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wolsey

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Posts posted by wolsey

  1. ============================

     

    ...and I always think that the Fairfields Hall organ just doesn't "come together" due to the acoustic design; though it was always better than the old Festival Hall.

    I'm puzzled that you feel that Croydon's Fairfield Concert Hall organ just doesn't "come together" due to the "acoustic design". Are you referring to the auditorium, as its acoustic is very highly regarded indeed by orchestral players.

  2. I haven't found anyone tackling 'Hymne aux memoires heroiques' by Jean-Jacques Grunenwald as part of the Alain celebrations. Indeed I have heard it very infrequently and am not sure why it's been missed off the radar so completely.

    I was inspired to learn it after hearing it being played by the late Allan Wicks on one of the Monday evening organ recitals which BBC Radio 3 broadcast for years; I still have the cassette tape of the programme tucked away somewhere. It's a powerful piece, and one I've enjoyed including in recitals where the instrument and type of audience seemed right.

  3. We were rehearsing Stanford in F evening canticles on Friday when one of my choristers noticed that on the front cover of our copies it says 'In the key of F with the greater third'. I have to admit that, when asked, I had no idea what 'with the greater third' means. Is it just a different way of saying "F major"?

    The greater third is the interval of two whole tones or a major third, but does not necessarily mean that the key of the setting you were singing is F major.

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    The complex rhythms and inegalities of the French language are right for French baroque music.

    At the risk of digressing too much from the original topic, nothing is clear cut. The Ouvertures of Bach's four orchestral Suites, for example, surely need to be approached with an understanding of French baroque playing styles, as will those various French dances which follow them. The C minor Fantasia (BWV 562) is sometimes given a French interpretation, but it's debatable whether or not it should extend to the use of inegalité. Incidentally, the E flat Prelude (BWV 552i) does work wonderfully in the French Ouverture style, but one needs to hear an orchestra convey the graceful and rhythmic character of the style - and yet maintaining a sense of line - before trying it on the organ.

  5. Perhaps this site will help: http://www.broekmans.com/en/default.cfm

    Broekmans en Van Poppel is not a specialised dealer of organ music scores, but you probably can order a lot of organ music via them, if needs be on special request.

    You can pay by creditcard.

    I'd also endorse Broekmans. It was recommended by an RCO staff member, and they're a stone's throw from the Concertgebouw and part of what is now the Amsterdam Conservatorium. I've browsed/bought music (Sweelinck, etc) there on previous visits to the city.

  6. Bärenreiter's Mendelssohn editions comes in two volumes: 1) the sonatas; 2) everything else. I have volume 2 only. Textually it seems fine, but I find the portrait format unhelpful, especially as the volume is thick enough to dislike staying open on the music desk (it has a flat spine). I'm not sure there's currently anything better, however, now that the Novello edition by William Little is out of print.

    The Breitkopf (Schmidt) edition appears to be equally reliable. I moved to the Henle edition ten years ago.

  7. My understanding is that Dover is fine for Bach (Bach-Gesellschaft reprint); Sweelinck; and Widor where it is a reprint of the first editions - but it doesn't included Widor's revisions (NB use the American edition). Scholarship has resulted in more authoritative editions of all the other composers you mention, if that is an issue for you.

     

    Tournemire appears to be out of copyright, and his works are available electronically from two different sources. Note though that Rupert Gough has published a new edition of the Five Improvisations which aims to be be a more faithful transcription of the now-available remastered audio recordings of Tournemire's playing.

  8. 'Forth in thy name, O Lord I go' never leaves me feeling inspired at the end of a service, probably because I dislike the Gibbons tunes (several of which find rather dull).

    À chacun son goût. Gibbons' Song 34 is a tune I like very much. I find it comes to life rhythmically when performed with a minim pulse (as notated in NEH) for the first line of the text, then a dotted minim pulse for the remaining lines. I am in agreement with basses who prefer to omit the slur towards the end of the second line.

  9. Any film which promotes Parry's music is going to be a Good Thing. The various Shulbrede Tunes played on the piano were a revelation to me, as was the movement from the Magnificat, filmed in Oxford. As an appetizer for a deeper investigation into Parry's music it must surely be ranked as a great success.

    I agree, and do not share the disappointment which some have expressed about the film. I do hope that the Magnificat will be recorded in due course, and while Parry's Piano Concerto is available for discovery on the Hyperion label, I can safely say that Boult's rather elusive last-ever recording - the 5th Symphony, no less - will be finding a place on my CD shelves in the next few days.

