Power of Life
Mons Leidvin TAKLE (b. 1942)
Power of Life (2007) [5:29]
  George SHEARING (1919-2007)
  Amazing Grace [3:03]
  William WALTON (1902-1983)
  Orb and Sceptre (1952-3) [8:13]
  Heitor VILLA-LOBOS (1887-1959)
  Aria (Cantilena) from Bachianas brasileiras No. 5 (1938) [5:46]
  Marius MONNIKENDAM (1896-1977)
  Toccata No. 1 (1970) [4:58]
  Wolfgang Amadeus MOZART (1756-1791)
  Andante and variations in G major K501 (1786) [9:41]
  Hans-André STAMM (b. 1958)
  Rapsodia alla Latina (2009) [7:10]
  Marcel DUPRÉ (1889-1971)
  Ave maris stella (1919) [5:56]
  Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
  Rhapsodies sur des cantiques Bretons (1866) [5:56]
  Vincenzo PETRALI (1830-1889)
  Allegro festoso [4:29]
  Peter WARLOCK (1894-1930)
  Pieds-en-l’air (1927)
  Franz WAGNER (1870-1929)
  Trionfo della vita [4:23]
  Christopher Herrick (organ)
  rec. 2014, Poblet Monastery, Tarragona, Spain.
  HYPERION CDA68129 [67:08]
	    I don’t normally go in for these ‘organ 
          fireworks’ types of programme, but was drawn to this one by the 
          power of the blurb which concludes, “If you like your organs meaty, 
          but with a good sense of humour, this one is for you.”
          
          Entertainment is central to this album, and Norwegian organist and composer 
          Mons Leidvin Takle’s Power of Life is one of those irrepressibly 
          “over the top [and] energetic” pieces which wins you over 
          through its sheer effusive joy in existence. The main tune could easily 
          have landed from a 1970s Eurovision Song Contest, but the accompaniment 
          takes on a life of its own and we’re treated to a real work-out 
          from the very fine Metzler organ in Poblet Monastery.
          
          Following such a remarkable title track isn’t easy, but George 
          Shearing’s set of variations on Amazing Grace is a suitably 
          juicy number, with scrunchy and at times seemingly impossible progressions 
          and plenty of colour from the organ. Following these lush pastures, 
          William Walton’s Orb and Sceptre march written for Queen 
          Elizabeth II’s coronation in 1953 has our moustache bristles twitching 
          in all the patriotically correct directions. From the grey streets of 
          1950s London we are warmed by the southern sounds of Heitor Villa-Lobos’s 
          famous Aria (Cantilena) from Bachianas brasileiras No. 
          5. Vox humana vibrato in the melody delivers some contrast, and 
          while the definition in the accompaniment isn’t as distinctive 
          as with the original eight cellos this is a nice enough version. More 
          interesting is Marius Monnikendam’s surprising Toccata No. 
          2, which opens with a grand gesture and builds up a huge head of 
          steam, screwing up tension with rising harmonies and drilling home its 
          message with driving rhythms. Following this with the Andante and 
          Variations K 501 makes Mozart sound like a joke but this arrangement 
          for organ works very well indeed, expanding the four-handed piano sonorities 
          and taking us some way towards the mechanical origins of this music. 
          The minor variation is particularly affecting.
          
          German composer Hans-André Stamm’s Rapsodia alla latina 
          was written for an international organ festival in Mexico and is chock-full 
          of latin rhythms. Whether these really work or not on a massive cathedral 
          organ is beside the point, an in any case the trumpet stop is given 
          plenty of air in this piece and it’s all great fun. Marcel Dupré 
          is one of the best known names here in terms of organ music, and the 
          Ave maris stella from his Op. 18 ‘Vespers’ are 
          evocative settings of that famous melody, surrounded in characteristic 
          fashion with magical haloes of organ figuration and added layers of 
          piquant musical flavour, all topped off with a rousing grand toccata. 
          Camille Saint-Saëns didn’t write a great deal of organ music and 
          his three Rhapsodies sue des cantiques bretons are fairly unassuming, 
          with nice touches such as added chimes in the rustic second movement, 
          and imaginative use of the simple Breton folk-tunes on which the music 
          is based. Vincenzo Petrali was based in Bergamo and is remembered today 
          as the teacher of Enrico Bossi, Italy’s emblematic composer for 
          organ. The Allegro festoso is the jaunty and celebratory finale 
          to Petrali’s Messa solenne, which sounds as if it’s 
          about as solemn as Rossini’s Petite messe solennelle. 
          Peter Warlock’s Pieds-en-l’air is from his famous 
          Capriol Suite for string orchestra, placed as a warmly gentle 
          penultimate track before the grand finale of Franz Wagner’s Trionfo 
          della vita. Wagner, not to be confused with the more famous Richard, 
          was organist at the Grünenwaldkirche in Berlin, his work concluding 
          this fine disc with a spectacular C major climax.
          
          Superbly recorded and nicely documented with a good selection of attractive 
          photos, this is the kind of generous organ programme which should satisfy 
          all but the most po-faced of purists. The weighty sonorities and refined 
          colours of the Metzler organ, perfectly suited to the large but not 
          overly swampy acoustic of the Royal Abbey of Santa Maria de Poblet, 
          are a treat. Steered by the secure musical hands and feet of now as 
          good as legendary Christopher Herrick, this is indeed a meaty and richly 
          entertaining disc.
          
          Dominy Clements
           
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