Ludvig Nielsen is a new name to me. He was organist 
                  of Trondheim Cathedral, Norway's National Shrine, for 41 years, 
                  between 1935 and 1976. He was a student of Arild Sandvold, a 
                  pupil of Straube, and also studied with Straube himself. His 
                  music is characterised by an intensely contrapuntal, though 
                  not overly chromatic language, sometimes with a modal twist. 
                  Perhaps not always as succinct as one would like, his music 
                  nevertheless displays a formidable invention and feeling for 
                  atmosphere. 
                I enjoyed this disc a lot. Bjorn Kare Moe is a 
                  former assistant to Ludvig Nielsen, as well as being a former 
                  student of Gaston Litaize, and plays this music with verve and 
                  dedication. Trondheim Cathedral is best known in the organ world 
                  of course, as the home of the famous 18th century Wagner organ, 
                  perhaps one of the finest Bach instruments in the world. The 
                  instrument featured here however is the instrument built for 
                  the church, upon completion of its restoration in 1930 by the 
                  German builder Steinmeyer. Originally containing a monstrous 
                  139 stops, the organ was unfortunately rebuilt and reduced in 
                  size to a mere 133 stops including transmissions, although part 
                  of it was moved to the east end to make a choir organ. Apparently 
                  there are now plans to restore it to its original situation. 
                  The booklet notes that the current organ is in poor condition. 
                  Despite this it sounds splendidly symphonic on this recording, 
                  especially in such sound hands, and playing music written specifically 
                  for it.
                Among Nielsen's organ works, I found the shorter 
                  works to be the most successful. The two short chorale preludes 
                  are especially effective, 'Brod for verden..' sounds curiously 
                  like Hyfrydol incidentally! The larger works hang less 
                  well together; the 20 minute 'Veni Redemptor' is a remarkable 
                  piece with some brilliant writing, but as a whole fails to convince. 
                  In fact, I can't help feeling that Nielsen's real compositional 
                  talent was in the writing of vocal music. The sacred songs here, 
                  all set strophically, are wonderful miniatures with haunting 
                  melodies, and highly inventive use of the organ as an accompanying 
                  instrument. Congratulations to Mona Julsrud for some beautifully 
                  understated singing.
                The music is of uneven quality then, but this is 
                  unusual, very interesting, and very well performed. The inclusion 
                  of the Cathedral bells at two points in the programme is a nice 
                  touch. Warmly recommended.
                Chris 
                  Bragg