编号: Naxos 8.557924

魔术号角团购价: ¥33.00 (市场价: ¥35.00 节省: ¥2)
DURUFLE: Organ Music (Complete)
Maurice Duruflé was a highly self-critical composer whose musical language can be viewed as a synthesis of the impressionist tradition of Debussy and Ravel and the modal, Gregorian-inspired style of Fauré. Although his best-known work is the Requiem, his distinctive and powerful organ music continues the French tradition of organ-playing and composition. The Prélude sur l'Introït de l'Épiphanie demonstrates Duruflé's mastery in capturing the shape and colour of plainsong. With its perfect architectural balance and proportions, the Prélude et Fugue sur le nom d'Alain written in memory of Duruflé's colleague Jehan Alain, killed in action in 1940, has become one of Duruflé 's most popular organ works.
more....
Maurice Durufle
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Fugue sur le theme du Carillon des Heures de la Cathedrale de Soissons, Op. 12 00:03:30
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Prelude 00:08:02
- Adagio 00:06:16
- Choral varie 00:05:51
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Prelude sur l'introit de l'Epiphanie, Op. 13 00:02:15
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Scherzo, Op. 2 00:06:01
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Prelude 00:06:38
- Fugue 00:05:57
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Meditation, Op. posth. 00:03:43
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- Chant Donne - Hommage a Jean Gallon 00:01:54
| Fairs, Henry, organ |
- I. Prelude 00:08:08
- II. Sicilienne 00:06:57
- III. Toccata 00:08:08
播放时间: 01:13:20
相关内容
- HEAR MY PRAYER - Hymns and Anthems
- LEPAGE-DEAN, Oliver: Evening Hymn (An) - Music for Solo Treble
- Requiem: Classical Music for Reflection and Meditation
- AGNUS DEI - Classical Music for Reflection and Meditation
- DURUFLE: Messe Cum Jubilo / Organ Suite, Op. 5
- DURUFLE: Requiem / 4 Motets / Prelude and Fugue

评论
媒体评论
Fairs is Organist at the University of Birmingham and tutor at the Birmingham Conservatory. His teachers include Thierry Mechler, David Sanger, and Susan Landale. The program was recorded on the 3-72 Cavaille-Coll/ Debierre (1885/1938) in Notre-Dame d'Auteuil, where Frederic Blanc is organist. The instrument is gorgeous, likened by some to the one in St Antoine-des-Quinze Vingts or La Trinite. The performer is new to me, and I am delighted to make his acquaintance.
An analysis of each piece is needless here, for Fairs offers interpretations as satisfying and aesthetically appropriate as any other available. His program includes two short pieces often missing in other recordings: 'Hommage a Jean Gallon' and the 'Meditation' (Opus posth.). The former is found in the 64 Devoirs d'harmonie, a collection of tribute pieces by former pupils of Gallon, while the Meditation was done in 1964 and used later in the composer's Cum Jubilo Mass. Neither is sufficiently expansive to compete for the listener's attention, though they are nicely crafted and quite gentle.
Fairs emerges as a top-notch performer. His registrations, tempos, and sensitivity to subtle nuances in phrasing and articulation are superb. I would place this recording with Leonardy at St Eustache (July / Aug 2000), Patrick (Sept/Oct 1997), Wilson (Delos 3047), and Pincemaille (Motette 12541). I hope Fairs will record more for Naxos. This is an outstanding release.
--Review by Metz, American Record Guide, September/ October 2007
There is a handful of recordings of Duruflé's complete organ works. The market is not inundated with them for the simple reason that much of the music is so fiendishly difficult. It takes a brave person to tackle these works, let alone record them. Henry Fairs has taken on the challenge and succeeded superbly, even though his playing doesn't quite have the same flair and excitement as the John Scott/St. Paul's recording.
Without an enormous acoustic to contend with, the clarity of Duruflé's complex, fastidious writing can be heard clearly in this recording thanks to the recording engineer's microphone placement. It's also testimony to Fairs' articulate playing; this repertoire requires buckets of technique. Organs in echo-plagued buildings are not the easiest instruments to record well. Here the sound of this magnificent Cavaillé-Coll organ has been captured beautifully. That said, the ambience of a larger building in other recordings gives the listener the greater sense of gravitas that this music commands.
The order in which to place these works on a recording poses a curious dilemma. There is really no obvious sequence apart from doing them chronologically. I think the order here works well. It's a pity though that the mutation stop used at the opening of the first track is so hideously out of tune; it detracts from the enjoyment like a poke in the eye.
In some of the quieter sections and in pauses, the action of the organ and stop-changes are very audible, as if the janitor has stumbled in to do a spot of cleaning; nothing terribly untoward though. On the contrary, it adds an element of reality, giving the performance a more spontaneous, 'live' feel which I applaud.
The organ itself is a splendid instrument for such a recording. The lovely warm sonorities of the Cavaillé-Coll craftsmanship are showcased throughout, but really shine in the Prélude of Prélude, Adagio et Choral varié sur le theme du 'Veni Creator', Op. 4 demonstrating the beautifully voiced flutes and soft reed stops, not to mention the luscious strings. The rousing finish to the variations is extremely exciting.
What a fantastic piece the Scherzo is. Duruflé's softer pieces really can be as gripping to the listener as the big crash-bang-wallop showpieces, particularly when played with the sort of effervescence and verve Fairs shows here. Alternating between slow interludes and rocket-speed acrobatic passages this little gem is a highlight of the disc.
Duruflé was very fond of using triplet figures in order to create a sense of forward momentum - two of the Préludes and the Sicilienne for example - and this direction is achieved to perfection in the Prélude sur le nom d'Alain; such tremendous drive and excitement which for a movement that doesn't exceed mezzo-piano indicates a genuine sense of energy. The fugue that follows is a little on the leisurely side and doesn't quite have the same drive as the Prélude. Indeed a number of the tracks are significantly slower than other recordings but not damagingly so.
The delightful Méditation - omitted from some recordings because it was unknown until its publication in 2002 - and the Hommage à Jean Gallon - curiously missing from other 'complete organ works recordings - incorporate deliciously impossible twists of harmony that only Duruflé could get away with. Thus follows the mighty Suite, Op. 5 which in my opinion, is the daddy of the lot. Sandwiched between the brooding Prélude - the musical equivalent of a rumbling volcano waiting to erupt - and erupt it does once the Toccata gets cracking - and the fiery Toccata, the Sicilienne ambles rather than lilts along. Some of the solo tunes are unfortunately slightly obscured by the accompaniment. It is, however, played with extreme dexterity. Precise and accurate playing with such zest and vitality and a perfectly paced accelerando ensures that the Toccata is the icing on the cake of an excellent recording.
--Review by Max Kenworthy, Musicweb International, July 2007
"It is always difficult to decide the relative merit of a new recording added to a long list of exemplars. Paraphrasing my late father, no-one deliberately makes a bad recording of the 'Complete Organ Works of Maurice Duruflé.' Often decisions as to what version is 'best' come down to subjective opinions or even irrational preference. The present recording has, to my ear, four advantages - one the clarity of the sound is superb, secondly the playing is totally competent and convincing, thirdly the organ used is a Caviallé-Coll and lastly it is a well-presented CD at only £5.99. But the bottom line is that enthusiasts of Duruflé's music will insist on having at least half a dozen different recordings. The present disc would make an ideal first instalment to that collection!"
--Review by John France, Musicweb International, June 2007