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Debussy & Ravel on the Organ
Gunnar Idenstam
Debussy & Ravel on the Organ
Genres: New Age, Classical
 
A musician of uncommon versatility, Gunnar Idenstam happily acknowledges the influences of Swedish folk music and dance as well as the symphonic rock of the 1970s. But whether he collaborates with Sami traditional singers ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Gunnar Idenstam
Title: Debussy & Ravel on the Organ
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Naxos of America, Inc.
Release Date: 7/8/2014
Album Type: Hybrid SACD - DSD
Genres: New Age, Classical
Style: Instrumental
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Product Description
A musician of uncommon versatility, Gunnar Idenstam happily acknowledges the influences of Swedish folk music and dance as well as the symphonic rock of the 1970s. But whether he collaborates with Sami traditional singers (as on Songs for Jukkasjärvi, BIS-1868) or folk musicians (as on Folkjul: A Swedish Folk Christmas, BIS-5031), Idenstam is firmly grounded in the virtuosic French organ tradition which he studied in France, with the legendary Marie-Claire Alain. It was during his time in Paris that he first started dreaming of transferring Debussys La Mer to his own instrument to perform this impressionistic orchestral seascape on the organ. As Idenstam now releases a recording of his arrangement, it appears in the company of key orchestral works by Maurice Ravel, another composer who never wrote anything for the organ. In his liner notes to the disc, Idenstam writes of arriving, over the years, at his own palette of organ sounds, one which he feels best corresponds to those of the orchestra. Finding a suitable organ on which to realize the arrangements has also been vital for this project, and as a result, Idenstam travelled to the small town of Dudelange in Luxemburg. With its more than 5.000 pipes, the four-manual Stahlhuth-Jann organ of Église Saint-Martin has an exceptionally broad dynamic spectrum, as well as a wealth of characteristic stops with which to bring out the timbres of Debussys sea and wind, and depict the daybreak of Ravels Lever du jour, the glittering ballroom chandeliers of La Valse or the ecstatic climax of Boléro.