Gillian Weir - A Celebration
 Dame Gillian Weir (organ)
 rec. 1964 to 1998. Various locations. ADD/DDD.
ELOQUENCE 4841435
    [22 CDs] [BW]
	
	I don’t normally volunteer for large box sets of CDs – it’s hard to know
    where to put them – but I have made a willing exception in this case, 
	as I did with the Hyperion boxes of The Golden Age (The Sixteen, CDS44401 –
    
        review;
    10 CDs or downloads, £15 from
    
        hyperion-records.co.uk) and their two Purcell box sets from The King’s Consort (CDS44141 –
    
        review,
    11 CDs, £35/£37 download/CDs from
    
        hyperion-records.co.uk
    
    and CDS44031 –
    
        review,
    8 CDs, download only: £35 from
    
        hyperion-records.co.uk).
 
    Gillian Weir’s organ recordings are in the same very special category as
    those Hyperion sets: my colleague Chris Brag is quoted in the booklet
    describing her contribution as ‘almost incalculable’. My usual metier these
    days is to review downloads and streamed recordings, but only 12 of these
    22 CDs are available in that format. These were mostly originally recorded
    and released on LP on the Decca subsidiary label Argo; the remaining ten
    CDs come from BBC recordings, and these are available only in the physical
    set. In any case, with the 12 downloads selling for around £9 each in
    lossless sound, the cumulative cost would be more than the £81 or so of the
    complete set – reduced by one dealer to £64.50 as I write – and you would still be without the ten BBC recordings and
    the booklet for the set. (I wonder what wishful thinker is advertising his
    used set as I write for £139.82.)
	Let me repeat that only the first twelve of these CDs are available to 
	download; having said so in reviewing CD7 separately, a reader took me to 
	task on the Message Board for not having said so.
 
    I must apologise for my tardiness in completing this review; for some time
    now, we have been recruiting new reviewers to work from downloads and
    streamed music, together with some older hands who have also been
    contributing material from these sources. Monitoring the ‘team’, editing
    their reviews and converting them to html, though very satisfying, has
    greatly reduced my own output. On the plus side, there has been a review –
    sometimes two – from these colleagues, new and old, on the MusicWeb pages
    nearly every day for almost three months. In order not to delay even longer
    long, I edited some of this review away from home on a Chromebook;
    apologies, therefore, if there are even more typos than usual.
 
    Even before I received the set, I had selected one recording from this
    collection, as making a very strong case for an unjustly neglected
    composer: François Roberday Fugues et Caprices, CD7 of the set –
    
        review.
 
    Lovers of organ music have hit the jackpot with this collection, released
    to celebrate Dame Gillian’s eightieth birthday. Eloquence had already
    reissued many of the recordings she made for Decca’s sister label Argo, but
    very few are now available on single CDs. Their replacements in the box set
    reproduce the original Argo LP covers, while the BBC-derived recordings
    have been given covers in a similar style. The exception, CD12, reproduces
    the snazzy cover of the 1977 Prelude LP on which part of the material first
    appeared – it even includes the Prelude catalogue number in the top right
    corner, though the contents have been augmented for the reissue.
 
    Five separate CDs entitled The King of Instruments were released
    some time ago by Eloquence as 4601862, 4601872, 4601882, 4601892 and
    4601902. Chris Bragg thought these recordings, made between 1974 and 1980
    on the organs of St Laurens, Rotterdam; Clare College Cambridge; Royal
    Festival Hall, London; Hexham Abbey; St Leonhardskirche, Basel and St
    Maximin Thionville ‘a portrait of a hugely influential artist at a certain
    period in her career’. They are no longer separately available on CD, but
    CB’s comments apply to the equivalent parts of the new set –
    
        review.
 
    Reviewing French Virtuoso Organ Music on 4818742: recorded in 1976
    on the Hradetzky Organ, Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, John
    France thought it ‘great to have this exciting, technically demanding and
    imaginative recording in my library once again’ –
    
        review.  It’s still available separately on CD and download as well as in the new
    box set.
 
    Olivier Messiaen Organ Works on 4818742 recorded at the Royal Festival Hall
    Organ, London, and first released on CD in 2014, is still available on a
    2-CD set, but is reported out of stock by some dealers. In any case, the
    arrangement in the new set is more cost-effective; the two short-ish discs
    have been rejigged to cover one of 72 minutes and the first 20 minutes of
    the next.
 
    These recordings remind us what a fantastic range Gillian Weir’s repertoire
    covered, from the Renaissance to Messiaen and practically every stop
    in-between. All the Decca recordings were models of clarity in their time
    and, though ADD, they have come up very well in these transcriptions. The
    live recordings from the BBC, too, several of them digital, also sound very
    well in these re-masterings.
 
    CD 1
    [47:26] opens near the beginning of the time span of this set, with music
by Nikolaus Bruhns (1665-1697) and     Samuel Scheidt (1587-1654), two composers whose music
    fits better together, as on their first Argo release, than when Bruhns was
    paired with Clérambault on the earlier single Eloquence CD.
 
    Recent recordings of music from this period may subscribe to more
    historically-informed practice, but Weir remains a strong advocate for
    these two composers, here as first released on an LP in 1980. Communicating
    with the listener must, surely, always take precedence over historical
    correctness. In any case, organ recordings date less than most: the
    instruments remain the same, unless they are rebuilt, and most of the
    organists whose recordings I have known for a long time still don’t sound
dated. Helmut Walcha’s Bach is an excellent case in point: his    Art of Fugue remains one of my favourite recordings. The same
    applies to Karl Richter’s Bach cantatas, worth hearing alongside modern
    favourites. (It’s interesting that Amazon list this Weir set and the
    Richter as having been bought together.)
 
    John France commented on Weir’s ‘sheer sense of drama’ in Bruhns, and
    that’s a feature of her playing throughout these recordings; the elegant
    lady shown reclining on the cover of the box is only part of the picture.
    Bruhns' music has been somewhat in the shadow of that of Buxtehude, but he
    shares many of the latter’s qualities, while Scheidt was an important
    member of the North German group of composers who adapted Italianate style
    to Lutheran practice.
 