  10. ======================

    I don't think there is a single example of a convincing performance of the Reubke on You Tube, and in my own lifetime thus far, I think I've heard only TWO performances which really got to me; the last being in the mid-1970's.

    As far as I'm concerned, it's Simon Preston's second (1985) recording from Westminster Abbey.

  11. [snip] -- whom the RCO seem to have had in mind when outlining the design for a new organ --, [snip] These have been expanded for the RCO organ, which also will not have as ample space as a true symphonic organ might want. [snip]

     

    Did you mean RAM, not RCO?

  12. Now that I think about it, my Vierne organ scores are published by Lemoine, who perhaps had a different approach to proof-reading than Hamelle.

    In the not-too-distant future, you may care to invest in one or other of the new editions of Verne's organ music by Carus or Bärenreiter.

  13. This is the title of a new book by John R. Near, published by the University of Rochester (U.S.). A hefty volume, nearly 600 pages including a 50 page list of his works (did you know he wrote that much?) and correspondingly expensive, but looks to me the last word on his life and work. I'm part way through it. Enter the title in Amazon if interested, I was promised delivery in 1 to 2 months but it arrived within 5 days of my order so obviously have it stock.

    It would seem to be a more substantial undertaking than Andrew Thomson's useful 116-page biography (OUP 1987). And yes, he was very prolific in music outside the organloft (including operas) - on which point, Stanford's 2nd Piano Concerto in C minor seems worth investigating, on the strength of last Saturday's CD Review on BBC Radio 3. Its debt to Rachmaninov's C minor concerto is unmistakeable.

  14. One could compare him in some ways to that other player with flair, Cameron Carpenter, and I will even admit to having his CDs.

    Like Jim, I have heard Nathan Laube live, however, I do not believe that his comparison is valid. I repeat again what I said when Nathan was discussed on here last September under the topic 'Playing from Memory', "I was immediately drawn by his ability to make and communicate music on the organ. I have no time for showmanship and lack of musical depth which is found in certain virtuosi today, and Mr Laube's playing sets him apart from these prestidigital performers."

  15. Considering where you'll be based in West London, there's St Paul's Girls' School and the catholic Church commonly called the Servite Priory - both Grant, Degens & Bradbeer instruments of an earlier generation of organ-building; St Mary on Paddington Green (Petter Collins); and as Nigel Allcoat has said elsewhere, there's the splendid church of St John the Evangelist (RC), Islington (Walker), but it's not in your vicinity. There are others too, I'm sure.

  16. DHM's post is misleading, as "the present incumbent" went last month, and there is an Acting Director of Music - to whom I thought DHM was referring. The Chapter felt unable to appoint a successor from those who applied; it can happen. I feel uneasy, however, about all this being discussed on a public forum while the process of appointment is being repeated.

  17. I would strongly recommend listening to a recording with an orchestra to know how to colour the organ part: there's a section towards the end of the Agnus Dei that has a superb Trumpet/Tuba solo in the tenor before the recapitulation of the opening and personally I feel a lot of music is lost if it is left out. However, it's not there in the organ part but I've written it in to my copy.

    I agree with practically all that has been said by Paul Morley and Colin Harvey. I would advise though that the recording with orchestra should be of the Rutter edition itself; the Cambridge Singers made one under Rutter's direction almost thirty years ago. There may be others of the Rutter, but I do not know. Many other recordings though tend to be of the so-called Roger-Ducasse edition, at which one should askance if one reads Rutter's fascinating account of the genesis of the various versions and editions.

     

    If playing from the Rutter edition, I use a suitably proficient page turner who plays the second keyboard part of the Sanctus.

  18. It reminds me of the story, probably apocryphal, of a young 'clever' organ scholar, I'm told at Halifax Parish church but that may be incorrect, who could hear a rather wayward tenor in the choir and decided to help him out in one of the hymns by 'decorating' the organ part and soloing the tenor part on the solo tuba! At the end of the hymn or whatever all that could be heard around the church was the comment - in a broad Halifax accent "If tha does that agin, I'll brek thee bl***y neck!!!"

     

    This is recounted by Gordon Reynolds in his humorous book Organo Pleno (Novello 1970): Chapter 7 - 'In statu pupillari'.

  19. In a few places in the Couperin Masses, therefore, I have always wondered if the transcription/editing has been completely accurate.

    I have the Brunold (l'Oiseau-Lyre) edition of 1949, but am led to understand that the new l'Oiseau-Lyre (edited by Gilbert & Moroney) is probably the most authoritative. There is some useful information here.

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