This is a peculiar 
                and unfortunately not wholly successful 
                release from Festivo. Its primary purpose 
                is to showcase the new (2004) Bernard 
                Dargassies organ in the Basilique Notre-Dame 
                du Perpetuel Secours in Paris. However, 
                the astonishing admission that the new 
                organ is "built from organ pieces that 
                belonged to dismantled organs or to 
                organs that had been changed in some 
                way" hardly fills one with confidence 
                and proves entirely reflected in its 
                tonal quality. This is strictly second-rate 
                organ building, featuring hardly a beautiful 
                solo colour anywhere, though plenty 
                of ugly ones, in its more than sixty 
                stops. The one exception is a marvellous 
                Flute Harmonique, which presumably came 
                from an organ of worthy vintage. At 
                the other end of the spectrum, the hideous 
                chamade-unit is a model of bad taste. 
              
 
              
The clue to the organ's 
                design can be found in its titulaire, 
                Jean-Paul Imbert's, background. This 
                is a Guillou disciple, perhaps not quite 
                as radical as the man himself, but with 
                bizarre mutations and pizzicato couplers, 
                the enfant-terrible's organ-design ethos 
                hangs heavy over the instrument. The 
                Guillou-world is clearly evident in 
                Imbert's playing. The least successful 
                tracks here are the mainstream repertoire; 
                Imbert is unable to keep the Bach stable, 
                and moreover gets lost in his myriad 
                of silly registration changes. The Franck 
                and Widor are played according to the 
                Guillou-rules of registration rather 
                than those of the composers, stability 
                and legato line are sacrificed. 
              
 
              
More enjoyable is the 
                opening gambit of Cochereau, where the 
                rather hard-sounding organ seems apt 
                for anyone who has heard those François 
                Carbou recordings of the Notre-Dame 
                organ following Cochereau's radical 
                alterations in the 1960s. Imbert seems 
                more willing here to keep within the 
                bounds of what the music's creator intended. 
                I wish the rest of the disc had stayed 
                in the same vain. The final transcriptions 
                also fare better than the literature, 
                though again Imbert's lack of rhythmic 
                solidity slightly spoils the otherwise 
                quite effective transcription of the 
                famous "Montaigus et Capulets". The 
                use of the pizzicato-coupler in the 
                Shostakovich is a cute effect. 
              
 
              
Unfortunately this 
                (in all senses) ugly instrument would 
                never be on my itinerary of must-visit 
                Parisian organs. The CD is only recommendable 
                for the Cochereau. 
              
Chris Bragg