    There’s actually not much more of Bruhns to explore: his ‘complete organ
    music’ takes only part of a Brilliant Classics CD with that title, which
    Johan van Veen thought only ‘pretty good’, with better to be had –
    
        review.  Gillian Weir certainly qualifies as ‘better’. More of Scheidt’s music
    survives and is worth exploring: two recordings of his organ music on MDG
    were praised by Johan van Veen –
    
        review
    
    –
    
        review.  Otherwise, he has a walk-on part on several recordings with the likes of
    Schein and Schütz; it’s high time that he came into his own. The only CD
    that I know dedicated to his organ music, on CPO 9991052, is now download
    only, and I haven’t heard any of the recordings of his music on the Fagott
    label.
 
    CD2
[47:03] is devoted to the music of    Jean-François Dandrieu (1682-1738), a selection of pieces
    from his Première Livre d’Orgue, or First Book of Organ Pieces,
    all related to aspects of the liturgy, which first appeared on Argo in
    1980.
 
    Several other recordings of his music have appeared since – see the reviews
    of two Château de Versailles offerings in
    
        Winter 2019/1
    
    – but this album can hold its own, both singly as a download, and in the
    complete set. Several of these pieces were included on 4601892, but it’s
    good to see the complete contents of that Argo release brought together
    again.
 
Next up, CD3 [47:38], contains the music of    Louis Marchand (1669-1732), 
	excerpts from his five books of organ music on the Thionville organ, which 
	first appeared in 1979. He may be less famous than his contemporary François 
	Couperin (‘le grand’), but this recording reminds us that second-best to a 
	genius can often be very good if the music is in the right hands. 
	Preferences are, in any case, subjective; remember that the Leipzig worthies 
	thought Bach second best. The organ is not contemporary with the music, 
	though it contains some 18th-century pipework and was constructed with 
	French and German music of the period in mind. Colourful and often powerful 
	music, persuasively presented.
 
    CD4
[48:35] brings us a selection of music by    J S Bach (1685-1750) on the Marcussen Organ of the
    Laurenskerk, Rotterdam. It’s not the most urgent single recommendation,
    when there are so many very fine recordings of JSB’s organ music, but it’s
    good to have the whole 48½-minute programme instead of the shorter
    selection which featured on 4601862. It was highly praised when it appeared
    in 1977, and it’s still well worth hearing.
 
    For a fuller picture of Weir’s Bach interpretations, you need to turn to
    her recordings for the Priory label, especially PRCD800, a 2-CD set of his
    ‘Leipzig’ Chorales and other works on the organ of JSB’s own Thomaskirche.
    Back in 2016 I recommended a single-CD selection of Bach’s organ music by
    Maude Gratton on the PHI label as an appetite-whetter for a complete
    collection of the ‘18’; it was Gilian Weir’s recording, or that of Helmut
    Walcha (DG Archiv E4775608, download only) that I had in mind as a
    follow-up.
 
    For Bach’s keyboard music (harpsichord and organ), enthusiasts are well
    served by an ongoing complete survey being undertaken by Benjamin Alard for
    Harmonia Mundi. Volume 4 has recently been released on HMM902460/62, 3 CDs,
    budget price. Stuart Sillitoe described Volume 3 as part of ‘an
    enterprising series of the complete keyboard music’ –
    
        review.  Unfortunately, my usual preferred source for Harmonia Mundi downloads,
    eclassical.com, are charging an unfeasible price for the releases in this
    Alard series.
 
    CDS 5 and 6
[45:41 + 81:07] bring us one of the first highlights of the set, François Couperin’s (1668-    1733) two great masterpieces for the instrument, his Organ
    Masses for the convents and the parishes on the organ of the Prediger
    Kirche, Zurich. If you don’t intend to go for the new complete box-set,
    these two volumes are well worth purchasing as downloads, for around £9
    each in lossless sound, but no booklet.
 
    CD 6, the Messe pour les couvents and other pieces, is especially
recommendable, not least because, rounded off with music by    Louis-Nicolas Clérambault (1676-1749), it runs to over 80
    minutes. Though this is one of the earliest recordings in the set, first
    released in 1973, both performance and recording wear their years very
    lightly. The Gramophone reviewer spoke of the ‘natural elegance’ of the
    playing, and that’s been a hallmark of Dame Gillian’s style ever since.
 
    I have to admit to having sometimes found these organ masses a trifle
    boring, even in the hands of such distinguished interpreters as Michael
    Chapuis (Messe pour les paroisses, Harmonia Mundi HMA190714). Not
    so from Gillian Weir, who brings to life music that I had tended to
    dismiss.
 
Her later recording of Couperin’s harpsichord    Music to The Sun King on Kiwi Pacific Records can be found as a
    download for around £5.50. I’m not sure of the provenance, but you could
    hardly go wrong at the price.
 
    Another fascinating CD, No.7 [61:12], is entirely devoted
to the music of François Roberday (c.1624-c.1690), his    Fugues et Caprices (1660), recorded in 1973 on the rebuilt
    Silbermann Organ of St Leonhardkirche, Basle. There’s only one other
    current recording which offers these twelve fugues and caprices, his sole
    surviving work, from André Isoir on the Tempéraments label (3691, with
    music for viols by Roberday and Louis Couperin). The music may not be the
    equal of his more famous pupil Lully, but Weir clearly had a real affection
    for it, and her performance on a fine reconstruction of a Silbermann organ
    makes a very strong case for it. I’ve already
    
        reviewed this separately,
    as a download. I singled it out as special because it makes an excellent
    case for an unjustly neglected composer.
 
    CD8 
[45:16] contains the Missa Mundi of Maltese composer    Charles Camilleri (1931-2009), played on the organ of the
    Royal Festival Hall, London. Composed in 1972, it has only ever had this
    one recording. Sadly, the prediction when this recording was released in
    1975, that it might become one of the most significant organ compositions
    of the twentieth century, never came to fruition, but this recording makes
    a good case for it. It’s mainly reflective, frequently (very) powerful,
    often reminiscent of Messiaen – no bad thing in my book – and haters of the
    avant-garde need have no fear of it. I’ve seen it described as ‘tough’ and
    ‘austere’ music, but if an old fogey like myself could cope with it, most
    readers should have no problem.
 
