John Kiley
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John Kiley (died 1993) was the organist at Fenway Park from 1953 to 1989 and contemporaneously for Boston Garden as well. He is credited with having discovered the Boston Garden's resident singer Rene Rancourt. Kiley was a veteran movie theater organist from the silent film era. According to a 1993 Boston Globe obituary: "From the age of 15, when he made his professional musician's debut at the Criterion Theater in Roxbury, Kiley played in many Greater Boston movie theaters. In 1934 he switched to radio and was music director for the next 22 years at radio station WMEX." In later years, he appeared at a number of Boston-area science fiction conventions and other gatherings of film buffs where he played the organ for showings of silent era classics.
Kiley also had the reputation of performing one of the fastest versions of the Star-Spangled Banner in all of baseball as evidenced by this recording.
A popular trivia question among Boston-area sports fans in the seventies was "Who is the only man to play for the Red Sox, the Bruins, and the Celtics?" -- referring to Kiley, who played the organs at both Fenway Park and the Boston Garden.
The organ that Kiley played at Fenway Park was a Hammond X-66. At Boston Garden it was a Hammond C-3, later a Kimball. After quitting the Boston Garden job in 1983, he was succeeded by Ron Harry, who played until the building's closing in 1995, and in the new building for the Celtics until his death in 2004.