John Scott - Whitlock: Organ Sonata etc. (Organ of St Paul's Cathedral) (2004)

Artist: John Scott
Title: Whitlock: Organ Sonata etc. (Organ of St Paul's Cathedral)
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Hyperion
Genre: Classical Organ
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
Total Time: 01:11:48
Total Size: 216 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
TracklistTitle: Whitlock: Organ Sonata etc. (Organ of St Paul's Cathedral)
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Hyperion
Genre: Classical Organ
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) +Booklet
Total Time: 01:11:48
Total Size: 216 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Organ Sonata in C Minor: I. Grave – Animato
02. Organ Sonata in C Minor: II. Canzona
03. Organ Sonata in C Minor: III. Scherzetto
04. Organ Sonata in C Minor: IV. Choral
05. 5 Short Pieces: I. Allegretto
06. 5 Short Pieces: II. Folk Tune
07. 5 Short Pieces: III. Andante tranquillo
08. 5 Short Pieces: IV. Scherzo
09. 5 Short Pieces: V. Paean
10. Fantasie Choral No. 1 in D-Flat Major
For his last recording as Organist of St Paul’s Cathedral in London—he takes up his appointment as Organist and Director of Music at St Thomas Church, Fifth Avenue, New York, in the autumn of 2004—John Scott turns to the music of Percy Whitlock.
Whitlock would perhaps be better known today but for his early death (of tuberculosis at the age of forty-two) and his personal preference for a musical life in that twilight zone of the organ world to be found far from the mainstream of Cathedral life—only as Borough Organist at the Bournemouth Pavilion could he indulge his passion for concert organ performances. In this capacity (and as the prolific builder of fiendishly complex Meccano constructions) he won for himself quite a reputation, a solid broadcasting career, and the opportunity to write music ranging from orchestral fripperies for the Bournemouth orchestra to liturgically appropriate organ pieces for the Church. Alongside this world of divergent miniatures he also composed a massive Organ Symphony, and the Organ Sonata recorded here. And what a work it is: a towering landmark on the generally rather dreary landscape of British organ music of the time, and one admirably captured by the Hyperion engineers in John Scott’s performance on the Grand Organ of St Paul’s Cathedral.