ELGAR Symphonies 1 & 2 (transc Briggs)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Edward Elgar
Genre:
Instrumental
Label: Acclaim Productions
Magazine Review Date: 03/2014
Media Format: Cassette
Media Runtime: 120
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: APCD4016

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Symphony No. 1 |
Edward Elgar, Composer
David Briggs, Organ Edward Elgar, Composer |
Symphony No. 2 |
Edward Elgar, Composer
David Briggs, Organ Edward Elgar, Composer |
Author: Marc Rochester
David Briggs, whose mastery of the Francophone improvisation is such that there are those who cannot imagine a Briggs performance without one taking centre stage, has also become one of the great transcribers of our time and, with an impressive track record of complete symphonies by Schubert, Tchaikovsky and Mahler, he proves the ideal person to turn Elgar’s distinctly orchestral textures into idiomatic organ music. We might even excuse him his bit of egotistical licence in a meandering booklet-note. Indeed, Briggs’s naive writing is the only weakness here, and even then there is something rather sweet about his irrelevant flights of fancy (many of which seem to be promoting Apple products). These include suggestions as to what ‘JS Bach would have had on his iPod’ (Vivaldi’s L’estro armonico, de Grigny’s Première Livre d’orgue and ‘certainly Buxtehude’s complete improvisations as a download’), as well as on his iPhone (‘the timetables for Air Leipzig’ and links to his website offering PDFs of his cantatas ‘for 100 euros each’ – much as Briggs offers PDFs of his own transcriptions on his own website). But it does include at least one useful insight into these transcriptions: ‘With Elgar, it’s not necessary to reduce too much or to leave too much out.’
Curiously, while they sound utterly convincing as organ music, after a while you forget that these are organ transcriptions and, whether by association or clever registration, the original orchestral colours flood the mind; how fascinating it would be to hear this before hearing Elgar’s originals. Denied that opportunity, I can only say that as a huge fan of Elgar, not least these two symphonies, I have few reservations in what Briggs has done to them here; they are impeccably faithful to both the detail and the essence of Elgar’s original scores, and the only lingering doubt hangs over the very opening of the Second Symphony, which seems rather too fussy.
Briggs’s playing is magnificent, an object lesson in virtuosity (there’s a simply breathtaking account of the First Symphony’s Scherzo), and the choice of the Worcester Cathedral organ adds a marvellous touch of both geographical authenticity and organistic opulence (only at 7'12" in the First Symphony’s finale does Briggs’s registration seem incongruous). All of this is captured in a stunning recording from Acclaim Productions. A triumphant achievement in every respect.
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