St. John's has a vibrant music ministry with 5 choirs, an active cantor ministry, a handbell choir and parish instrumental ensemble. Our repertoire spans the entire musical history of the Catholic Church, from Gregorian Chant to contemporary Catholic music. For more information joining any parish ensemble, contact Michael Dailey at (513) 777-6433 or through e-mail at mdailey@stjohnwc.org.
January 23: 3rd Sunday in Ordinary Time
January 16:2nd Sunday in Ordinary Time
January 9: Baptism of the Lord
December 31 - January 1: Mary, Mother of God
Archived Music Schedules
(Click the cover for more information.)
A Child is BornCDs are $15 each. To order, call (513) 777-6433, or e-mail mdailey@stjohnwc.org
Sample Audio Files
A Radiant Light Richard Proulx Sung by the St. John Youth Chorus
Nativity Carol Francis Patrick O'Brien Sung by Barbara Hook and Greg Nelson
Dominus Dixit Ad Me (Introit for Christmas Midnight Mass) - The Men of St. John's Choir
O Come, All Ye Faithful - Choirs, Bell Choir and members of the Parish Orchestra
Herr Christ, der Einig' Gottes Sohn, BWV 601 J.S. Bach - Michael Dailey / Hook & Hastings, Opus 1782.
Click on the links below to find out more information about our ensembles!
“…be filled with the Spirit, addressing one another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and playing to the Lord in your hearts, giving thanks always and for everything in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ to God the Father.” (Ephesians 5:18-20)
Cantors of Saint John
Audition
Auditions for cantors are required. Please schedule an
appointment for an audition to begin your ministry as a cantor.
Weekly Rehearsals
First Wednesday evening of the month, 6:30 – 7:00 PM in the Church
Weekend rehearsals:
5:00 pm - 4:15 pm in the Church
8:00 am Mass – 7:40 AM in the Day Chapel
9:30 am Mass – 9:05 AM in the Day Chapel
11:30 am Mass – 10:45 AM in the Church
Gatherings
Every so often, the Cantors gather together for educational opportunities (i.e. workshops with the National Pastoral Musicians or the Archdiocese of Cincinnati) or social events. These will be announced as they are planned.
Feast day rehearsals
1/2 hour prior to the Liturgy.
Recommended resources for purchase
The Parish Cantor by Michael Connolly (GIA Publications)
Living Liturgy for Cantors (Liturgical Press)
Parish Orchestra
Rehearsal time Sundays from 10:45 - 11:30 am
Rehearsals In the nave on the 2nd - 5th Sundays of each month.
In the Chapel on the 1st Sunday of each month (KofC Rosary)
Ensemble rehearsals Arranged following 11:30 am Mass or during the
week on an as-needed basis.
Hymn Festival Rehearsal February 23 & 24, 2011
Solo rehearsals Arranged with the director on an as-needed basis
What you need to bring with you:
1. Your instrument / Please store your cases in the music room during Mass.
2. Extra reeds (if your instrument uses them.)
3. A pencil.
4. A digital tuner.
Orchestra repertoire for the 2010 - 11 year.
Ensemble repertoire:
Selections from Sounds of Worship & Sounds of Christmas
Mozart: Church Sonatas
Solo repertoire
Selections from Reflections (Robert Powell)
Choral & Hymn Preludes (Charles Callahan)
Regina Coeli - Marian Hymns (Jacques Berthier)
Handbell Choir Information
Founded in 2007, the ST. JOHN BELL CHOIR provides music for one Mass a month and for Holy Days of the Church Year. Rehearsals are Mondays from 7:15 – 8:45 pm from September - May.
All positions in the bell choir are currently filled. Please check the website frequently for openings!
The ST. JOHN CHOIR provides musical leadership for the 9:30 am Mass on Sunday mornings, the Christmas Mass at Night, Holy Week and Holy Days. Rehearsals are Wednesday evenings from 7:30 to 9:00 pm beginning after Labor Day and ending after Pentecost Sunday. The choir’s repertoire spans the centuries and includes Gregorian chant, Renaissance polyphony, English choral anthems, modern choral works spirituals and some contemporary Christian music. The choir regularly participates in Archdiocesan celebrations, choral festivals, and other events throughout the West Chester and greater Cincinnati communities.
For more information on joining the choir, contact Michael Dailey at (513) 777-6433, ex. 128.
Teen Choir
The teen choir, formed in 2010, is open to singers age 13 – 18. The choir sings a wide variety of repertoire for 1 Mass per month, and participates in community outreach and social activities. The teen choir travelled to Washington, D.C. in April 2011, and will travel to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 2012.
Download a schedule for the teen choir here

Founded in 2003, THE ST. JOHN YOUTH CHORUS sings for one Mass a month, the Christmas 3 pm Mass, the Easter Sunday 11:30 am Mass, the Breakfast in Bethlehem Christmas pageant, and other parish events. Membership is open to children in 3rd – 8th grade. The Youth Chorus is a member choir of the American Federation Pueri Cantores – the national student choral organization of the Catholic Church in the United States. The choristers have travelled to Chicago, Illinois, and Washington, D.C. to sing for Pueri Cantores Festivals. This year, the Youth Chorus will travel to the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, IN to sing for Mass at the Basilica of the Sacred Heart.
Rehearsals are Mondays from 5:30 – 6:30 pm. For more information on joining the Youth Chorus, call Michael Dailey at (513) 777-6433, ex. 128.
Download the 2011 - 12 Youth Chorus Schedule here!
Parents: download a medical release form for your child here.
