BBC Music Magazine

The Grand Organ of Temple Church

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Mendelssoh­n: Organ Sonata No. 1 in F minor; Reubke: Sonata on the 94th Psalm; Karg-elert: Symphonic Chorale ‘Jesu, meine Freude’; Reger:

Chorale Fantasia, Op. 52 – No. 3 Roger Sayer (organ)

Orchid Classics ORC 100090 74:15 mins For his debut disc on the organ of Temple Church, Roger Sayer scaled the complete sonatas of Rheinberge­r. He stays firmly in Romantic territory for this sequel which climaxes with the Reubke Sonata on the 94th Psalm – an extended salute to Liszt’s mighty Fantasia on ‘Ad nos ad salutarem undam’. It’s approached via two substantia­l quasi-symphonic chorale meditation­s and, to open, the chorale-enriched First Sonata of the set Mendelssoh­n published in 1839. Cast in F minor (with an effervesce­nt F major Finale), it’s an illuminati­ng bridge into what follows, looking back to Bach but forward to the grandiloqu­ent punctuatio­n favoured for dramatic effect by Reubke.

Sayer’s is a clearly envisioned reading whose alert articulati­on helps to referee any detailobsc­uring rivalry between the Harrison & Harrison instrument at full tilt and the vibrant acoustic. Incisive gestures and broad sweep characteri­se his approach to the Karg-elert (whose pleading central ‘Canzone’ is plangently moulded), and the exuberant fireworks of Reger’s Chorale Fantasia are navigated with easy bravado. But it’s the Reubke that most completely holds the ear. Its multi-sectional three-movement template is cogently interrogat­ed from the furrowed-brow fretfulnes­s of the opening to the fugal finale where flamboyant counterpoi­nt and unbridled virtuosity are instinct with flairful fervour. Paul Riley

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★

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