
  
  
    Modest MUSSORGSKY (1839-1881) 
    Pictures at an Exhibition (1874) (transcribed for organ 
    by Calvin Hampton) [33:00] 
    Calvin Hampton (organ) 
    rec. live, March 1982, Asbury Methodist Church, Rochester, NY, USA. 
    Transferred from 15ips two-track master tape 
    HDTT HDCD281 [33:00] 
      
    Elsewhere on these pages I’ve extolled the virtues of HDTT’s output. 
    There have been a few disappointments though, but then HDTT are dealing with 
    master tapes and LPs of varying quality and vintage. For the technically minded 
    the bold sleeve notes - they don’t really qualify as booklets - list 
    the equipment and processes used in these transfers, which are then made available 
    in a number of physical/downloadable formats. The emphasis is always on high 
    definition, but even as standard CDs the results are pretty impressive. 
      
    This live recording of organist Calvin Hampton playing his own transcription 
    of Mussorgsky’s Pictures at an Exhibition was made on a two-track 
    15ips tape by engineer John Profitt. It’s not the first organ transcription 
    or recording of this piece - older listeners may remember Arthur Wills’s 
    spectacular Hyperion LP with its eye-catching prismatic cover - so Hampton 
    does have some competition. It seems he was much better known in the USA - 
    I haven’t come across his name until now - but apart from the audiophile 
    claims of this recording I was keen to see if the transcription lives us to 
    Profitt’s description of the piece as ‘masterful’. 
      
    First impressions are most promising; the Austin organ is quite closely recorded 
    and Hampton’s clean articulation and bold registrations aren’t 
    at all compromised by an excitable acoustic. If anything there’s a slight 
    dryness to the sound that reminds me of those Sheffield Labs LPs I admired 
    years ago; what this HDTT recording shares with those demo discs is a vivid, 
    yet unexaggerated presentation that rings true in every sense. That may not 
    come across first time around - it certainly didn’t for me - but repeated 
    listening makes all the difference. 
      
    The transcription itself doesn’t quite measure up to the hype - some 
    may find that Hampton’s broad-brush approach misses the music’s 
    subtle details - but the general outlines are imaginatively drawn. The most 
    dynamic and demanding pictures - The Hut on Fowl’s Legs and The 
    Great Gate of Kiev - sound hefty but not overbearing; as for the more 
    animated ones - The Ballet of the Unhatched Chicks and The Market 
    at Limoges - they are well characterised. There’s also a decent 
    pause before the applause kicks in. 
      
    HDTT’s prices are reasonable so prospective buyers shouldn’t baulk 
    at the disc’s short playing time. As a technical achievement this CD 
    of Pictures is impressive, and I daresay the high-res versions are 
    even more so; that said, those hoping for a big, bravura display à 
    la Arthur Wills may find Hampton’s approach is just too restrained. 
    Indeed, the sleeve note says this transcription ‘met with controversy’ 
    at its premiere, but doesn’t elaborate. It’s certainly entertaining, 
    if not memorable. As with their other releases HDTT’s notes trumpet 
    the technology but don’t pay enough attention to essential details, 
    such as track listings; all too often the latter are sprinkled with careless 
    typos that are at odds with the company’s dedication to excellence elsewhere. 
    
      
    This transfer is technically superb; musically it’s much less interesting. 
    
      
    Dan Morgan
    http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
      
    
    Technically superb but musically much less interesting.  
    
    Masterwork Index: Pictures 
    at an exhibition