If you enjoy hearing trumpet and organ sounding 
                  and resounding around a church, without too much concern for 
                  what is actually being played, then be assured that both players 
                  are secure and musical and the recording balances them in exemplary 
                  manner, homing in on the details of the organ’s passage work 
                  while not ignoring the church’s long reverberation period. 
                
It’s a glorious sound and I could leave it 
                  at that. If, like me, you have the musicological bug and want 
                  to know what you’re listening to, then the notes, by Landeghem 
                  himself, are a little disingenuous. I have dutifully reproduced 
                  the title of the Boyce as given on the disc, but it turns out 
                  (as I suspected it would) to be an old friend, the quick movement 
                  from the composer’s first Organ Voluntary. This was written 
                  to show off the organ’s trumpet stop, to be sure, but Boyce 
                  might have been bemused at the idea of a real trumpet playing 
                  it, however splendidly. He might, too, have felt that his indication 
                  "Swell or Eccho" called for a lighter registration 
                  of the minor-key middle section. Similarly the Clarke Suite, 
                  of which we are told that "the original version was probably 
                  written for trumpet and a wind instrument ensemble". It 
                  turns out to be another string of "old familiar faces", 
                  one of them very familiar indeed, originally published as keyboard 
                  pieces, and this is the first time I have heard it suggested 
                  that this was not the composer’s intended form. On the other 
                  hand, much of it sounds pretty thin on a harpsichord and Clarke 
                  might have taken his own life a little less willingly if he 
                  had heard what a splendid sound his music could make. I should 
                  add that I have nothing whatever against arrangements, especially 
                  for a combination which, despite its obvious effectiveness, 
                  has inspired composers to write precious little original music 
                  for it; but I do expect sources and arrangers to be fully declared. 
                
With the two Italian composers we have original 
                  music for the combination. Or at least, basically we do. As 
                  Landeghem tells us, the Fantini Sonatas "are of historical 
                  significance in that the trumpet is accompanied for the first 
                  time in the history of music by a figured bass. The organist 
                  was expected to improvise both the necessary harmonies and the 
                  counterpoint in the style of the period". He certainly 
                  enjoys himself no end doing that, as can be heard in the 5th 
                  Sonata with exuberantly enjoyable results. 
                
Roelant plays, as far as I can tell, a modern 
                  trumpet, soaring into the upper reaches of the "baroque" 
                  range without apparent effort. The organ was brand new (1991) 
                  at the time of the recording, though based on an 18th 
                  Century model. For 17th Century music even a chamber-sized 
                  instrument of a century later offers ample opportunities for 
                  anachronism in the hands of an organist who likes the 16-foot 
                  stop and certain sections of the Bruhns, the Froberger and even 
                  the Bach suffer from overbearingly heavy registration. But Landeghem 
                  is an imaginative player (he is also a composer) whose zestful 
                  rhythmic articulation usually wins the day, not least in the 
                  Buxtehude where his natural exuberance matches the composer’s 
                  own. 
                
Not a musicological experience, then, but a 
                  very enjoyable one. 47’02" might seem short measure but 
                  it is about the right length for an enjoyable programme from 
                  this combination – is it really such a good idea to jam-pack 
                  CDs up to 75+ minutes at all costs? (I know you don’t have to 
                  listen all at one go, but people tend to do so). And one can 
                  only be disarmed by the total unconcern for publicity shown 
                  by the whole team when the disc contains the most famous 
                  trumpet piece ever and neither cover nor notes make any reference 
                  to the fact. If you don’t know the title by which this is usually 
                  known, I shan’t tell you! . 
                
 
                  Christopher Howell