It seems to me a shame that Naxos have limited their Guilmant chapter of their extensive ‘Organ Encyclopaedia’ 
                  to one 'best of' disc. Movements from two sonatas and some other 
                  sacred and secular works make up a relatively satisfactory programme; 
                  still I would have wished for a whole sonata at least. 
                Robert Delcamp, the former student of Louis Robilliard and organist 
                  of The University of the South in Sewanee, where this CD was 
                  recorded, plays well, just as on his previous CD of Saint-Saëns. 
                  Occasionally I miss a little flexibility and warmth in his playing, 
                  his expressive vocabulary seems more influenced by American 
                  liturgical organ playing than by extensive time spent in France. 
                  If this seems overly negative, it’s not meant to be; I admire 
                  Delcamp's well considered tempi, phrasing, control and sense 
                  of space. What for me is lacking is simply that last step that 
                  brings the sometimes vapid, though usually very well constructed, 
                  music of Guilmant off the page. At the risk of sounding like 
                  a broken record, check out Ben van Oosten on MDG. His cycle 
                  of the Guilmant sonatas recorded in Rouen 
                  was memorably described by one reviewer as 'definitive'. He 
                  wasn't wrong.
                Delcamp isn't helped by the instrument he has chosen to record, his 
                  'own' 60s Casavant with added, horrible digital 32s, (don't 
                  tell me you can't tell the difference, you can!). The organ 
                  is actually a good example of Northern American Classic organ 
                  building from the G Donald Harrison era, and it finds itself 
                  in a good acoustical situation. The foundations serve the music 
                  well, but at registrations above mf, the upperwork becomes 
                  too prominent and the reeds are in general a bit smooth. The 
                  tutti is loud rather than grand, and the Antiphonal party horn, 
                  occasionally, unforgivably, coupled to the tutti, is just crass.
                This release is OK, but there are more interesting releases of Guilmant 
                  around.  See also Kurt Lueders's new harmonium CD on Hortus, 
                  'Noel au Salon'. A review will appear shortly.
                Chris 
                  Bragg
                see 
                  also Review 
                  by John France
                BUY NOW  
                
                AmazonUK 
                    AmazonUS