The 
                    wonderful 15th century church of Fotheringhay 
                    in Northamptonshire, received a new organ in 2000, built by 
                    Vincent Woodstock. It is a modest instrument of some 15 stops 
                    distributed thus:
                  GT: 
                    8 8 8 (Dulciana), 4 2 IV 8
                  SW: 
                    8 4 2,2/3 2 1,3/5
                  Ped: 
                    16 8 16 (Bassoon)
                  Conceptually 
                    it is difficult to quantify the instrument, and although much 
                    is written about it in the booklet, none of it concerns the 
                    basic concept. Superficially it seems stuck in the ‘neo-classical 
                    plus swell box’ mould typical of the artistic crisis which 
                    the vast majority of British organ builders have found themselves 
                    in for twenty years or more. Here the inevitable swell box 
                    (balanced!) houses just a cornet décomposée! However, I’m 
                    happy to report that on the basis of this recording, the conceptual 
                    fuzziness proves less important than the fine tonal qualities 
                    of much of the instrument. I was especially delighted with 
                    the principal chorus; there is a real singing quality to the 
                    principals, and the mixture seems very intelligently composed 
                    and voiced. The latter stop is calm and never threatens to 
                    tire the ear. The plenum is underpinned by an excellent fractional-length 
                    pedal reed. The trumpet seems to have too much of a solo characteristic 
                    for such a modest scheme. Archer doesn’t use it in the plenum 
                    at all (tellingly one suspects), except in the Dialogue 
                    sur les Grands Jeux of Couperin where the mixture of course 
                    isn’t employed. It proves a pleasing solo stop in the English 
                    Voluntaries. The flutes have some real beauty. Perhaps most 
                    impressive though, is that Vincent Woodstock has made a winding 
                    system which creates a vocal quality I’ve barely heard from 
                    a modern British builder! Congratulations! 
                  Malcolm 
                    Archer, recently appointed organist of St 
                    Paul’s 
                    Cathedral, plays a programme of English, German and French 
                    music dating from between the late 16th and late 
                    18th centuries. His playing is neat and well-controlled, 
                    with some very nice ornamentation. The most successful tracks 
                    are the English voluntaries and the Ritter Sonatina, long 
                    championed by Gustav Leonhardt, which is presented with a 
                    pleasing idiomatic freedom. However in order to become a really 
                    first-rate player of this literature Archer needs to become 
                    far more aware of the natural grammatical accents inherent 
                    in baroque music. His approach can be nicely summarised with 
                    a brief analysis of the Buxtehude Ciaconna. Firstly the pedal 
                    ostinato is played rather too legato to shape the bar effectively. 
                    Secondly his touch is not sophisticated enough for him to 
                    avoid the placing of accents on the smaller note-values, especially 
                    when the movement is in semiquavers. Here the feeling is very 
                    much of six impulses in the bar instead of three - or even 
                    one depending on how you look at it. The - unnecessary - manual 
                    changes, as throughout the disc, occur with a shortening of 
                    the last note before the change, frequently resulting in an 
                    accent on a weak part of the bar. I have also some small textual 
                    issues; Mr Archer should consult Michael Belotti’s Buxtehude 
                    edition. 
                  Elsewhere 
                    the grammatical problem presents itself in other guises. During 
                    the third variation of the Sweelinck for instance the non-decorated 
                    right hand (playing the theme) becomes almost completely legato 
                    while the left hand plays the semi-quavers in contrast to 
                    the articulation of the theme at the outset. (Track 8, 2’56). 
                    Other issues I must mention are the strange added manual change 
                    for the third material in the famous E flat Prelude of Bach, 
                    and the rallentandos at the end of each section of the fugue 
                    which destroy the relationship between the time-signatures. 
                    Why, incidentally in 2005 does the English organ fraternity 
                    still insist on its silly tradition of giving the E flat Fugue 
                    its turn-of-the 20th century nickname based on 
                    an erroneous association with Croft’s hymn tune?
                  In 
                    general the surprisingly fine organ makes this an interesting 
                    release, and Archer’s playing, whatever my small gripes, presents 
                    it well enough; he is after all an excellent musician, and 
                    rightly one of the most highly respected figures in English 
                    Cathedral music. 
                  Chris 
                    Bragg