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            Sigfrid KARG-ELERT 
              (1877-1933)  
              The Complete Organ Works - Volume 8  
              22 Leichte Pedalstudien, op.83 (1913) [42:31]  
              Symphonic Chorale Ach, Bleib mit Deiner Gnade, op.87 no.1 
              (1913) [8:30]  
              Symphonic Chorale Jesu, Meine Freude, op.87 no.2 (1913) [22:31] 
               
                
              Stefan Engels (organ)  
              rec. Marienkirche, Hansestadt Salzwedel, Germany, 30-31 March 2011. 
              DDD  
                
              PRIORY PRCD1063 [73:51]   
             
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                  Though no great organist, the German composer Sigfrid Karg-Elert 
                  did write, alongside much else of quality, a lot of excellent 
                  music for the organ, both original works and transcriptions 
                  or arrangements. Now probably in the home straight, this is 
                  volume eight of Stefan Engels' complete recording on various 
                  organs for Priory, released concurrently with the seventh (PRCD 
                  1062 - see review). 
                   
                     
                  The works in this volume provide a broadly similar experience 
                  to Volume 6 (see review). 
                  The disc opens in similar fashion, with an ostensibly monolithic 
                  work running to three-quarters of an hour. Like the twelve items 
                  that make up the Sempre Semplice op.142, the 22 Leichte 
                  Pedalstudien op.83 are frequently slow and soft - sometimes 
                  very soft - in nature, creating an apt atmosphere of 
                  quiet contemplation. As is often the case, what a composer labels 
                  'leicht' ('easy') is not necessarily so - there are many technical 
                  and indeed expressive challenges awaiting the organist, for 
                  all the surface straightforwardness.  
                     
                  There is more volume and overt drama, though only in places, 
                  in the virtuosic Symphonic Chorales of op.87, among Karg-Elert's 
                  finest organ works. No.2, though it too starts serenely (a simmering 
                  rather than raging 'Inferno'!), and continues along those lines 
                  for the Canzone middle movement, eventually turns more 
                  'sulphurous' than its Bach-recalling subtitle might imply. Indeed, 
                  the work ends with a manual and pedal chord so massive that 
                  an additional foot is actually required! Throughout the work 
                  can be heard a much-iterated B-A-C-H motif.  
                     
                  At any rate, Karg-Elert's music is eminently accessible and 
                  likeable and should appeal to anyone who appreciates the harmonic 
                  language and formal innovation of the likes of Widor, Reger 
                  and Vierne.  
                     
                  Stefan Engels does another first-rate job here, bringing ample 
                  technique, stamina and understated expression to this excellent 
                  addition to a worthy series. He will doubtless be recalled by 
                  some for his two volumes of Marcel Dupré's organ music 
                  for Naxos in the Nineties (8.554210, 8.553920). Coincidentally, 
                  his Priory edition is in direct competition with that of fellow 
                  German Elke Völker on the Aeolus label, although she now 
                  lags behind - volume 6 of her series, subtitled 'Ultimate Organ 
                  Works', came out at the turn of the year (AE 10721). In price 
                  terms, neither set comes cheap, with the Priory discs generally 
                  to be had for around 10% less - although shopping around will 
                  in most cases iron out the differential.  
                     
                  Recording quality is as ever very good, with Priory managing 
                  to capture and balance the very softest sounds and the loudest 
                  chords. The huge neo-Romantic Furtwängler & Hammer 
                  organ at the Marienkirche in Salzwedel - pictured on the cover 
                  - only dates back to 1913, although it retains the beautiful 
                  Baroque façade of its predecessor, the damaged Joachim 
                  Wagner organ of 1749. Its latest restoration was completed in 
                  2007. Incidentally, another impressive Furtwängler & 
                  Hammer can be heard on volume 5 - recorded at Verden Cathedral 
                  in Saxony (PRCD 869).  
                     
                  As always, the Priory booklet is a joy to read, with a long 
                  biography of the composer and as much again on the works heard 
                  in volume 8 by Anthony Caldicott, chairman of the not-as-useful-as-it-could-be 
                  Karg-Elert 
                  Archive, followed by a brief history of the church and organ 
                  by Engels, and the latter's full specification. There is also 
                  a biography and cheery photo of an avuncular-looking Engels, 
                  plus details of previous releases in the series. These CDs are 
                  not likely to win any prizes for design, but the rather lurid 
                  yellow is an improvement on the eye-unfriendly colour scheme 
                  of volume 7.  
                     
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at artmusicreviews.co.uk 
                   
                     
                 
                  
                
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