    CD9
    [49:04] is a very mixed bag: The Organ at Hexham Abbey, music from
different periods and styles, mostly French, ranging from John Bull and Claude Daquin to Charles Widor, Louis Vierne and    Jean Langlais. It was designed to show off the then new
    Hexham organ, built by Weir’s husband, and, engaging as the playing is,
    it’s hardly the most essential part of this collection. It does, however,
    demonstrate the versatility of the organ - able to convey a convincing
    renaissance sound in the Bull, yet coping equally well with the more recent
    French compositions.  Though it possesses, as I understand, just two
    manuals, albeit with a panoply of stops, it confirms the reputation of
    Phelps organs in this repertoire. I’ve commented elsewhere on the lack of
    organ specifications; I would have especially welcomed the spec for the
    Hexham instrument. It is, however, available, with a detailed commentary,
    
        online.
 
    This CD also serves to remind us that there were very few gaps in Dame
    Gillian’s repertoire. I had always associated her, based on those Decca
    Argo recordings with the renaissance, baroque … and Messiaen. The two CDs
    of Franck’s music from BBC recordings (CDs 16 and 17) help redress the
    balance even further.
 
    If the success of the earlier music on this modern organ comes as a
    pleasant surprise, it’s the later French repertoire that tests the
    capabilities of the instrument, a test which it passes with flying colours.
    Decca chose the Mulet and Dubois for a budget LP sampler of their organ
    repertoire.
 
    CD10
[43:45] contains three pieces by    Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847), with Felicity Palmer the
    soloist in Hör mein Bitten (Hear my prayer), effectively
dispelling shades of Master Ernest Lough, and two by    Zoltán Kodály, on the organs of Kingsway Hall and
    Guildford Cathedral, an odd pairing on the face of it, and originally
    released on different LPs, the Kodály from an album made with the Brighton
    Festival Chorus. Weir appears here as accompanist rather than soloist, but
    it’s none the less an important part of the collection.
 
    Mendelssohn and Zoltán Kodály (1882-1967) are odd
    bedfellows; these recordings were, indeed, not originally paired. The Mendelssohn (ZRG716) included music on which Weir did not feature,
as did the Kodály release (SXL6878), which also contained the Hymn of Zrinyi, so their splicing together was inevitable. The    Hymn can be found, with other music by Kodály and Bartók, on Eloquence 4804853. That’s now download only, duplicates Weir’s performance
    of Laudes organi, and is more expensive, at just under £16 in
    lossless sound, than when it was a 2-CD set. It also comes without a
    booklet, which is an appropriate moment to point out that the individual
    download releases on CDs 1-12 of the box set are also free from any
    booklet. The fact that it happens all too often is no excuse; it leaves a
    sour taste which is in no way attributable to Dame Gillian, whose notes in
    the booklet with the set and on the web – see below – are excellent. Decca
    are among the worst offenders in not providing booklets with their
    downloads.
 
    CDs 11 and 12
    [72:00 + 73:35] bring us some of the most important recordings in the set.
    Valuable as were Weir’s forays into the earlier French repertoire, her
    recordings of Olivier Messiaen (1908-1992) have always been highly
    regarded, alongside the likes of Jennifer Bate, Simon Preston and Olivier
    Latry. Recorded back in 1966 in the Royal Festival Hall, soon after Weir’s
    arrival in the UK and her winning the St Alban’s organ prize, and first
    released on LP by a small company, these performances returned to Weir’s
    copyright in 2014, when they were first released on CD by Eloquence.
 
    Messiaen’s music was far less well known in 1966, but these pioneering
    performances, by no means displaced by Weir’s later Priory recordings of
    his music, fine as those are (PRCD921-926), are almost worth the price of
    the whole set. Otherwise, the two downloads cost around £9 each in lossless
    sound. If I pass over them now, it’s only to consider them alongside the
    other even finer jewels of the set, the BBC live recordings of Messiaen on
    the last five CDs in the set, which bring us the complete œuvre as it stood
    in 1979.
 
    The RFH recordings of Messiaen run over onto the first part of CD12. The
    second half of that offers the contents of French Virtuoso Organ Music,
    now augmented to 73 minutes, given a cover which restores that of the
    original LP, made by Prelude, and offering better value than when JF
    reviewed it so positively – see above. The Hradetzky organ in the Royal
    Northern College of Music may not seem the ideal vehicle for this
    repertoire, but, with some judicious registration and idiomatic playing, it
    sounds fine. Once again, it’s a pity that there was not enough space in the booklet
    which accompanies the set to include the specification of each of the
    organs involved, and even the chosen registration, but it would have been
    very helpful to have had it, even for the most ham-fisted (and -footed)
    organist like myself.
 
    Two works by Marcel Dupré (1886-1971) form the major
interest of the French Virtuoso Organ Music. His Variations    sur un Noël are a modern take on the Christmas
    music which formed an important aspect of the earlier French repertoire.
    (C.f. the Daquin on CD9.)  The performance shows how well Dupré captured the mood of this attractive
    piece, though the resplendent conclusion reminds us that this is a later
composer’s take on that music, in the manner of Respighi’s    Gli Uccelli or his Ancient Airs and Dances for the Lute.
 
    The principal competition for this and the Symphonie No 2 which
    concludes CD12 comes from Thomas Trotter (Decca 4524782), whose recording,
    now download only, includes the Symphonie-Passion. If the Weir
    recording inspires you as I think it will, that would be a good follow-up –
    or the 2-for-1 John Scott recording from St Paul’s on Hyperion CDD22059.
 
There are a couple of other recordings of Jacques Charpentier (1933-2017)    L’Ange à la Trompette,
    but I don’t recall having encountered it before. In any case, it’s an
    example of Dame Gillian’s willingness to explore unfamiliar repertoire, as
    in the case of the Roberday on CD7, albeit from a different musical era.
 
