The Gramophone Shop Celebrity Series
  Complete Danish Recordings 1948-1950 and the earliest Finn Viderø organ recordings 1937-1941
  DANACORD DACOCD893-896 [4 CDs: 305:51]
	
  The Gramophone Shop was a powerhouse among North American emporia, situated on 42nd East Street and owned by Bill Tyler and Joe Brogan. Not only did it issue its own Encyclopedia of Recorded Music, which ran to several editions – I use the 1948 edition regularly whether for reviewing or for research – but it also had its own record label. This was the Gramophone Shop Celebrities series and this is the background to the first ever CD release of the complete GSC recordings of Danish recordings made between 1948 and 1950.
  
  It was through Askel Schiøtz that Brogan learned of Finn Viderø and Mogens Wöldike, and their espousal of Baroque and Renaissance music clearly fired Brogan’s enthusiasm for an expansion of the recorded repertoire. Brogan duly travelled to Denmark to make this series of recordings that were soon to be issued in a sequence of five album sets each containing six 78rpm discs. They were produced by Danish HMV in Valby, Copenhagen. The albums were called ‘Baroque Cantatas of 17th Century North Germany’, ‘Seventeenth-Century Organ music’, ‘Compenius Organ album’, ‘Choral music of the Renaissance’ and ‘Alto Cantatas of Schütz and Buxtehude’. There’s more to read in the notes by Claus Byrith and Peter Quantrill, to which I’m indebted for this introduction.
  
  In the Baroque Cantatas album, the main soloist is the mezzo Lorri Lail, a Norwegianisation of her original name which was Laurie Lyle. Though Oslo-born and a Norwegian artist her heritage was Scottish. She recorded for HMV and Urania and Lieder eines fahrenden Gesellen is probably her best-remembered LP. Nevertheless, her early music and church recitals were especially popular, and she reveals her real affinity for this repertoire – Schütz and Buxtehude principally but Franz Tunder too. She is accompanied by fine string players - Else Marie Bruun and Julius Koppel feature prominently, as does cellist Alberto Medici - and by Viderø himself. In Buxtehude’s Jubilate Domino, the viola da gamba of Thomas Rosenberg is very audible, enriching the small string ensemble very considerably and adding another sonic layer to the sound. It’s the only piece on which he plays. For the second part of this first album, Wöldike conducts or directs from the harpsichord a variety of shifting ensembles with various singers in cantatas by Matthias Weckmann Schutz, Buxtehude and less well-known composers such as Vincent Lübeck. All reveal sharp interaction between the accompanying forces and the series of fine singers, and the difference between the organ and harpsichord-accompanying figures is marked.
  
  For the Renaissance Choral music album Wöldike conducts the forces of the Danish Broadcasting Madrigal Choir in performances that reflect the then prevailing approach to unaccompanied choral music in the same way as the accompanying string ensemble in the Cantata album, with its obvious use of vibrato and warm phrasing, reflected the instrumental approach of the day. Wöldike is especially convincing in Lassus and Palestrina whilst in Josquin his instinct is toward a degree of romanticism.
  
  CD3 contains Finn Viderø’s ‘Late Renaissance and Early Baroque Organ music’ album played on the largely unmodified 1601 Esaias Compenius organ at Frederiksborg Castle, near Copenhagen, and which is one of the best-preserved instruments of the time. The repertoire here reflects the organist’s wide range of enthusiasms and accomplishments – as commanding in Scheidt as he is in Antonio de Cabezón, where he is unexpectedly touching. For the GSC sequence Viderø also recorded on two Marcussen organs, one in Grundtvigs Church and the other in Jaegersborg Church, where one can revel in a tremendously compelling and stylish Louis Marchand Grand dialogue. These were hardly his first experiences recording as twelve years earlier, in 1937, he recorded three 78s for HMV on the Compenius organ and they are also included. Whilst obviously not part of the Gramophone Shop series, their place here is both valuable and historically relevant. Here too are the three HMVs he made in 1940 on the Marcussen organ at Christiansborg Castle which can be found in the fourth disc. They complement the Gramophone Shop recordings in recorded sound, use of relevant organs and repertoire, and they must also have been made by the same recording team as well.
  
