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Feike Asma - The Great Cathedral Organs Of The Netherlands flac mp3 download

Feike Asma - The Great Cathedral Organs Of The Netherlands flac mp3 download
Title:
The Great Cathedral Organs Of The Netherlands
Musician:
Feike Asma
Style:
Baroque
MP3 album size:
1515 mb
FLAC album size:
1232 mb
Other formats:
WMA VQF AA XM AHX MP1 AAC
Genre:
Rating:
4.1 ✪

Tracklist Hide Credits

Amsterdam Baroque Organ
A1 Bach: Toccata And Fugue In D Minor
Composed By – Bach*
9:57
A2 Bach: Toccata In F
Composed By – Bach*
9:26
Dordrecht Baroque Organ
A3 Franck: Piece Heroique
Composed By – Franck*
8:40
B1 Franck: Chorale No. 2
Composed By – Franck*
12:57
Maassluis Baroque Organ
B2 Reger: Fugue, Op. 127
Composed By – Reger*
10:45

Credits

  • Organ – Feike Asma

Notes

"The organ of the Great Church in Dordrecht dates from 1859, when it was built by W.H. Kam from Rotterdam. Notwithstanding the predominance of Romantic stop, the seventeenth and eighteenth-century traditions are decidedly represented and can be heard in this mighty cathedral organ. This organ is not merely a classically oriented instrument, but also has an unmistakable Dutch respectability.

The grandiose baroque organ in the Great Church at Maassluis was installed in 1732 by Rudolph Garrels, prominent in the famous German organ building school of the Schnitgers. As the years passed, it's registers and sound were adapted to the ideas of the various organists who played the instrument. In 1938 the instrument was radically changed and romanticized in such an way that the original Garrels sound was all but obscured. It was owing to the Dutch Bureau of Historical Monuments, led by the famous organ expert, Dr. H. L. Oussoren, that in 1962 the original Garrels stop list with some extensions, as well as the original baroque sound, were restored.

The organ of the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam is unquestionably the aristocrat among Dutch organs. It was built in the years 1724-1726 by Christian Vater (Hannover), and was restored and completed in 1739 by Johann Caspar Müller (The Hague), a brother of Christian Müller, the builder if the organ of St. Bavo's Church in Haarlem.

Since that time, generations of organ builders have worked on this exceptional instrument, but it was the great Christian Gottlieb Freidrich Witte who harmonized the pipes in such a way as to obtain the most impressive sound. In Feike Asma's opinion the instrument of the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam is still the best preserved baroque organ in the Netherlands. It has become famous all over the world and it's equal is nowhere to be found.

Although the three "families" of organ pipes - diapasons, flute stops and reeds - are worldwide, the different organ building schools have produced their own characteristic varieties. Therefore it is impossible to translate literally the names of the Dutch stops and we give here the original stop lists of the three organs:" (followed by the original stop lists of the three organs).

A product of Mercury Record Productions, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Matrix / Runout (Side A Run-outs, Stamped): PHS900237A- M1
  • Matrix / Runout (Side B Run-outs, Stamped): PHS900237B- M1