Reviews for
GMCD 7180 - Marcel Dupré Vol. 7
COMPLETE ORGAN WORKS
The Amereican Organist - June 2001
Marcel Dupré: The Complete Organ Works, Vol. 7
Jeremy Filsell plays at St. Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, Fla. (1979 Moller,
III/60).
Guild CD 7180 (DDD); 56:38 - Produced by Adrian Peacock
(Variations sur Il est né le divin enfant, WoO; Élévation, op. 2; Scherzo,
op. 16; Élévations, op. 32; Seven Pieces, op. 27.)
Dupré composed two sets of "Variations on a Noël," this second one
in 1948 for his daughter Marguerite to play during her first Christmas as volunteer
village organist (she was a superb pianist by training). Graham Steed, friend and pupil,
helped achieve a posthumous publication for the score in 1996 here in The American
Organist. These four pages are not at all easy, but at least the pedal part is relatively
uncomplicated. Everyone must begin somewhere, and Duprés Op. 2, his first published
organ score, is so unassuming as to give no hint at all of the supremely assured young
virtuoso who would finally burst on the scene with his Op. 7 Preludes and Fugues in
1912. (Theyre in Filsells Vol. 1, Guild CD-7156.) But the ferocity of the
subsequent Op. 16, which is as far away from anything light-hearted and jovial as you can
imagine, amply predicts a brilliant future for a composer-performer who by then was in his
mid-30s and deserving serious attention. His future was so bright, and so demanding, that
during the 1930s, when he was in his 40s, Duprés time available for organ
composition was limited, and the three Élévations may have been created as little
island of self-preserving calm in an otherwise harried period. They are a balm of soothing
simplicity. For all his Frenchness, Dupré prospered during his many international tours
and responded to friendly foreign environments and individuals with memorable performances
and, eventually, new compositions. Each of the Seven Pieces is dedicated to a
noteworthy personality, such as the organbuildes Henry Willis and Ernest Skinner, West
Point Cadet Chapel organist and host Frederick Mayer, Duprés American agent
Alexander Russell, and others. Since the two most difficult pieces in this Op. 37 are
occasionally played and recorded. Ive never understood why more recitalists have not
worked up the entire set. Yes, none of these movements is easy, but the chunky charm of
the Canon, the bucolic fragrance of the Pastorale, and the haunted
melancholy of Souvenir (dedicated to the memory of Canadian, virtuoso Lynnwood
Farnam, one of Duprés few peers) deserve more exposure than they have been given.
Well, you can hear them all in this CD production. Several more Filsell albums await
issue, as two other "complete editions" of Duprés music on CD find their
way to the marketplace, too. Do we need them all? Why not? Comparisons create clarity,
Jeremy Filsells work is a marvel, a wonderful encouragement to our fuller
appreciation of the Dupré legacy, and a treasure for any to whom the organs art is
a perpetually fascination adventure. To borrow a line from Paul Claudel (from another,
related context): "How revealed (and revered) is this man Dupré, and how
profound!"
Organists Review - May 2001 See GMCD 7173
American Record Guide September/October Page 132
DUPRE- Noel Variations; Elevations, opp 2+32; Scherzo; 7 Pieces
Jremy Filsell, organ--Guild 7180 (Qualton) 57 min
This is Volume 7 in Filsell's series of Dupr6's compiete organ works. In keeping with
earlier installments the program includes both familiar fare and some seldom-heard
compositions. The approach makes good sense-listeners will find ample variety in each
volume. A good ease in point is the Variations. Dupr6 wrote it for his daughter
Marguerite, who took an organist's job in a small parish with a very poor instrument. Pere
Marcel still owned a two- manual Cavai116-Coll tracker and had it restored and sent to her
church. The Variations were written with limited organ re- sources in mind-four brief
variations on a well known tune in the style of Daquin. It was never intended for
publication, but it was published in The American Organist of December 1996. The
gentle and ultra-brief variations conclude with a rousing finale.
Over 20 years separate the Opus 2 Elevation and the three Elevations that
make up Opus 32 (1935). The simple musings that characterise Opus 2 become somewhat more
pensive in Opus 32. All three of the latter are appropriately subdued, but the harmonic
language is more searching and shifting. These are lovely miniatures not often heard.
Seven Pieces from 1931 is known primarily for the 'Carilion' and the 'Final', but
there is considerable melodic interest in 'Souvenir' and the tone colors in 'Pastorale'.
Each of the seven pieces is dedicated to a friend of Du- prd's, The Moller instrument
heard here has plenty of variety available, and the solo stops are particularly effective
in these quieter pieces. Filsell delivers a commanding interpretation of the' Carlion', a
knuckle-buster with a non-stop pattern of descending fourths in the manuals. He captures
the sense of swinging bells admirably and offers goad competition for Delcamp (Naxos
554026).
A superb performance of the rarely heard Scherzo is given here, a kind of perpetual
motion exercise of devilish difficulty. Chromaticism and roller-coaster runs abound, but
the clarity is maintained. Filsell continues to impress with each volume in this series.