  The four discs are priced ‘as for two’ and make for a cohesive, insightful collection of Danish recordings of the period from 1937 to 1950, with the obvious emphasis on those 1948-50 sets masterminded by the indefatigable Joe Brogan. It’s rare to find these 78 sets as the LP market was soon to sweep America and they were never reissued in this format. Fine restoration and loving care ensures you can snap them up for the price of a twofer and you don’t have to worry about clicks, skipped grooves, and blasting.
  
  Jonathan Woolf
  
  Contents
  CD1
  Baroque Cantatas of the 17th Century North Germany
  Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672)
  [1] Herzlich lieb hab’ Ich dich, O Herr, SWV 348
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Else Marie Bruun and Julius Koppel, Violins
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  [2] Was hast du verwirket, SWV 307
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  [3] Bringt her dem Herren, Ihr gewaltigen, SWV 283
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  [4] O süsser, O freundlicher, O gütiger Herr Jesu Christe, SWV 285
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Jarl Hansen, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  [5] O misericordissime Jesu, SWV 309
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Jarl Hansen, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  
  Diderik Buxtehude (1637/39-1707)
  [6] Jesu, meine Freud’ und Lust, BuxWV 59
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Else Marie Bruun, Violin and Julius Koppel, Violins Hans Kassow, Viola
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  
  [7] Jubilate Domino, omnis terra, BuxWV 64
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Thomas Rosenberg, Viola da gamba
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  
  [8] Wenn ich, Herr Jesu, habe dich, BuxWV 107
  Lorri Lail, Contralto
  Else Marie Bruun, Violin and Julius Koppel, Violins
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Thomas Rosenberg, Viola da gamba
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  
  Franz Tunder (1614-1667)
  [9] Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme
  The Copenhagen Boys' Choir with chamber orchestra
  Mogens Wöldike, Conductor
  
  Matthias Weckmann (1619-1674)
  [10] Zion spricht: Der Herr hat mich verlassen
  Elsa Sigfuss, Contralto
  Volmer Holböll, Tenor
  Holger Nørgaard, Bas
  Chamber Orchestra - Mogens Wöldike, Conductor
  
  Heinrich Schütz
  [11] O, hilf Christe, SWV 296
  
  [12] Meister, wir haben die ganze Nacht gearbeitet, SWV 317
  Volmer Holböll, Baryton
  Eskild Rask Nielsen, Baryton
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Mogens Wöldike, Harpsicord
  
  [13] Pharisäer und Zöllner, SWV 444 I - Es gingen zween Menschen
  [14] Pharisäer und Zöllner, SWV 444 II - Ich sage euch: Erhöre mich, wenn ich rufe
  Maja Bærentzen, Soprano
  Valborg Garde, Contralto
  Volmer Holböll, Tenor
  Holger Nørgaard, Bas
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Mogens Wöldike, Harpsichord
  
  CD2
  
  Vincent Lübeck (1654-1740)
  [1] Willkommen süsser Bräutigam
  Karen Heerup, Soprano
  Valborg Garde, Contralto
  Else Marie Bruun, Violin
  Julius Koppel, Violin
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Mogens Wöldike, Harpsichord
  
  Christoph Bernhard (1628-1692)
  [2] Fürchtet euch nicht
  Karen Heerup, Soprano
  Else Marie Bruun, Violin
  Julius Koppel, Violin
  Mogens Wöldike, Harpsichord
  
  Diderik Buxtehude
  [3] O wie selig sind, BuxWV 90
  Niels Brincker, Tenor
  Holger Nørgaard, Bas
  Else Marie Bruun, Violin
  Julius Koppel, Violin
  Alberto Medici, Cello
  Mogens Wöldike, Harpsichord
  
  Choral Music of the Renaissance
  All with The Danish Broadcasting Madrigal Choir, Conductor, Mogens Wöldike
  
  Orlando di Lasso (c. 1532-1594)
  [4] Psalmus poenitentialis (Ps. 129 De Profundis)
  
  [5] Improperium
  
  Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina (c. 1525-1594)
  [6] Motet, Super flumina Babylonis
  
  [7] Motet, Dies sanctificatus (In festo nativitatis Domini)
  
