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Catalogue | Organ

Pathos & Freude - Organ Works by J.S. Bach
audite 20.028|Feb. 2009
EUR19.99 CD

Pathos & Freude - Organ Works by J.S. Bach

This CD presents a selection of important works from different genres by J S Bach. Martin U. Sander reveals an impressive understanding of how to bring the baroque organ to life. The verve and virtuosity of Vivaldi’s orchestral works are thus equally noticeable in Bach’s organ arrangements. In... more...

Martin Sander

Johann Sebastian Bach

"Dies gelingt vollauf, stehen ihm doch eine verblüffende Technik und Musikalität sowie mit der Wagner-Orgel ein gewaltiges Instrument zur Verfügung. Eine hervorragende Produktion." (Alte Musik Aktuell) more...

Pathos & Freude - Organ Works by J.S. Bach

 

This CD presents a selection of important works from different genres by J S Bach. Martin U. Sander reveals an impressive understanding of how to bring the baroque organ to life. The verve and virtuosity of Vivaldi’s orchestral works are thus equally noticeable in Bach’s organ arrangements. In the second movement of the trio sonata, Sander masters the imaginative ornamentations in the chamber music style of the time which other interpreters often avoid due to their immense complexity. In the Prelude – one of Bach’s most remarkable and magnificent pieces – he uses the glorious and yet transparent full texture of the Wagner Organ with celebratory, vigorous joy.

The Wagner Organ dates back to the late baroque era and is housed in the Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim (Norway). The cathedral also accommodates the tombs of the first Christian Viking kings and continues to serve as the coronation church of Norwegian royalty. The organ was delivered to Trondheim around 1740 by the organ builder Joachim Wagner. Having been evacuated shortly before the Second World War and stored for many years in the cellar of the cathedral, the organ was reassembled and fully restored only a few years ago. Whilst most other instruments which were made by Wagner – who knew the Bach family well and was known as the “Silbermann of the Mark Brandenburg” – were modified insensitively or destroyed by war, this, one of his most important works is now housed, in outstanding condition, in the Norwegian “national treasure” of the Nidaros Cathedral and allows us to hear Bach’s music as he might have heard it himself.

Martin U. Sander often appears as a soloist in concerts and is also Professor of organ in Heidelberg and Basel. He regularly gives masterclasses at home and abroad and adjudicates at international competitions. Winning prestigious awards at national and international organ competitions played an important part in paving his way as a concert artist. Martin U. Sander has performed with leading orchestras and at major music festivals both at home and abroad.

  • Fono Forum | Herbert Glossner | January 1, 1999

    Auszeichnung Bach erster Klasse
    Auch wenn der Titel „Pathos und Freude“ auf den ersten Blick allzu populär wirkt – die Ausführungen über die barocke Affektenlehre im Beiheft...

  • Katolsk Tidning | Kaj Engelhart | April 9, 2009

    Den fantastiska stilen på orgel
    "Stylus phantasticus" – den fantastiska stilen – var en nyhet som kom som en befrielse för 1600-talets kompositörer, inre minst av orgelmusik....

  • Magazine de l'Orgue | Jean Ferrard | January 2, 1999

    A la première écoute de ce CD, j’ai eu le petit frisson qui augure l’éventualité d’un coup de cœur: une Passacaille bien musclée, menée...

  • Newsletter of the American Bach Society | Teri Noel Towe | January 3, 2003

    The 1740 – 1741 two manual and pedal organ in the Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, Norway, contains more original pipework by the Berlin based...

Pathos & Freude - Organ Works by J.S. Bach (audite 20.028)

article number: 20.028
EAN barcode: 4022143200280
price group: BCA
release date: 20. February 2009
total time: 64 min.

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