,,Weihnacht mit Bach" - so hat Jacobi-Organist Gerhard Löffler sein MDG-Debüt betitelt. ,,Und mit Arp Schnitger" mag man hinzufügen, denn Schnitgers meisterhaftes Orgelwerk in der Hamburger St. Jacobi-Kirche ist nicht nur das größte Instrument des norddeutschen Orgelbauers, dessen Todestag sich dieses Jahr zum 300. Male jährt; mit dem wohl bedeutendsten original erhaltenen Pfeifenbestand des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts prägt es ganz erheblich Musik und Interpretation. Im prachtvollen dreidimensionalen Klanggewand auf Super Audio CD eingefangen, ist Festtagsstimmung rund ums Jahr garantiert.
Originally released between 1975 to 1991 on the now-defunct Calliope label, Andre Isoir's recordings of the complete organ works of Bach have been unanimously acclaimed by both the press and the public. La Dolce Volta now offers these landmark recordings (unavailable since 2008), completely remastered, in a deluxe, specially priced boxed set. The set includes a 152 page, full color booklet rich with photos and information about the music and the recordings.
Here is Johann Sebastian Bach in transfigured light: with organ chorale preludes, vocal cantata movements and orchestral sinfonias – 24 pieces in all – transcribed for trio and solo piano by Fred Thomas, and threaded into a compelling new sequence by Manfred Eicher. On Three Or One, Bach’s idiom is respectfully explored by three innovative players, a process Thomas describes as “quietly joyful,” and the trio pieces, primarily drawn from Bach’s Orgelbüchlein, acquire a fresh character in the hands of Kazakh violinist Aisha Orazbayeva and British cellist Lucy Railton, musicians more often associated with contemporary composition’s cutting edge.
To celebrate the conclusion of CPO’s extensive survey of Bach’s complete organ works, all the volumes are presented here in a 22 CD box set complete with 168 page booklet.
Bodies of the church of St. Wawrzyńca w Wołowie (1715-1717), come from a workshop, one of the greatest Silesian builders Adam Horatio Casparini. Contemporary disposition, slightly modified in the nineteenth century, does not differ much from the Casparini concept. The instrument still meets the requirements of very orthodox baroque literature, including the works of Johann Sebastian Bach.