    CD13
    [61:17] The first of the BBC live recordings brings us a varied programme
    of music from French, British and German composers from a wide range of
    periods and styles, half recorded as long ago as 1963 in a digital transfer
    of an analogue original, and half from 1996 in fully digital sound. The ADD
sound on tracks 1-3 may not be ideal, but the performances of music by Louis 
	Vierne (1870-1937), Olivier 
	Messiaen and    William Mathias (1934-1992), made soon after winning the
    St Alban’s competition, were excellent auguries for what was to come. I’ve
    compared this sharper account of Combat de la Mort et de la Vie
    from Les Corps Glorieux with that of the complete work on CD20
    below.
 
    The DDD recordings from Clare College on the rest of the CD make me wish
that Weir had recorded more of the music of    Dietrich Buxtehude (1637-1707), the greatest North German
    composer before Bach; his Toccata in F, BuxWV156, seems to be all that she
    recorded – there’s another recording of it on her Birmingham recital (Priory
    PRCD867), and that’s it. Fortunately, there’s some fine Buxtehude from
    Masaaki Suzuki on BIS (BIS-1809, SACD) and three very fine complete
    recordings on Dacapo (Bine Bryndorf), Hyperion (Christopher Herrick) and
    Naxos (various organists).
 
    CD14
    [56:24] entitled The Organ Dances, does indeed include several
dance-based works, including the opening Ballo by    Antonio 
	Valente (1520-1580), not a piece that you hear
    very often, and another example of the versatility of the repertoire on
    these CDs. Recorded at the Albert Hall in digital sound, the programme is
    so enjoyable that I was not troubled by the organ not being on its best
    form.
 
The principal interest comes from the three dance pieces by    Jehan 
	Alain (1911-1940). After his death in 1940, his
    sister Marie-Claire Alain became his principal interpreter, and it’s to her
    recordings of his music that you may wish to turn if your appetite has been
    whetted, as I expect will be the case, by his music here and on CD15. Only
    Volume 2 of what used to be two CDs remains generally available, as a
    mid-price download on Erato 9029519690, but you should also be able to find
    Volume 1 to download or stream - from Qobuz, for example. Volume 2 includes
    the two short Danses a Agni Yavishta; it’s a shame that these 
	couldn’t have been included on CD14 of this Eloquence collection.
 
    On CD15 [59:32] we have live BBC recordings in DDD sound
    of French, mostly from the twentieth century, on three organs. From the
Birmingham Oratory there’s an excerpt from    Marcel Dupré (1886-1971) Symphonie-Passion, a
moreish recording to make the listener try the whole work. Then it’s Jehan 
	Alain’s Intermezzo and    Charles Tournemire (1970-1939) Choral paraphrase of the
    Easter hymn Victimæ paschali, transcribed by Duruflé.
 
    From the Royal Festival Hall comes more Jehan Alain (Deux Fantaisies),
    recorded to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of his death. The RFH organ
    may not be the ideal instrument for Alain, but you would hardly know it
    from this recording.
 
Finally, from Aarhus Cathedral, we have Jean Langlais (1907-1991) Incantation pour un jour saint and    Maurice 
	Duruflé (1902-1986) Prelude on the Epiphany
Introit, Leon Boëllmann (1862-1897) Versets sur ‘Adoro te’ and Jeanne 
	Demessieux (1921-1968) Choral Preludes and    Te Deum.
 
If you are as taken with the wonderful Demessieux setting of the    Te Deum as I think you will be, there’s another recent Eloquence
set to add to your collection:    Jeanne Demessieux – the Decca Legacy (4841424, 8 CDs). There’s
    also a shorter 2-CD Decca set with the same title (4856165, 2 CDs) and
    separate downloads of the individual albums. No promises, but I hope to
    investigate some of those separate releases. Obviously, her own (1959)
    recording of her Te Deum, separately released as a download on
    4856164 (no booklet), with music by Bach, Liszt, Mozart, Widor and others,
    is more authoritative, but that simply means that you should hear both
    versions.
 
    CD16
    [79:59] and CD17 [79:03] bring us some very welcome and
    well-filled recordings of César Franck (1822-1890), his
    complete works performed on the Cavaillé-Coll organ of Saint-Sernin,
    Toulouse, and brought to us from BBC tapes in digital sound. Franck is an
    organist’s dream come true: even his orchestral music sounds as if it was
    composed with the organ in mind. His Symphony has even been transcribed
    convincingly for organ, as recorded by Simon Johnson at St Paul’s (Hyperion
    CDA68046, CD, or download in 16- (£8.99) or 24-bit (£10.10) sound from
    
        hyperion-records.co.uk).
 
    The miscellaneous French works on CD12 and CD15 are claimed in some of the
    publicity material as the eye-openers of the set, but I’d love to spend the
    whole of this review on the Franck. Space, however, allows only a few
    comparisons when the Messiaen deserves even closer attention. As well as
the Symphony and an organ transcription of the Symphonic Interlude from Rédemption, Johnson includes Cantabile, M36, and    Pièce héroïque, M37. At 9:17, Johnson is a little slower in this
    piece than Weir who, at 8:44, both makes it more heroic and gives it a bit
    of a swagger, rounded off with a resplendent conclusion. My preference
    would be for Weir by a small margin, not least for the sounds she elicits
    from the Cavaillé-Coll organ, but with Johnson not far behind, and with the
    24-bit version to which I listened giving him a narrow edge sound-wise over
    the BBC recording, itself digitally recorded. In fact, unless you were
    doing a detailed Building a Library comparison, there’s very little to
    choose between these two recordings.
 