On this page you will find information on the organ at St. John the Evangelist Church. The organ is a 2-manual,28 rank instrument built in 1898 by Hook & Hastings and repaired and restored into a new instrument by David Wallace in 1999.
Swell |
Great |
Pedal |
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16’ Bourdon 8’ Open Diapason 8’ Salicional 8’ Aeoline 8’ Stopped Diapason 4’ Flute Harmonique 4’ Violina 2’ Flautino III Dolce Cornet 8’ Cornopean 8’ Oboe Tremolo
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16’ Open Diapason 8’ Open Diapason 4’ Octave 8’ Dulciana 8’ Viola da Gamba 8’ Doppel Flute 4’ Flute d’Amour 3’ Twelfth 2’ Fifteenth III Mixture 8’ Trumpet Swell to Great
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16’ Open Diapason 16’ Bourdon 8’ Violincello 16’ Trombone Great to Pedal Swell to Pedal
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Read a history of Hook & Hastings, Opus 1782
A History of the St. John Organ
During the second half
of the 19th Century and the first part of the 20th Century, the E. & G. G.
Hook and later the Hook & Hastings Company delivered 21 pipe organs to the
Greater Cincinnati area. The first was a 2 manual E & G. G. Hook Opus 234
in 1858 for the Central Presbyterian Church. The last was Hook and Hastings
Opus 2569, a 3 manual organ delivered in 1929 to St. Joseph's RC Church.
Perhaps the most notable was the 4 manual 90 rank E. & G. G. Hook &
Hastings Opus 869 built for the Cincinnati Music Hall.
In 1996, nearly 70 years after the arrival of the last Hook organ, St John the Evangelist Church in West Chester was about to bring yet one more Hook and Hastings organ to the Cincinnati area when they purchased Opus 2173 from the Bangor, Maine Universalist Church. The organ was to be renovated and installed in the new St John Church. The façade of Opus 2173 was incorporated into the design of the new church and plans were made for the renovation.
On Palm Sunday 1998, St John Parish turned the first soil for the construction of their new building. On that very same day, the parish of St Michael in the Lower Price Hill section of Cincinnati held their final service as that church was to be closed and combined with Holy Family. St. Michael's church held one of the remaining Hook and Hastings organs in Cincinnati. Opus 1782, installed in 1898, was about to join the forgotten ranks of many of the other fine Hook organs that once graced churches, private homes and the grand music hall in Cincinnati.
Word soon got around to Jim Pera, organist at St John that the old organ might be available. It was visited and while found to be a rough condition suffering the ravages of time, Mother Nature and misguided maintenance, it was deemed restorable. Despite having to gasp for breath and having lost an essential part of it's key action, it was still able to show the pallet of tonal colors that lay hidden beneath the grime and indicate to all that restoration to its former grandeur was indeed a possibility enabling a renewed life and the chance for the organ to remain in the Cincinnati area.
Opus 1782 was also purchased by St John's and plans were made to disassemble and move the organ to the shop of restorationist David Wallace & Company in Gorham, Maine. But, the grand façade Opus 2173 had already been well incorporated into the plans for the new St John Church. Since both organs had been built by the same company, the solution was to simply do a façade transplant! The elegant case of the Bangor organ was mated to the functional aspects of the St Michael organ. The result incorporated the historic St Michael's mechanical action organ with the handsome Victorian case from the Bangor organ.
The St Michael organ was in rough shape at the time it was removed from the church in August of 1998. The tower above the organ had leaked many times over the century the organ stood in the church causing considerable damage to the Great division windchest and pipes. The leather on the reservoir had most likely given out so the original wind reservoir and bellows were chopped up and discarded in favor of an under-sized supply house regulator. The pneumatic assist mechanisms that helped make the bottom two octaves of keys for each manual keyboard easier to play were also chopped out of the organ and replaced with cardboard patches and lengths of copper electrical wire. The keys at the low end of the keyboards were almost impossible to play. Soot, dust, dampness, and even urine in one corner of the organ left the poor old instrument with just enough life to make one glorious final presentation to St Michael's parishioners and friends on the day before it was taken down and shipped to Maine.
The estimated 15,000 or so pieces of the organ were given detailed attention. Each part was cleaned, if it was broken it was mended and the missing parts were replaced duplicating the originals. Every attempt was made where possible to use original Hook & Hastings parts. The missing key action pneumatics were copied from Opus 1801 in Taunton, Massachusetts which was built in the same year as St Michael's organ. The dimensions of the missing wind reservoir were plotted out from screw holes on the floor frame and from the positions of the wind trunks in the organ. The feeder bellows were also duplicated so that the organ could once again be hand pumped. The heavily worn down key ivories in the middle octave of each keyboard were replaced with the only available legal source of ivory today— 10,000 year old Mastadon tusk ivory from Siberia.
The pipes were all carefully cleaned and adjusted to play at the original pitch. The stoppers in the wooden pipes were releathered for a snug fit and the reed ranks were carefully cleaned so the brilliance and fire would again be present. The quarter sawn oak Bangor case was stripped and refinished to match the color scheme for St John's. The huge façade pipes were also repainted to match the decor.
The only change made to the organ was a "non-intrusive" addition of a 16' Trombone stop to the Pedal Division. The Pedal section has two very deep stops and one soft string stop. The Trombone was judiciously added to lend a range of harmonic color and support to the Pedal stops. The windchest, key action and stop action for the Trombone required no alteration of any of the existing parts of the St Michael organ to be added.
The Bangor organ along with the façade from the St Michael organ are in storage awaiting a new home. It could very well be that the pipe organ—equally as grand as the St Michael organ, could indeed become the 22nd Hook & Hastings organ in the greater Cincinnati area if the right church realizes the need!