The organ sounds wonderful here.
METZ
Cathedral Music
MARCEL DUPRÉ ORGAN WORKS
Jeremy Filsell plays the organ of st Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, Florida, USA.
Volume 3: Prélude et Fugue en Mi mineur; Prélude et Fugue en La bémol
majeur; Prélude et Fugue en Do Majeur; Vingt-Quatre Inventions; Trois Hymnes.
Volume 4: Vitrail; Souvenir; Le Tombeau de Titelouze; Symphonie Passion.
Volume 5: Paraphrase sur le Te deum Op 43; Angélus Op34; Épithalame Wo0;
Announciation Op 56; Suite Op 39; Offrande á la vierge Op 40; Trois Esquisses Op 41.
Volume 6: Eight Gregorian Preludes Op 45 Méditation Wo0; Six Antiennes pour le Temps
Noël; Deux Chorales; Deuxième Symphonie.
Volume 7: Variations suril est né le divin enfant; Élévation Op2;
Scherzo; Élévations Op 32; Sept Pièces.
GUILD Vol 3 GMCD 7159 TT 62:39 /
Vol 4 GMCD 7162 TT 66:22 / Vol 5 GMCD 7164 TT 65:17 / Vol 6 GMCD 7173 TT 51:05 / Vol 7 GMCD 7180 TT 56:38
With the release of these volumes we are now almost halfway through Jeremy
Filsells survey of Dupres organ works, and what an outstanding series this is
turning out to be. Filsells technical ability is second to none, as he is able to
tackle the most complex musical figurations with what appears to be relative ease. The
musicality that shines through in these recordings provides a fresh approach, bringing new
life to some of Dupres best known works. His use of rubato can seem a little
excessive at times, as what on a first hearing sounds exciting and thrilling may jar on
the listener as something approaching a performance mannerism. However, this is a small
detail in comparison to the wealth of superb performances on these discs. The highlights
are to numerous to mention, and each volume has a careful balance of the known and less
well known. The recordings are wonderfully clear, and every single note can be heard.The
rhythmic vitality is never lost, and the tempi are pushed to the limits without being too
fast as to lose any detail. I cannot recommend these recordings highly enough. Quite
superb!
Andrew Bryden Andrew is assistant cathedral organist at Ripon Cathedral and head
of music at the Cathedral Choir School
Gramophone May 2000
Complete Organ Works, Volume 7
Elévation, Op2, Scherzo, Op16, Sept pièces Op 27, Trois élévations, Op 32,
Variations sur 'Il est né le divin enfant'
Jeremy Filsell org
Guild f GMCD 7180 (57 minutes: DDD)
Written in 1929 for his first American recital in three years, Dupré;s Second Symphony
is, in the words of David Gammie's eminently readable notes, the work of 'a composer at
the height of his powers, secure in his inspiration and rejoicing in his own virtuosity'.
Since dupré was arguably the greatest organ virtuoso of the 20th century
the technical demands of the work are, to put it mildly, daunting, but after decades of
neglect by recording artists, the Symphonie is at last become well represented in
the catalogue. I described John Scott's performance of it as 'stunning', and for me his is
still a revelatory performance, reaching into the heart of a work in which, again to quote
Gammie 'there are dark forces at work'. Wayne Marshall took virtuosity to new heights with
his breathtaking account; one which for sheer technical bravado and almost superhuman
energy is unlikely ever to be matched. The sound of the organ in St. Boniface, Sarasota
(on which the complete Dupré cycle has been recorded), is less impressive than that of
St. Paul's Cathedral (for Scott) and Filsell's playing lacks the impact or thrill of
Marshall's, but this latest addition to the works's discography is undoubtedly a force to
be reckoned with.
Filsell has lived, slept and breathed Dupré in the months (years?) leading up th this
astonishing recording project (12 discs recorded in the space of just two weeks) and plays
with unique understanding and insight. Yes, he's a brilliant virtuoso for whom the
'Everest-like' technical demands of Dupré's music hold no terrors, but he is also a
sensitive and perceptive musician who, in true Dupré fashion, sees virtuosity merely as a
vehicle for committed musical interpretation. For that reason Filsell non only impresses
in the great show-piece toccatas (such as the dazzling 'Final' to the Sept pièces)
but gives equally compelling and persuasive performances of simple little trifles.
Volume 6 begins with eight simple Gregorian Preludes while Volume 7 kicks off
with a nice little set of Daquin-esque variations on Il est né le divin enfant, written
for Dupré's daughter to play on the small church organ of the village where she lived.
Irrespective of the music's technical demands, Filsell lavishes painstaking care and
attention on everything; consequently, works which might seem worlds apart technically sit
happily and congruously side by side.
Although there is not apparent logic in the selection fo music for each disc (these two
volumes, for example, rance in time from Dupré's first published work - a lovely little Elévation
- to the short Méditation which he composed in his 80th year, and from
the brief Chiorales - each lasting barely 90 seconds - to the 20 minute Symphonie),
the range of moods and styles on each makes for compulsive listening. And enhanced by
Filsell's astonishing interpretative and technical skills, not to mention Guild's
gloriously full-bodied recording, this disc makes one of the most impressive organ
recording ventures in recent years.