    The Grande Pièce symphonique is the central work on CD16, and I
    suspect that it’s the one that most listeners will be interested in. Here,
    and throughout the two CDs, the principal competition comes from
    Marie-Claire Alain, whose Warner Apex twofer is irresistible at the budget
    price of £8 (2564614282). I’m not even going to attempt a comparison
    between two such very fine organists; I’ll merely add that the Apex would
    make an excellent supplement to the new Eloquence set. Much as I enjoyed a
recent BIS release of the Trois Pièces, M35-37, and    Trois Chorals, M38-40, with the Cavaillé-Coll of Saint Croix,
    Orléans, resplendent in SACD or hi-res download sound (including surround)
    –
    
        Passiontide and Easter 2021
    
    – see also
    
        Recommended review
    
    by Dan Morgan – I’d still turn to Dame Gillian or Marie-Claire Alain for
    effectively the last word on these and other Franck works.
 
    CD18
[53:52] brings the first of the BBC-sourced recordings of    Olivier 
	Messiaen – over 5½ hours of very valuable extra
    music to add to the earlier Argo-derived recordings, bringing us up to date
    with everything composed by 1979. There is, inevitably, a degree of
    overlap. L’Ascension, for example, features both on CD12 (two
    movements only) and CD18 (complete), and again on her Aarhus recording,
    originally for Collins, now on Priory PRCD924 (with Livre d’orgue). Les corps 
	Céleste features on both CD11 and CD20.
 
    Paul Shoemaker’s reservations about the Priory recording –
    
        review
    
    – concerned his unease with the coupling, Livre d’orgue, which he
    found a puzzling work, not the performance of L’Ascension. He also
    appears to be surprised that the organ version of L’Ascension
    seems less immediate in appeal than the orchestral version. He writes that
    ‘it is at first difficult to see that they are the same work at all’.
    Indeed, they are not: the third movement of the orchestral version consists
    of alleluias for the trumpet and cymbals which were heavily criticised as
    inappropriate for a sacred theme, so Messiaen replaced them with a more
    ‘appropriate’ movement depicting a soul sharing in the glory of the
    Ascension. Considering the differences, there’s much to be said for both
    versions, but I would concur with the general opinion that the third
    movement of the organ version is the better piece.
 
    If you prefer the orchestral version, you may wish to try a recent
    recording on the Alpha label from the Zürich Tonhalle Orchestra and Paavo
    Järvi (Alpha 548, with Le Tombeau resplendissant and other works:
    Recommended –
    
        review). I missed it at the time because my press preview was in mp3 only, but,
    listening to it now, it certainly deserves its recommended status. There’s
    no problem in enjoying both that and Gillian Weir’s recordings.
 
    I could compare recordings of the major works such as L’Ascension
    until this review became too long to get online. Among the many well worth
    considering, I’ve chosen Hans-Ola Ericsson on BIS, largely because it’s
    some time since I listened to his Messiaen. His recording is still
available on a single CD (BIS-409, with Le Banquet céleste,    Apparition de l’Église éternelle and Diptyque), but the
    7-CD set offers much better value, at around £37 (BIS1770-72);
    paradoxically, the download costs much more, at around £67 in lossless
    sound and even sells on BIS’s own eclassical.com for an uncompetitive
    $73.70.
 
    Reviewing Tom Winpenny’s fine Naxos recording of L’Ascension in
    
        DL News 2016/4,
    a fine performance which emphasises the spirituality rather than the
    drama of the music, I found myself marginally preferring it to the
Ericsson, but that, too is well worth considering. Eloquence preface    L’Ascension with Le Banquet 
	céleste, while BIS reverse the
    order, but the two works go very well together. Both are more concerned
    with the inward and spiritual grace than with the outward and visible
    drama. L’Ascension offers a very different, more thoughtful
    perspective than those medieval stained-glass windows where the disciples
    stare up at a pair of disembodied feet drifting into the clouds, while the
    Heavenly Banquet envisaged by Messiaen is less like some grand and noisy
    state occasion, more like the hushed vision of the Holy Grail passing
    through the room in Malory’s Arthurian vision: ‘Ther was no 
	knyght that myght
    speke one worde a grete whyle [a long time]; and so they loked every man on
    other as [as if] they had bene doome [speechless]’.
 
    So, even when L’Ascension opens with Christ’s Majesty asking for
    glory from the Father, it’s a quiet request, not a rash demand, though
    Weir is perhaps a fraction more upfront here than other recordings. It’s
    some time since I listened to either Winpenny or Ericsson in this work, but
    my appreciation of both, and of Weir, remains strong, even having heard
    Järvi’s orchestral version more recently.
 
    Ericsson’s Heavenly Banquet is a more leisurely affair than Weir’s. Heard
    side by side, I think the greater length is to the music’s advantage, but
    there’s no sense that Weir is rushing it; if there is one composer who
    needs to speak for ‘a grete whyle’ more than Bruckner, it would be Messiaen
    – they share a sense of deep spirituality in which time is irrelevant.
 
    In L’Ascension, too, Ericsson generally takes a little longer than
    Weir. I’ve already commented that her first movement makes Christ sound a
    fraction more peremptory; His prayer as He ascends to the Father takes 10:17
    from Ericsson as against 8:46 from Weir, but here, too, the difference is
    more apparent on paper than in actuality. Neither is vying with the priest
    who, as Erasmus reported, gabbled the Mass so quickly that for years no-one
realised that he always said mumpsimus instead of    sumpsimus. Above all, I’m delighted that we now have the whole of
    Weir’s L’Ascension, not just the two movements from the earlier
    Eloquence recording.
 
    CD19
    [60:53] brings us La Nativité du Seigneur, recorded live at the
    National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC. Dame Gillian
    also recorded this on the Aarhus Cathedral organ for Collins, reissued by
Priory (PRCD921, with Apparition de l’Église éternelle and    le Banquet 
	Céleste). Reviewing Richard Gowers on the King’s College
    organ, Cambridge, Dan Morgan referred to the Weir as ‘formidable’, one of
    the best of the very fine versions that Gowers was up against –
    
        review.
 
    I’m not about to disagree with him about either the Priory recording or the
    King’s, which he thought ‘A remarkably perceptive and profoundly moving
    performance [in] superlative sound’; perhaps if I were reviewing CD19 as a
    separate release I might prefer one of Dan’s recommendations, but none of
    these BBC-derived recordings is available as a separate download, so
    comparison is not only odious but futile. The King’s and Priory recordings
    prove that you don’t have to use an organ designed to accompany the Roman
    rite in order to convey the music of the intensely Catholic Messiaen, but
    the Washington organ certainly helps make this recording a very fine
    interpretation of the work.
 
