum. Another remarkable instrument used by Biggs was a pedal harpsichord by John Challis; Biggs made recordings of the music of J. S. Bach, Vivaldi, and even went as far afield as Scott Joplin and Tchaikovsky on this instrument.

Biggs' critics of the time included rival concert organist Virgil Fox, who was known for a more flamboyant and colorful style of performance. Fox decried Biggs' insistence on historical accuracy, claiming that it was "relegating the organ to a museum piece". Despite different approaches, both artists enjoyed hugely successful careers and Biggs rose to the top of his profession. In addition to concerts and recording, Biggs taught at the Longy School of Music in Cambridge, Massachusetts, at various times in his career and edited a large body of organ music.

Biggs was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1950. He was one of the artists honored to celebrate the New York Philharmonic's 125th birthday celebrations in December 1967.

Between 1942 and 1958, he also hosted a weekly radio program of organ music (carried throughout the United States on the CBS Radio Network) that introduced audiences to the pipe organ and its literature.

Selected discography

For his contribution to the recording industry, Biggs has a star on California's Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6522 Hollywood Boulevard. He mainly recorded solo organ music, but there are recordings of Biggs collaborating with singers and instrumentalists, for example in the music of Giovanni Gabrieli.

Biggs recorded extensively for the Columbia Masterworks Records and RCA Victor labels for more than three decades. He was represented by Mercury Music in the 1950s.

  • Works for Organ: Essential Classics (1961)
  • Bach: Organ Favorites recorded on the Flentrop Organ in the Busch-Reisinger Museum of Harvard University, MS 6261 (1961)
  • The Golden Age of the Organ, Columbia Masterworks ML-5754 (1962) (A tribute to German organ builder Arp Schnitger), organs in Germany and the Netherlands (1963)
  • Heroic Music for Organ, Brass and Percussion, Columbia Masterworks M2S 697
  • Bach Organ Favorites, Vol. 2, Columbia Masterworks MS 6748 (1965)
  • Mozart: The Music for Solo Organ—Played on the "Mozart" organ at Haarlem, Columbia Masterworks MS 6856 (1966)
  • Bach Organ Favorites, Vol. 3, Columbia Masterworks MS 7108 (1968)
  • E. Power Biggs' Greatest Hits, Columbia Masterworks MS 7269 (1969)
  • Bach Organ Favorites, Vol. 4, Columbia Masterworks MS 7424 (1970)
  • Plays Bach in the Thomaskirche, Columbia Masterworks M30648 (1971)
  • Bach Organ Favorites, Vol. 5, Columbia Masterworks M 31424 (1972)
  • Bach Organ Favorites, Vol. 6, Columbia Masterworks M 32791 (1974)
  • Bach: Four Great Toccatas & Fugues (Cathedral of Freiburg), Columbia Masterworks M 32933 (1974)
  • Bach Eight Little Preludes and Concerto in D after Vivaldi, Columbia Masterworks M 33975 (1975)
  • Stars and Stripes Forever: Two Centuries of Heroic Music in America, Columbia Masterworks 81507 (1976)
  • Variations on Popular Songs, Columbia Masterworks AMS 6337
  • A Festival of French Organ Music, Columbia Masterworks MS 6307
  • Buxtehude at Lüneburg, Columbia Masterworks MS 6944
  • The Organ in America, Columbia Masterworks MS 6161
  • Historic Organs of England, Columbia Masterworks M 30445
  • Historic Organs of France, Columbia Masterworks MS 7438
  • Historic Organs of Italy, Columbia Masterworks MS 7379
  • Historic Organs of Spain, Columbia Masterworks MS 7109
  • Historic Organs of Switzerland, Columbia Masterworks MS 6855
  • The Four Antiphonal Organs of the Cathedral of Freiburg, Columbia Masterworks M 33514 (music of Handel, Purcell, Mozart, Buxtehude, et al.)
  • Bach on the Pedal Harpsichord, Columbia Masterworks MS 6804
  • Bach: The Six Trio Sonatas (Pedal Harpsichord), Columbia Masterworks M2S 764
  • Holiday for Harpsichord, Columbia Masterworks ML 6728
  • A Mozart Organ Tour, Columbia Masterworks K3L 231
  • Bach: The Little Organ Book, Columbia Masterworks KSL 227
  • The Art of the Organ, Columbia Masterworks KSL 219, recorded on twenty different European organs.