@Machru Baroque Music is a strange thing! When we listen to it, the melody penetrates deep within our soul and reflects perfectly what we are on the inside!
To @AionioTragoudi: True. Very intelligent reply - thank you! I agree with you, and that is probably why I feel a bit dead and bored inside...I cannot read into this what the performer is trying to say. Sorry, I didn't mean to be disrespectful.
I love this interpretation of this. Part of it is probably the instrument itself and part of it is the ornamentation he adds with his left hand. It fits perfectly with the piece. It is not too brash or distracting at all from the main theme of the piece. Secondly when the left hand comes in, most people use a stop that is a trumpet or chromhorne. I like how it fits inside of the sound of the other lines of the piece. Overall it is very nice!
I was wondering if you wrote down the reharmonization that you are doing with the left hand when the cantus firmus does not appear. My friend and I have tried to make our own version, but this perhaps is the best I have yet to hear. I would love a copy of this "arrangement".
That's the Gabler organ in the Basilica of Weingarten, Germany.
(The DVD set is superb, by the way. The four part documentary had been realized by Gilles Cantagrel around 1980. A pity they didn't include the original French commentary by Cantagrel in the DVD release.)
2:38 Fail! :D
GbUnLimiteD 5 months ago
sounds nicer than the voice and ochestra version (BWV 140)
jtingyz 9 months ago
Sorry...find it lifeless and boring...
Machru 1 year ago
@Machru Baroque Music is a strange thing! When we listen to it, the melody penetrates deep within our soul and reflects perfectly what we are on the inside!
AionioTragoudi 9 months ago
To @AionioTragoudi: True. Very intelligent reply - thank you! I agree with you, and that is probably why I feel a bit dead and bored inside...I cannot read into this what the performer is trying to say. Sorry, I didn't mean to be disrespectful.
Machru 9 months ago
Es fehlen die Trompete in einem Pedal
majex007 1 year ago
I love this interpretation of this. Part of it is probably the instrument itself and part of it is the ornamentation he adds with his left hand. It fits perfectly with the piece. It is not too brash or distracting at all from the main theme of the piece. Secondly when the left hand comes in, most people use a stop that is a trumpet or chromhorne. I like how it fits inside of the sound of the other lines of the piece. Overall it is very nice!
Afaral1989 1 year ago
I was wondering if you wrote down the reharmonization that you are doing with the left hand when the cantus firmus does not appear. My friend and I have tried to make our own version, but this perhaps is the best I have yet to hear. I would love a copy of this "arrangement".
CembaloMeister 1 year ago
what a wonderful interpretation of a beautiful piece. Could be a tad more slower and contemplative, but even at this tempo is very articulate.
crob647gtx 1 year ago
a nice concerto like performance and a very nice organ..
12345qazx1 1 year ago
Very interesting ornamentation!
GeorgiosZaimis 1 year ago
Wow, is he improving that part on the third manual? I've never heard it before.
brandon71085 1 year ago
wow in German
ChristinaBarrett5 2 years ago
Hmm he added a lot of ornamentation
gssq 2 years ago
A wonderful instrument!
Aeoline91 2 years ago
I love this organ!!! A dream to listen to it must be if one's sitting in the Chapel.
Beautiful, lovely.
angelabinu 2 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
awfull interpreation ! rythm and all is bad
jice0610 2 years ago
The Organ in Weingarten hasn't got 163 Stops, it has "only" 63.
Orgelduedler 3 years ago
169 is the number of ranks. The stops, registers or voices (depending on where you are from) number 63. This information is from die-orgelseite.
moller11739 3 years ago
Yes i know, but i thought that it is wrong because the most write the number of stops behind the manuals.
Orgelduedler 3 years ago
Sorry, it has been clarified in the info.
moller11739 3 years ago
That's the Gabler organ in the Basilica of Weingarten, Germany.
(The DVD set is superb, by the way. The four part documentary had been realized by Gilles Cantagrel around 1980. A pity they didn't include the original French commentary by Cantagrel in the DVD release.)
chwidder 3 years ago
Thanks.
moller11739 3 years ago