    Perhaps because it was his first major cycle, composed in, 1935, I had
    tended to think this one of Messiaen’s least absorbing works, but Tom
    Winpenny on Naxos –
    
        review
    
    –
    
        review
    
    –
    
        DL News 2014/15
    
    – helped to change my mind, and CD19 has convinced me even further, while
    Weir’s detailed notes on the
    
        Eloquence website
    
    elucidate the music even more.
 
    Given the right choice of registration and a respectful, but not boring,
    interpretation, the Aarhus, St Alban’s and King’s organs sound just as
    ‘right’ as the Washington instrument or, indeed, that of La Trinité,
    Messian’s own organ in Paris. Once again, it’s a shame that we are not told
    Dame Gillian’s choice of registration, or even the stops at her disposal –
    at least the spec of the St Alban’s organ is included in the Naxos booklet.
 
    The only major difference between the Eloquence recording and the Priory
    and Naxos is that Dame Gillian gives the music a little more time to
    breathe in the final Dieu parmi nous on Priory (8:31) than on
    Decca (7:48), as does Winpenny (9:30). Winpenny especially gives the
    movement full weight – literally, with all the bass of the St Alban’s organ
    called upon where required – but that certainly doesn’t mean that the
    Eloquence recording sounds skimped. All three bring the house down with a
climactic conclusion. There’s no disagreement about timing in    Le Verbe, the centre of the work both physically and musically.
 
    CD20
    [51:59] brings the complete Les Corps Glorieux. If the earlier
    (1966) recording on CD11 brings us a rather sharper interpretation of the
    fourth movement, Combat de la Mort et de la Vie, by 1979 the whole
    work had been more fully absorbed and the overall effect is more
    satisfying. Apart from that one section, tempos generally had sharpened,
    most notably in the concluding Le Mystère de la Sainte Trinité.
    Nevertheless, it’s good to have both accounts here. The slightly greater
    space given to Combat in 1979 brings the interpretation closer to
    Messiaen’s own recording on the Sainte Trinité organ in Paris (Warner
    9029542816, budget-price download only). Fascinating as it is to have the
    composer’s own recording, the very slow tempo for this movement, often
    ignoring his own markings, and the less-than-ideal organ tuning and mono
    mid-1950s recording require a good degree of tolerance; I returned to CD20
    gratefully after renewing acquaintance with the Warner. Much as I know that
    many revere the composer’s own recordings, I greatly prefer Gillian Weir to
    his wayward account of Les Corps Glorieux.
 
    I’ve already said that the Washington organ is a very suitable vehicle for
    Weir’s Messiaen; it may be less French in tone than that of Sainte Trinité,
    but at least it’s in tune. Not that that is always the case on these
    recordings; the mighty Albert Hall beast sometimes sounds as if it’s
    running out of puff on CD14. Apparently, it was having some pumping
    problems.
 
    CD21
[79:58] presents us with more 1979 Washington recordings, this time of    Messe de la Pentecôte, Verset pour la fête de la Dédicace
    and Livre d’Orgue.
 
    The original coming of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost (Whitsun) was, 
	to judge by the account in the Acts of the Apostles, a pretty dramatic 
	affair, with the sound of a mighty rushing wind; what better to depict that 
	than with the greatest of all the wind instruments, as depicted in the 
	final, post-communion, section, entitled Sortie? The title of the Pentecost Mass
    may be a tribute to the older form of the Organ Mass, best known from the
    two such works by Couperin on CDs 5 and 6, but Messiaen’s is a very
    different creation. Composers of Couperin’s generation may have loved bird
    imitations, but I think François and his contemporaries might have been
    mystified by how this work might fit into the liturgy (it did) and
    by Messiaen’s use of bird calls, especially in the Communion movement,
    waterdrops, plainsong, imaginative registrations, dabbling with
    serialization and Hindu rhythms. An interest in Eastern mysticism was in no
    way at odds with the composer’s deeply held Catholicism. Perhaps ‘mystified’
    is the right word to use, because Messiaen reminds us that the Spirit of
    Pentecost is one of the great Mysteries, and that’s just how it comes over
    in Dame Gillian’s recording.
 
If the Messe de la Pentecôte was a tribute to Couperin, the    Livre d’Orgue surely is meant to remind us both of the title of
    Bach’s Orgelbüchlein, with which it shares music for the seasons
    of the church year, and the eighteenth-century French composers such as
    Grigny and Dandrieu (CD2), who used that title for collections of their
    music. Like Bach, Messiaen employs many mathematical devices in this work,
    especially in the closing Soixante-quatre durées, and, again like
    Bach, it can sound intellectual and dry in the wrong hands. But these are
    the right hands, and the music never outstays its welcome. Once again, the
    composer’s signature bird calls are evident in the fourth section, evoking
    birdsong at Easter, while the Hindu influence is noticeable in the Trio for
    Trinity Sunday.
 
    The music puzzled contemporaries when it was published in 1952, and it can
    still seem intractable to listeners now, with Messiaen, whose music I
    mostly find demanding but comprehensible, as close as he ever came to the
    music of his student Boulez, whose works I find incomprehensible. Paul
    Shoemaker, in his
    
        review
    
    of Dame Gillian’s Priory recording of this work, appears to have found
    himself as puzzled by it as those listeners of 60 years ago. Having enjoyed
    and been enlightened by Tom Winpenny’s recording – 
	Winter 2019/2
	–
    I find this Eloquence recording, if anything, even more to the point. You
    may need to listen several times to get that point. Even if you don’t get
    it, you’ll be treating yourself to some fantastic sounds in the process.
 
