Dancing Pipes
Canadian draws sweet sounds from Swedish organ
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Pietro Yon, Anton Heiller, Per Gunnar Petersson, Johannes Brahms, Noel Rawsthorne, Nils Lindberg, Johann Sebastian Bach
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Nosag
Magazine Review Date: 1/2012
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 61
Mastering:
Stereo
DDD
Catalogue Number: CD199
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(6) Concertos, Movement: No. 1 in G, BWV592 (after Concerto by Johann Ernst |
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer Mary Chard Petersson, Organ |
Humoresque, '(L')organo primitivo' |
Pietro Yon, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Pietro Yon, Composer |
(11) Chorale Preludes, Movement: Herzlich tut mich verlangen |
Johannes Brahms, Composer
Johannes Brahms, Composer Mary Chard Petersson, Organ |
Dancing Pipes |
Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer |
Visa från Älvdalen |
Nils Lindberg, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Nils Lindberg, Composer |
Dance Suite |
Noel Rawsthorne, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Noel Rawsthorne, Composer |
Organ Mass |
Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer |
Tanz-Toccata |
Anton Heiller, Composer
Anton Heiller, Composer Mary Chard Petersson, Organ |
Tre canti sacri |
Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer
Mary Chard Petersson, Organ Per Gunnar Petersson, Composer |
Author: Marc Rochester
The 2009 Ruffatti organ in Sweden’s Älmhult Church is visually and aurally a fine instrument which speaks with great clarity and brightness, although never that piercing brightness which distinguishes so many new organs, and has plenty of warmth, especially in the pedals, which can sound a little woody but never muddy. In short, it seems just about the ideal church organ.
And, if this playing is anything to go by, Mary Chard Petersson – Canadian born and Viennese trained – is the ideal church organist. She’s not the organist at Älmhult – that position is held by her Swedish husband, Per Gunnar – but she clearly knows her way around this instrument and displays it to its very best advantage in a programme which captivatingly spans the gamut from Bach’s bubbly Concerto transcription to Lindberg’s endearing folk melody, and from Brahms at his most intimate to Heiller at his most extrovert.
The surprise? Mr Petersson’s work involves the church choir, who add a nice touch of sanctity to the whole disc. Highly enjoyable.
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