Date: Tuesday February 27, 2007
Time: 7:30 PM
Type of Event: Classical concert
About Erik Wm. Suter
A native of Chicago, Erik Wm. Suter is Organist and Associate Director of Music at Washington National Cathedral. He holds degrees in organ performance from Oberlin Conservatory and
Yale
University , where he studied with Haskell Thomson and Thomas Murray respectively. He has held the positions at
Trinity
Church, Copley Square,and at the Parish of All Saints, both in Boston; and at
Trinity
Church on the Green in
New Haven, Connecticut .
In the spring of 1991, Mr. Suter won first prize in the Conrad Sulzer Young Performer's Piano Competition in
Chicago. He won first prize in the 1993 Chicago American Guild of Organists Young Organist's Competition. In 1995, he won first prize in the National Undergraduate Organ Competition in
Ottumwa, Iowa . In 1996, he won the Gold Medal of the Mayor of Musashino/Tokyo in the International Organ Competition Musashino in
Japan. In 1997, Mr. Suter won first prize in the Yale Biennial Organ Competition. He was a two-time finalist in the prestigious AGO National Competition in Organ Playing. Mr. Suter has been heard on the nationally syndicated Minnesota Public Radio show "Pipedreams". His performances can be heard on the JAV Recordings, Pro Organo, and Gothic labels. Mr. Suter recently released his fourth solo compact disc featuring the complete organ works of Maurice Duruflé as heard live in recital at Washington Cathedral.
In his free time Erik enjoys reading, sailing and skiing. He is an avid hockey player and a private pilot. He lives in
Washington with his wife and son. Mr. Suter is under the exclusive concert management of Karen McFarlane Artists, Inc.
In addition to his duties at Washington Cathedral, Mr. Suter maintains an active solo recital schedule. He has performed extensively in the United States and
Canada in addition to appearing in several Asian and European countries. He has performed at national conventions of the American Guild of Organists and the Organ Historical Society. As a continuo artist, he has appeared with the Philadelphia Orchestra and National Symphony Orchestra.