The New Church of the 
                district of Orgryte in the pretty Swedish 
                city of Gothenburg has in the last five 
                years become a mecca for organists. 
                Not only does the church house the now 
                famous North German Baroque Organ, the 
                result of a multi-disciplinary, multi-million 
                pound project between Gothenburg University's 
                Organ Art Centre, and Chalmers Institute 
                of Technology, but also the unaltered 
                1871 Father Willis built for St Stephen's 
                Hampstead. This CD presents these organs 
                in an astonishingly original manner.
              Bengt Tribukait is 
                a new name to me. Born in 1964, he studied 
                with perhaps the two leading Swedish 
                organists of their generation, Torvald 
                Toren and Hans Fagius, as well as with 
                David Sanger in England. His specialisation 
                in contemporary music is reflected in 
                the fact that the contemporary music 
                on this CD is the most successful material. 
                Victoria Borisova's free fantasia depicting 
                Bruegel's 'Adoration of the Magi in 
                the Snow' is a very attractive piece; 
                highly atmospheric and mostly tonal. 
                This could find some popularity I think. 
                The work by Sergei Dmitriev was too 
                static to maintain my interest. These 
                together with a slightly breathless 
                (at 15'44, one of the quickest performances 
                on record), performance of Liszt's famous 
                Variations on 'Weinen, Klagen' are performed 
                on the Willis. And doesn't it just love 
                this music? With all the furore about 
                the new organ, it is easy to forget 
                the sublime quality of this instrument. 
                The loss of so many of Father Willis's 
                instruments in the UK, often the result 
                of misguided rebuilds by the original 
                builder's grandson is to be regretted. 
                This is among the finest organ building 
                Europe produced at the time.
              The contrast between 
                Liszt on the Willis and Byrd on the 
                North German organ couldn't be more 
                pronounced. Apart of the obvious aesthetic 
                differences, the new instrument is tuned 
                in 1/4 comma meantone! Tribukait's fluent 
                and often refined playing is highly 
                impressive on both instruments, but 
                when playing the new organ, I tired 
                of his fidgety approach to registration; 
                no fewer than four registrations in 
                the Byrd Fantasia, and even three in 
                the Bach fugue, starting on an 8' basis 
                and ending with the 16' plenum. If ever 
                Bach wrote a plenum fugue, surely this 
                is it. Tribukait's lack of monumentality 
                in his approach here, the tempo is also 
                rather quick, is a shame.
              The literature chosen 
                for the North German organ is in itself 
                a little peculiar. Byrd is of course 
                'meantone music', but he never dreamt 
                of an organ like this one. More troubling 
                however is the Bach which quite frequently 
                goes outwith the bounds of the temperament, 
                leading to some excruciating moments. 
                Tribukait's argument that mean-tone 
                organs were 'prevalent' in Bach's time 
                doesn't add up, 1/6 comma meantone, 
                the temperament used by Gottfried Silbermann, 
                was more prevalent in Bach's area, and 
                even this he complained about! 
              A slightly eccentric 
                disc then, but in general very well 
                played, the organs are gorgeous, and 
                the presentation is first rate with 
                some great photography and full registration 
                details - excepting some printing errors. 
                A small factual error also creeps into 
                the notes; the Willis organ isn't the 
                only three manual example of his work 
                outside the UK, a further three manual 
                instrument can be found in a private 
                residence in the Netherlands. Incidentally, 
                all are live performances except the 
                Liszt. Highly recommended.
              
              Chris Bragg