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Oh No!! How sad. The reaper has been excessively busy lately, whom the gods love eh! Another one of my youthful heroines gone! The Handel Organ concertos recorded in 1961 in Paris for Erato with Jean-Francois Paillard. Issued here on Argo/Decca. It was the only set for a time and I still love that sound. I had all the 4 LPs as a student and treasured them. She was a marvellous exponent of her brother's music too. Will play a couple of the Handel later as a tribute.
I think they might be around on CD - Boston Skyline did some but not all of them - Vol 2 available here at Amazon.
The reaper has been excessively busy lately indeed
another great musician passed away.
Her recordings made me listening to Bach's organ works too.
I must admit: organ music in general (exceptions confirming the rule) Is something I rarely feel attracted to, but nevertheless.
Not only her brother's music but also her father's, Albert Alain.
When she was on the jury at St Albans the other year she gave a recital consisting entirely of his music to a packed cathedral, earning an instant standing ovation. The fact that she wasn't able to get on the organ to start registering the pieces until nearly midnight didn't seem to trouble her in the least, and she continued until 2.30 am.
A sad loss. I treasure her set of Franck works played on the Cavaille-Coll at Saint-Etienne de Caen (Erato); superb. (I see, now reissued at pocket money prices - got a high, if not top, BaL recommendation I think for the Chorals some years ago: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Franck-Organ...1920161&sr=1-1)
A sad loss. I treasure her set of Franck works played on the Cavaille-Coll at Saint-Etienne de Caen (Erato); superb. (I see, now reissued at pocket money prices - got a high, if not top, BaL recommendation I think for the Chorals some years ago: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Franck-Organ...1920161&sr=1-1)
Oh, alas! 'L'Art de la Fugue', a 2 LP set dated 1974. She showed me a path, just a wonderful vision, I'm still trying to tread my way to the truth. For sure, Bach wrote it, but for us humble mortals, we need the likes of M-CA to bring us interpretation.
The reaper has been excessively busy lately indeed
another great musician passed away.
Her recordings made me listening to Bach's organ works too.
I must admit: organ music in general (exceptions confirming the rule) Is something I rarely feel attracted to, but nevertheless.
RIP Marie-Claire Alain
I rarely listen to any Organ music by any other composer, and other family members tend to react very negatively to any organ music. Bach wrote so many of his greatest works for the Organ, that just don't sound right in transcription. E Power Biggs was my my introduction to most of Bach's Organ music, and then I added Alain for an alternative view.
The world-famous French organist Marie-Claire Alain (died february 26th, 2013 at the age of 86) plays Litanies by her brother Jehan Alain (1911-1940) on the ...
Not all organists are great musicians, but Marie-Claire most certainly was! She must have been a formative influence on many of us. I first saw her playing her brother's Litanies not (as in the excellent Youtube clip) on a magnificent instrument, but in the modest surroundings of the parish church at St Peter Port in Guernsey. I must have been about 18 at the time, and I was totally comverted to Litanies (had to learn it at once), to Marie-Claire and to playing (sometimes, in my case) without music. Hardly anyone did in those days except the notable blind French organists.
Thank you, Marie-Claire for your inspiration and example.
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