Marc Rochester
International Record Review April 2000
Dupré
Complete Organ Works, Volume 6. Eight Gregorian Preludes, Op. 45. Méditation. Six
Antiennes pour le temps de Noël, Op. 48. Deux Chorales, Op. 59. Symphony No. 2 in C sharp
minor, Op. 26.
Jeremy Filsell (organ).
Guild GMCD 7173 (full price, 51 minutes). Recorded
on the organ of St Boniface Episcopal Church, Sarasota, Florida. Producer Adrian
Peacock. Engineer Ken Blair. Date September 1998.
Dupré
Complete Organ Works, Volume 7. Six Variations sur Il est né le divin enfant'.
Elévation, Op. 2. Scherzo, Op. 16. Trois Elévations, Op. 32. Sept Pièces, Op. 27.
Jeremy Filsell (organ).
Guild GMCD 7180 (full price, 57 minutes). Recorded on the organ of St Boniface Episcopal
Church, Sarasota, Florida. Producer Adrian Peacock. Engineer Ken Blair. Date
September 1998.
Comparisons:
Symphony No. 2:
Scott (Hyperion) CDA67047 Trotter (Decca) 452 478-2
Jeremy Filsell has now reached the mid-point of his heroic single-handed traversal of
Dupré's complete organ music for Guild (an ongoing rival series on Naxos is shared
between half-a-dozen players). Filsell - one of those rare keyboard players with equal
facility on both organ and piano - has been a devotee of Dupré's music since his school-
days, and has every musical gift needed to do justice to the composer's varied demands. He
is alive to each nuance of tone and texture, although in the shorter pieces his basic
pulse can be rather free, sometimes unsettlingly so. His articulation is very clear, even
spiky (the Marche from Sept Piéces for example), and thus rather more 'modern'
than Dupré's own recordings from the 1920s and 1930s: Dupré gave us Romantic Bach, but
Filsell counters with Baroque Dupré! Both discs were recorded on the Möller organ of St
Boniface Episcopal Church at Sarasota in Florida. This may seem an unusual choice of
instrument when there is such a wealth of suitable authentic French organs to hand just
across the Channel, but this 62-stop organ has a specification very much in the French
manner and boasts an enormous pedal department. It is well equipped and powerful in tone
but not especially characterful, an instrument to be impressed by rather than warm to. The
church acoustic is clear and not very resonant, and some listeners may regret the lack of
cathedral-like mystery in this repertoire.
The principal work on Volume 6 is the Second Symphony, the remainder of the disc
consisting of short works or sets of short works averaging a couple of minutes in length.
Dupré was a legendary improviser, and many of the slighter works here sound much like
notated improvisations. The Eight Gregorian Preludes, Op. 45, that open the recital are
appealing and deliberately accessible miniatures on Gregorian themes, attractively
registered by Filsell using the St Boniface reeds, tremulant and chimes. The Six
Antiennes, Op. 48, are more modern in style, although they, too, are plainchant-based;
while the chorales 'Freu dich sehr, O meine Seele' and 'Liebster lmmanuel' from Op. 59
sound almost like satires on Bach, emphasized by Filsell's cheeky registration. The Second
Symphony is on a completely different scale, a dark-toned work with a wild, improvisatory
feel to it. The central Intermezzo, a theme and variations, includes some extraordinary
textures, while the concluding Toccata in C sharp is like a demonic march à la
Prokofiev. Filsell handles the technical and musical demands with aplomb - this is a
performance that demands to be heard. The Second Symphony has fared well on disc in recent
years, and the recordings by Thomas Trotter and John Scott, too, are superb.
The seventh disc has slightly less of a claim on the collector's purse, including as it
does only shorter compositions. The Sept Pièces of 1930 are an extended set of
concert works dedicated to Dupré's friends, including the organ builders Henry Willis and
Ernest Skinner, the organist Lynnwood Farnham and the Bach scholar Albert Reimenschneider
(the tumultuous Final dedicated to the latter includes the BACH motif worked into the
texture). The Canon - at the seventh - and the Carillon from this set are also impressive.
Of the other works on Volume 7, the most important is the toccata-like Scherzo, a
semiquaver moto perpetuo demonstrating Filsell's impressive prestidigitation;
Dupré wrote this at the time he was deputizing at Notre Dame for the ailing Vierne.
Ken Blair's recording is absolutely first- rate, capturing all the range, power and
colour of this fine organ, even if distracting stop clunks in several of the works might
have been edited out. David Gammie's booklet notes are detailed and informative, a model
of their kind. This series, a landmark in the recorded organ literature, is scheduled to
stretch to 12 discs, but at only 51 and 57 minutes in length, respectively, these two
really are unacceptably short; surely Guild didn't need to spread its wares so thinly.
Francis Knights
Page revised 01.08.2001
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