    CD22
[77:25] is dedicated to    Méditations sur le mystère de la Sainte Trinité, another 1979
    recording from Washington. Here again, there’s a recommended recording from
    Tom Winpenny, this time made in Iceland, which went straight to the top of
    Dan Morgan’s list –
    
        review.  Without demurring from that judgement, I chose to revisit the Ericsson
    recording, downloaded with booklet from
    
        eclassical.com
    
    (BIS-4646, or complete set). Dan differentiates between Ericsson on the one
    hand (‘precision engineered’) and Winpenny and Weir (Priory) on the other
    (‘richness, variety and rolling splendour’), but I could happily live with
    any of these – and, certainly, with the Eloquence.
 
    The Council of Nicæa supposedly settled the nature of the Trinity, but that
    has not prevented puzzlement and disagreement on the subject. The Orthodox
    East and the Catholic and Protestant West are even at odds on such a
    fundamental matter as whether the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father alone or
from the Father and Son, the filioque clause.  I’m far from sure that
    Messiaen’s music, with its many echoes of birdsong, helps explain the
    theology, but it does bring us some very impressive music in the process,
    and it receives as fine a performance as you are likely to hear.
 
    Wide-ranging as the coverage of this Eloquence set is, it doesn’t tell the
    whole story. I’ve already mentioned Gillian Weir’s Priory recordings,
    several of them of Bach, supplementing the all too little of his music that we have on
    the 22 CDs, and including all the Messiaen organ music available at the
    time.
 
    The booklet, mostly written by Gillian Weir herself, is comprehensive.
    Given the personal notes which she includes, this is an excellent read in
    its own right. I understand that it’s a regular complaint from performers
    that reviewers don’t read their notes; in this case, it was a delight to do
    so. Little anecdotes include the arrangement for Weir to be rushed by
    police car from St Mary’s Cathedral to receive the applause in the Usher
    Hall at the end of the Saint-Saëns ‘Organ’ Symphony on the last night of
    the Edinburgh Festival. There’s all too little of Saint-Saëns music in this
    set, but her 1990 recording of his symphony with the Ulster Orchestra and
    Yan-Pascal Tortelier is adequate compensation (Chandos CHAN8822, with
    Symphony No.2). I’m most surprised to see that we don’t appear to have
    reviewed it – I thought I had done so long ago. I did, however, recommend
    her recording of the Poulenc Organ Concerto, with Samuel Barber and Pierre
    Petit (Linn CKD178, now BKD178), in my
    
        September 2009 Roundup. The problems reported there with the Squeezebox – superseded technology
    now – were long ago resolved by using MusicBee as my main player of
    downloaded music.
 
    Even with a thick booklet, however, there’s more to be found about
    Messiaen, man and composer, on the
    
        Eloquence website
    
    and on Dame Gillian’s own site.
 
    I’ve already apologised for my tardiness in completing this review. Part of
    the problem is that I’ve enjoyed listening to these CDs too much to sit
    down at the computer keyboard. It’s certainly been far from onerous, and
    now I find that I have almost talked myself into reviewing all or some of
    the Demessieux set – and I’ve already set myself up to review the Decca
    11-CD set reissue of Chailly’s Stravinsky recordings.
	Meanwhile, having spent so many words on trying to describe this Gillian 
	Weir tribute, I've decided that words are inadequate; just go for it.
 
    Brian Wilson
 
    CD1
    [47:36]
 Nikolaus BRUHNS (1665-1697)
 Præludium
    in G
 Præludium
    in E minor 'Grosses’ 
 Chorale Fantasia on ‘Nun Komm der Heiden Heiland’ 
 Samuel SCHEIDT (1587-1654)
 Passamezzo, SWV107 (Variations 1-12)
 rec. Clare College, Cambridge, 1974. ADD.
 
    CD2
    [47:03)
 Jean-François DANDRIEU (1682-1738)
 Premier Livre de Pieces d’Orgue
    :
 Pièces en A
 Magnificat
 Pièces en G
 rec. Leonhardskirche, Basel; Great Organ of Saint-Maximin de Thionville,
    1973-74. ADD.
 
    CD3
    [47:38]
 Louis MARCHAND (1669-1732)
 Premier livre d’orgue
    : excerpts
 Troisième livre d’orgue
    : excerpt
 Quatrième livre d’orgue
 Cinquième livre d’orgue
 rec. Saint-Maximin de Thionville, 1974. ADD.
 
    CD4
    [48:35]
 Johann Sebastian BACH (1685-1750)
 Toccata, Adagio & Fugue in C, BWV564
 Fantasia in G, BWV572
 Trio Sonata No 1 in E-flat, BWV525
 Passacaglia in C minor, BWV582
 rec. Laurenskerk, Rotterdam, 1974. ADD
 
    CD5/CD6
    [45:41 + 81:07]
 François COUPERIN
    («le Grand») (1668-1733)
    
 Messe à l’usage des Paroisses
 Messe à l’usage des Couvents
 Louis-Nicolas CLÉRAMBAULT (1676-1749)
 Premier Livre d’Orgue
    : Suite du Premier Ton
 Premier Livre d’Orgue
    : Suite du Deuxième Ton
 rec. Prediger Kirche, Zürich, 1972; Leonhardskirche, Basel, 1973. ADD.
 
    CD7
    [61:12]
 François ROBERDAY (1624-1680)
 Fugues et Caprices pour orgue, Nos 1-12
 rec. Leonhardskirche, Basel, 1973. ADD.
 
    CD8
    [45:16]
 Charles CAMILLERI (1931-2009)
 Missa Mundi
 Rec. Royal Festival Hall, London, 1974. ADD.
 
    CD9: The Organ at Hexham Abbey
    [49:04]
 Charles-Marie WIDOR (1844-1937)
 Organ Symphony No 6 in G minor, Op 42/2: Allegro
 Louis VIERNE (1870-1937)
 Impromptu
 John BULL (1562-1628)
 Doctor Bull’s My Selfe
 Dr. Bull’s Juel
 Nicolas de GRIGNY (1672-1703)
 Récit de tierce en taille
 Henri MULET (1878-1967)
 Esquisse Byzantine
    : No 10 ‘Tu es petra et portae inferi non praevalebunt’ 
 Louis-Claude DAQUIN (1694-1772)
 Noël
    No 12 Suisse Grand jeu, et Duo
 Marcel DUPRÉ (1886-1971)
 La Fileuse
 Jean LANGLAIS (1907-1991)
 Dialogue sur les Mixtures
 Thomas TOMKINS (1572-1656)
 Worster brawls
 Jan Pieterszoon SWEELINCK (1562-1621)
 Mein junges Leben hat ein End
 Théodore DUBOIS (1837-1924)
 Toccata
 Rec. Hexham Abbey, 1975. ADD.
 
