The 
                      first thing to say about this Arsis SACD release is how 
                      well it is presented. If ever a record label wants a model 
                      to set a standard for their booklet, they could do a lot 
                      worse than look here. Excellent programme notes, lots of 
                      good colour photography of the organ, (also inside!), the 
                      church’s stained glass windows by Louis Comfort Tiffany 
                      no less, the church’s exterior and so on. It also contains 
                      interesting information about the organ, and full registration 
                      details. Well done Arsis.
                    Secondly, 
                      what a fascinating instrument. I have discussed here before 
                      the unique contribution made to 20th century 
                      organ building by John Brombaugh. Like Jurgen Ahrend in 
                      Europe, Brombaugh was, even by the early 1970s, 
                      at the forefront of the second stage of organ reform, building 
                      organs drawing heavily on carefully studied historical models, 
                      mostly in the Netherlands and Northern Germany. 
                      The development of his own style has created a North American 
                      school of historically inspired and informed organ building 
                      hardly matched in Europe. Apart from Brombaugh its leading lights include Paul Fritts, 
                      Taylor and Boody, and Richards and Fowkes. What is especially 
                      fascinating about this school is that, to different extents, 
                      it is now building organs which could be described as eclectic, 
                      though very different from the rather standardised instruments 
                      now being produced by Rieger, Klais etc. Perhaps the instrument 
                      which has received most coverage is the Fritts organ at 
                      Pacific Lutheran University in Tacoma, Washington State, with its obviously Stellwagen-inspired 
                      case, and Hanseatic North German tonal basis, but with a 
                      Swell box and reeds copied after Cavaillé-Coll. However, 
                      it’s probably true to say that the first figure to move 
                      the ‘new’ American school into eclectic organ building, 
                      was John Brombaugh. Already twenty years ago he built a 
                      four manual, seventy stop instrument in the Southern Missionary 
                      College in Collegedale, Tennessee, including a large ‘Recit 
                      Expressive’ with an unda maris! It is interesting to speculate 
                      how much the organ on the current discs represents a distillation 
                      of the Collegedale concept, and how much it represents a 
                      development of the style. The Springfield organ, completed in 2004 has 49 stops onthree3 
                      manuals, and even features electric stop action and a combination 
                      system! In trying to quantify the concept, the role of the 
                      Swell here is, for me, harder to grasp than at Collegedale. 
                      It features a celeste, but only a sharp mixture, as well 
                      as a copy of the Haarlem Bovenwerk Vox Humana, but also 
                      an extraordinary 16’ reed; a Dulcian until f’, thereafter 
                      a copy of an 1870 Hook oboe! Also the case is interesting; 
                      the Rűckpositive seems to point to around 1650ish, 
                      while the main case seems to point more to the first 20 
                      or 30 years of the 19th century. 
                    Predictably 
                      the organ sounds marvellous in Bach. The choruses are voiced 
                      so well in the dryish acoustic, the reeds are very very 
                      fine, including an uncanny copy of the Alkmaar Hobo, the 
                      winding is musically flexible, the flutes are wonderfully 
                      charming. Listen for the Schnitergerian Querflöte, curiously 
                      reticent in the Swell box! This, although I don’t fully 
                      understand it, is a masterpiece of 21st century 
                      organ building.
                    It’s 
                      a shame that the whole package is let down by the playing 
                      of Robert Clark. Clark has contributed immensely to American organ education in the 
                      last forty years. He commissioned an important Fritts organ 
                      at the University of Arizona 
                      and even edited a critically acclaimed edition of the Orgelbűchlein. 
                      In short, this is an American organ organist who really 
                      “gets it” and his intentions in terms of tempi, affekt, 
                      articulation etc, are spot-on. Unfortunately his playing 
                      has become laboured; co-ordination problems cause unsteadiness, 
                      frequent note and rhythmic inaccuracies and often untidy 
                      ornaments. I have the feeling that the whole recording is 
                      heavily edited and some edits are indeed rather badly handled. 
                      See disc 2: Track 2 @ 0’43, Track 5 @ 9’30 and Track 11 
                      @ 1’30.
                    Recommended 
                      for the instrument.
                    Chris 
                      Bragg