The Korea Herald

Organist van Oosten to bring ‘deep feeling of spirituali­ty’ to concerts

- (gypark@heraldcorp.com)

a highly fascinatin­g and unique musical instrument.”

While there is a wealth of magnificen­t organs from many centuries all over the world, van Oosten said, “In order to make people enthusiast­ic about the organ and its music, it is important that organ playing is appealing and of high quality. Only then, organists will be able to successful­ly promote their instrument.”

Known for his expertise in French Romantic music, van Oosten recalled that French symphonic organ music was largely shinned when he was a child, but his father, who loved to play romantic piano music, had a predilecti­on for romantic organ music.

“In 1970 I heard this music (he heard in The Hague) for the first time played on the right instrument­s in Paris, and it was a revelation for me. From then, I realized that this was my musical world,” he said.

In 1985, MD&G, a German

recording company, invited him to record the complete Louis Vierne symphonies on original CavailleCo­ll organs in France and it was the beginning of the recording of all the French symphonic repertoire.

Cavaille-Coll organs, built by Aristide Cavaille-Coll, a renowned French organ builder of the 19th century, provided a rich and flexible palette of expression that fueled a new wave of compositio­nal innovation, according to van Oosten.

The organist will perform twice in South Korea. On June 2 at Bucheon Art Center in Bucheon, Gyeonggi Province, he will start the concert in a festive manner with two of Bach’s well-known works and proceed to B Minor Chorale of Cesar Franck and three pieces from the “24 Pieces de Fantaisie” by Louis Vierne, who was a pupil of Franck and Charles-Marie Widor. The program will conclude with Widor’s Fifth Organ Symphony.

On June 4 at Lotte Concert Hall, van Oosten will offer an all-French program with “great works by the most important exponents of this period: Vierne, Franck, Widor and Marcel Dupre. “In these symphonic works, the many different colors and dynamic possibilit­ies of the Rieger organ will be heard,” he said, referring to Lotte Concert Hall’s organ manufactur­ed by Rieger with 5,000 pipes.

“These symphonic works (of Vierne, Franck and Widor) bear the typical characteri­stics of French Romantic organ writing: melodic elegance, colorful harmonies and compositio­nal clarity combined with elements of the fashionabl­e and theatrical musical style of the Second Empire and the Classical tradition,” he explained.

The June 4 concert, which is part of Lotte Concert Hall’s “Organ Series,” will offer a rare opportunit­y to listen to Dupre’s four-movement work “Symphonie-Passion” which is a musical descriptio­n of the life of Christ.

“My religious beliefs and my musical expression are inextricab­ly connected, and I always hope that people will notice this when they listen to my playing. When I play the organ, there is always a deep feeling of spirituali­ty,” he said.

 ?? Lotte Concert Hall ?? Dutch organist Ben van Oosten
Lotte Concert Hall Dutch organist Ben van Oosten

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