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Johann Sebastian
BACH (1685-1750) Organ Works: Volume 8
Fantasia in G minor BWV542/1 [5:52]
Chorale Prelude Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr BWV662 [8:11]
Chorale Prelude Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr BWV663 [7:31]
Trio super Allein Gott in der Höh sei Ehr BWV664 [6:04]
Prelude and Fugue in A major BWV536 [2:13 + 5:50]
Concerto in A minor (after Vivaldi Op.3/8) BWV593 [4:47+3:55+5:03]
Toccata and Fugue in F major BWV540 [10:02+6:36]
Jacques van Oortmerssen (Christian
Müller organ, 1738)
rec. church of St Bavo, Haarlem, 25-26 May 2006. DDD. Challenge
Classics CC72153 [66:10]
This is the
eighth in an ongoing series of Bach’s organ works, played
by Jacques van Oortmerssen on a variety of organs, all roughly
dating from Bach’s time. Having taken over and completed
Ton Koopman’s series of Bach Cantatas, Challenge Classics
now seem set to record all his organ works. With this eighth
volume they must be about half way through. I have not heard
any of the other discs in the series but, on the evidence
of this volume, it is unlikely to prove the equal of the
cantata cycle.
The booklet note challenges the concept of a ‘Bach Organ’ and
advocates the employment of organs of different traditions
as not only possible but even desirable. This, together with
the fact that Oortmerssen has previously recorded 19th and
20th century French organ works for Challenge,
might seem to indicate that he advocates a return to a less ‘authentic’ style
than has recently been the norm. He certainly goes for a ‘big’ sound
right from the opening Fantasia - here shorn of the Fugue
which usually accompanies it in modern editions. This is
an omission which the booklet defends on the grounds that
the two were never coupled in Bach’s own time. Oortmerssen
is also able to achieve a delicacy of tone where appropriate,
as in the transcribed Vivaldi Concerto: in fact, his playing
is reminiscent in its range of that of his teacher, Marie-Claire
Alain.
The booklet claims that Oortmerssen follows Bach’s own indications
for registration, but admits that these are infrequent. Otherwise
he combines the registrations laid down by Bach’s contemporaries,
with what the booklet calls “conventions … rooted in older
traditions.” In the Chorale Preludes, the Trio and the outer
movements of the Vivaldi Concerto, nothing heavier is employed
than 8’ stops on the manuals and 16’ in the pedals; the slow
movement of the Vivaldi is limited to 8’ manual stops. In
all the other works Oortmerssen regularly employs 16’ manual
and 32’ pedal stops. I hesitate to disagree with Oortmerssen,
successor to the scholarly Gustav Leonhardt as organist of
the Waalse Kerk in Amsterdam, yet the resultant sound strikes
me as somewhat too heavy – at times more appropriate to Franck
or Widor than to Bach.
I have to admit to a personal preference here. Immediately
after hearing the opening Fantasia, I listened for comparison
to this piece as recorded by Peter Hurford, whose very fine
Decca series of Bach’s organ works is available on 444 410-2
(17 CDs) with a selection on a Double Decca (443 485-2);
a Classics for Pleasure 2-disc set has also survived from
his later EMI recordings (5856302). My preference was very
much for Hurford – a clean, clear sound, yet with plenty
of bass, though I imagine he was not using anything more
than 16’ stops: the booklet does not specify – full marks
to Challenge for their very detailed listing. Hurford’s analogue
recording also holds its own well against the Challenge digital
recording; wide-ranging though this is, it is much less clear
than the Decca, though the reverberation at the end of each
piece suggests that this is partly due to the recording venue.
I have to admit, however, that I totally failed in a blindfold
test to convince my wife, who far preferred the ‘growly’ tone
of the Oortmerssen.
The three ‘Leipzig’ chorale preludes on Allein Gott in
der Höh sei Ehr, the Lutheran version of the Gloria
in excelsis, are played in an appropriately reflective
manner, especially BWV664, generally regarded as the finest
of the three. Here I did not find the registration excessive
and responded to the performances much more positively.
I have indicated also Oortmerssen’s lighter touch in the
Concerto – actually based on Vivaldi’s Op.3/8, not Op.3/6
as stated on the back cover and in the track details in the
booklet. Indeed, I was perfectly satisfied with his interpretation
of this piece until I tried another comparison, this time
an elderly recording by Anton Heiller whose Vanguard recordings
drift in and out of availability – some are currently available
in SACD format but not, I think, these concertos. I expected
to find the comparison in Oortmerssen’s favour, but the livelier
tempo which Heiller adopts in the opening movement made the
new recording sound ponderous by comparison. Once again,
although Ooortmerssen’s registration for this Concerto is
lighter than in some of the other pieces, Heiller sounds
much lighter and brighter, much more Vivaldi-like. His time
for the whole Concerto is two minutes shorter, much closer
to the tempo which Trevor Pinnock adopts for the original
Vivaldi – 3:55 for the first movement against Pinnock’s 3:33
and Oortmerssen’s 4:47. Incidentally, Pinnock’s 5-CD Archiv
box set of the Vivaldi, including the complete Op.3 and Op.10,
is an essential bargain purchase, on 471 317-2. Bach apparently
brought back several concerto scores from his visit to Amsterdam
and transcribed them as part of an abortive cure for the
dying Prince Johann Ernst, himself an able composer. Heiller’s
approach would have been more likely to cheer up the prince
than Oortmerssen’s more languorous version – and here my
domestic critic agrees with me.
Bach made twenty such transcriptions – four for organ and
sixteen for harpsichord. The Vanguard CD includes all four
organ versions; surely it would have been more logical for
Challenge Classics to have made all four the core of their
disc or to have devoted the CD completely to chorale preludes.
As it is, there seems to be no logic to the programme, though
the variety of genres reduces the likelihood of listener
fatigue.
Having written the above, I tried listening to the CD again
on my second system, in a larger room and with speakers marginally
less bass-sensitive. On this second system – and again when
listening through a pair of decent headphones – I was far
less aware of the bass-heavy registration and consequently
more able to enjoy these performances.
One final point: Challenge Classics sell themselves six minutes
short by claiming a playing time of 60:06; three CD players
make it 66:10.
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