ORGAN HISTORY–Eric Satie & French Rarities of the 20th Century

Jed Distler

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

The present installment of Arturo Sacchetti’s encyclopedic Organ History survey for Arts Music drops anchor in late-19th/early-20th-century France. It can be argued that the five instrumental sections from Satie’s Mass for the Poor that open this recital lose poignancy when shorn of their surrounding vocal movements, although the organ is a perfect instrument for the composer’s quirky, instantly identifiable harmonic language. By contrast, D’Indy’s Les Vêpres du Commun des Saints, Roussel’s Prélude et Fughetta, and Honegger’s Deux Pièces pour Orgue make an arid, academic impression. After Wayne Marshall’s pulverizing speed through the Pastorale by Roger-Ducasse (Virgin Classics), Sacchetti’s relatively conservative virtuosity proves less engaging. However, his incisive hand/foot coordination enliven Tournemire’s Improvisation on “Te Deum” and Langlais’ Hymne d’Actions de grâces “Te Deum”, although the latter yields to Andrew Herrick’s more vivid and better engineered traversal on Hyperion. Organists looking for an effective, unhackneyed encore should consider Ibert’s Musette or Milhaud’s Pastorale. Sacchetti plays both of them superbly and sensitively. If you own this series’ first 13 volumes, naturally you’ll not want to miss this one.


Recording Details:

Album Title: ORGAN HISTORY--Eric Satie & French Rarities of the 20th Century
Reference Recording: None for this collection

Various works by Satie, D'Indy, Honegger, Ibert, Milhaud, Roussel, Tournemire, others -

    Soloists: Arturo Sacchetti (organ)

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