Ben Van Oosten's 
                  latest release in his ongoing Dupré cycle, finds him in Princeton, 
                  New Jersey. Van Oosten has again selected cleverly an organ 
                  associated with Dupré; in this instance Dupré was involved in 
                  the design of the 1928 100-stop Skinner. Later alterations by 
                  the Aeolian Skinner company were partially reversed in the restoration 
                  of 1990-91 by Manders of London. It sounds truly magnificent 
                  here, matching Dupré's later compositions aesthetically very 
                  well. It is worth remembering that although Dupré remained organist 
                  at St Sulpice until his death, and, unlike his colleague and 
                  former pupil Cochereau at Notre Dame, preserved the 1862 Cavaille-Coll 
                  as conceived by its builder, much of his time was spent touring 
                  in the US. His later compositions reflect the contemporary Anglo-American 
                  organ building style. 
                The Princeton organ 
                  is captured very well; the listener is always aware of the room 
                  as well as the instrument. Ben van Oosten is as stupendous, 
                  as  always. Phenomenal control, technique, never playing 
                  too fast, amazing feeling for line, astonishing use of the instrument 
                  - such elements always characterise his playing and this is 
                  no exception. Van Oosten is, quite simply, the greatest interpreter 
                  of the French symphonic school alive today.
                Why then do I find 
                  it so hard to warm to this disc? The reason I'm afraid is the 
                  music. The too earliest works, the Poème Héroïque, and the Angelus 
                  (dating from the 1930s) are both attractive, the Poème Héroïque 
                  particularly dramatic, but the remainder, and especially the 
                  two larger works are inaccessible, in the case of Vision, very 
                  formless, and almost self-indulgent. In Memoriam op. 61, written 
                  in memory of his daughter, has never had the popularity that 
                  one would expect of the last large organ work of a figure as 
                  important as Dupré. The reason is quite simple, Dupré never 
                  finds the inspiration of the earlier Symphonie Passion, the 
                  op. 7 Preludes and Fugues, the concise Deuxième Symphonie, the 
                  op. 36 A-flat major Prelude and Fugue or the Variations sur 
                  un vieux Noël. Here one is much more aware of Dupré the improviser, 
                  notating ideas but somehow lacking the panache of the earlier 
                  creations.  
                For collectors looking 
                  for a complete Dupré cycle, this is undoubtedly the one to have, 
                  Van Oosten's insightful playing and his choice of instruments 
                  putting it far ahead of the variable Naxos releases, and Jeremy 
                  Filsell's cycle on Guild, typically brilliant, but as so often 
                  with him, let down by use of a single organ of limited appeal.     
                
                Chris 
                  Bragg