  [8] Missa Aeterna Christi Munera, Agnus Dei I & II
  
  Hans Leo Hassler (1564-1612)
  [9] Motet, Dixit Maria ad angelum
  
  Jacobus Gallus (Handl) (1550-1591)
  [10] Pater noster
  
  Clemens non Papa (c. 1510 - c. 1556)
  [11] Motet, Vox in Rama audita est
  
  Josquin des Pres (c. 1440-1521)
  [12] Kyrie, Christe, Kyrie - Sanctus from Missa pange lingua
  
  [13] Pleni sunt coeli - Benedictus
  
  [14] Osanna - Agnus Dei
  
  CD3
  Late Renaissance and Early Baroque Organ Music
  Finn Viderø on the Compenius Organ
  Frederiksborg Castle, Hillerød, Denmark
  
  Samuel Scheidt (1587-1641)
  [1] Magnificat secondi toni, 1-6
  
  Girolamo Frescobaldi (1583-1643)
  [2] Canzona dopo l'epistola
  
  Heinrich Scheidemann (1595-1663)
  [3] Praeambulum (In dorian mode)
  
  Antonio de Cabezón (1510-1566)
  [4] Diferencias 4:03 Play
  [5] Tiento del quarto Tono
  
  Jean Titelouze (1562-1633)
  [6] Magnificat quinti toni
  Magnificat, Quia respixit, Et misericordia eius, Deposuit potentes
  Deposuit potentes alter versus, Suscepit Israel, Gloria patri et filio
  
  Melchior Schildt (1593-1667)
  [7] Praeambulum
  
  Orlando Gibbons (1583-1625)
  [8] Fantasia
  
  Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck (1562-1652)
  [9] O lux beata trinitas. Var. 1 & 2
  
  Jacob Praetorius (1586-1651)
  [10] Praeambulum
  
  Michael Praetorius (1571-1621)
  [11] Alvus tumescit virginis
  
  Finn Viderø, Organ
  His first recordings
  Compenius Organ - Recorded November 12, 1937
  
  Antonio de Cabezón
  [12] Tiento del primer tono
  
  Tomás de Santa María (c. 1515-1570)
  [13] Fantasia tertii toni, from Arte de tañer fantasia
  
  Nicolas Lebègue (1630-1702)
  [14] Les Cloches, from Troisième livre d’orgue
  
  Samuel Scheidt
  [15] Variations on Da Jesus an dem Kreuze stund, verses 1-6, from Tabulatura nova
  
  Girolamo Frescobaldi
  [16] Toccata sopra I pedali, from Il secondo libro di toccata
  canzone, versi d'hinni, magnificat
  
  Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck
  [17] Fantasia op de Maneer van een Echo
  
  Finn Viderø - Marcussen Organ, Grundtvigs Church, Copenhagen
  Diderik Buxtehude: 4 Choral Preludes
  [18] Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder, BuxWV 178
  [19] Nun, komm, der Heiden Heiland, BuxWV 211
  [20] Vater unser im Himmelreich, Spitta II, 1, 96
  [21] Nun bitten wir den Heilgen Geist, Spitta II, 2, 24
  
  CD4
  
  17th Century Organ Music
  Finn Viderø - Marcussen Organ, Jægersborg Church, Denmark
  Recorded between January 11 and June, 1949.
  
  Diderik Buxtehude
  [1] Toccata F Major, BuxWV 156
  
  Johann Jakob Froberger (1616-1667)
  [2] Ricercare in phrygian mood
  [3] Ricercare F sharp minor
  
  Louis Marchand (1669-1732)
  [4] Grand dialogue in C Major
  
  Franz Tunder
  [5] Prelude in G minor
  
  Matthias Weckmann
  [6] Toccata in E minor
  
  Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706)
  [7] Fantasia in G minor
  [8] Ricercare in C minor
  
  Diderik Buxtehude
  [9] Prelude and Fugue in D minor, BuxWV 140
  [10] Canzonetta in E minor
  
  Early recordings
  Marcussen Organ at Christiansborg Castle Church, Copenhagen
  
  [11] Prelude and Fugue G minor, Spitta 14
  [12] Passacaglia in D minor, Spitta 1
  [13] Toccata in F Major, Spitta 21
  [14] Choral prelude In dulci jubilo, BuxWV 197
  
  Marcussen Organ, Grundtvigs Church, Copenhagen
  
  [15] Prelude and Fugue in E Major, Spitta 8