    CD10
    [43:45]
 Felix MENDELSSOHN (1809-1847)
 Hör mein Bitten, Op. posth.
 Veni Domine
    ‘Hear my prayer, O Lord’, Op 39/1
 Ave Maria, Op.23/2
 Zoltán KODÁLY (1882-1967)
 Geneva Psalm 114
 Laudes Organi
 rec. Kingsway Hall, London, 1972; Guildford Cathedral, 1972. ADD.
 
    CD11
    [72:00]
 Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
 Le Banquet Céleste
 Les Corps Glorieux
 Apparition de l’Église éternelle
 rec. Royal Festival Hall, London, 1966. ADD.
 
    CD12 Virtuoso French Organ Music
    [73:35]
 Olivier MESSIAEN 
 Verset pour la fête de la Dédicace
 L’Ascension
    (organ version)
 Marcel DUPRÉ (1886-1971)
 Variations sur un Noël, Op 20
 Camille SAINT-SAËNS (1835-1921)
 Fantaisie No 1 for organ in E-flat
 Louis VIERNE (1870-1937)
 Pièces de fantaisie
    (excerpts)
 Jacques CHARPENTIER (1933-2017)
 L´Ange à la trompette
 Marcel DUPRÉ 
 Deuxième Symphonie, Op 26
 rec. Royal Festival Hall, London, 1966; Royal Northern College of Music,
    Manchester, 1976 (originally Prelude Records PRS2507). ADD
 
    CD13 
    [61:17]
 Louis VIERNE (1870-1937)
 Pièces de fantaisie, 4th suite, Op 55/4, Naïades 
 Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
 Combat de la Mort et de la Vie (
    from Les Corps Glorieux)
 William MATHIAS (1934-19920
 Variations on a Hymn Tune, Op 20
 Dietrich BUXTEHUDE (16370-1707)
 Toccata in F, BuxWV156
 Girolamo FRESCOBALDI (1583-1643) 
 Aria detto Balletto
 Luigi ROSSI (1597-1653)
 Toccata Settima
 Arthur HONEGGER (1892-1955)
 Fugue
 Anton HEILLER (1923-1979)
 In Festo Corporis Christi
 BBC live recordings, rec. St Alban’s Abbey 1963; Clare College Cambridge,
    1996. ADD/DDD.
 
    CD14: The Organ Dances
    [56:24]
 Antonio VALENTE (1520-1580)
 Lo Ballo dell’Intorcia 
 César FRANCK (1822-1890)
 Choral No 2 in B minor, M.39
 Anton HEILLER (1923-1979)
 Tanz-Toccata
 Petr EBEN (1929-2007)
 Walpurgisnacht
    (from Faust)
 Jehan ALAIN (1911-1940)
 Trois Danses, AWV119
 Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
 Transports de joie d’une âme
 Organ of the Royal Albert Hall, London
 BBC live recordings, rec.1987. DDD.
 
    CD15 
    [59:32]
 Marcel DUPRÉ (1886-1971)
 Le Monde dans l’attente du sauveur
 Jehan ALAIN (1911-1940)
 Intermezzo
 Charles TOURNEMIRE (1870-1939)
 Choral-Improvisation sur le ‘Victimæ paschali’
 Jehan ALAIN 
 Deux Fantaisies
 Jean LANGLAIS (1907-1991)
 Incantation pour un Jour Saint
 Maurce DURUFLÉ (1902-1986)
 Prelude sur l’Introit de l’Epiphanie
    Op 13
 Léon BOËLLMANN (1862-1897)
 Versets sur
    ‘Adoro Te’
 Jeanne DEMESSIEUX (1921-1968)
 12 Choral-Preludes on Gregorian-Chant themes, Op 8/1 and 2
 Te Deum, Op 11
 Organs of the Birmingham Oratory, Royal Festival Hall, London and Aarhus
    Domkirke, Denmark
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1990 and 1998. DDD.
 
    CD16 
    [79:59]
 César FRANCK (1822-1890)
 Choral No 1 in E, M.38
 Cantabile, M36
 Grande Pièce Symphonique
    in F-sharp minor, Op 17
 Fantasy in A
 Prélude, Fugue et Variation
    Op 18
 Pièce héroïque, 
    M37
 Organ of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1984. DDD.
 
    CD17
    [79:03]
 César FRANCK (1822-1890)
 Choral No 2 in B minor, M.39
 Pastorale, Op 19
 Prière, Op 20
 Choral No 3 in A minor, M.40
 Fantaisie
    in C, Op 16
 Andantino
    in G minor
 Final
    in B-flat, Op 21
 Organ of Saint-Sernin, Toulouse.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1984. DDD.
 
    CD18 
    [53:52]
 Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
 Le Banquet Céleste
 Apparition de l’Eglise Eternelle
 L’Ascension 
    (organ version)
 Organ of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1979. ADD.
 
    CD19 
    [60:53]
 Olivier MESSIAEN 
 La Nativité du Seigneur
 Organ of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1979. ADD.
 
    CD20 [51:59]
 Olivier MESSIAEN 
 Les Corps Glorieux
 Organ of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1979. ADD.
 
    CD21 
    [79:58]
 Olivier MESSIAEN 
 Messe de la Pentecote
 Verset pour la fête de la Dédicace
 Livre d’Orgue
 Organ of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1979. ADD.
 
    CD22 
    [77:25]
 Olivier MESSIAEN 
 Méditations sur le mystère de la Sainte Trinité
 Organ of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception, Washington, DC.
 BBC live recordings, rec. 1979. ADD.