Lorenz Maycher - Organ Music of Leo Sowerby: Lorenz Maycher & Aeolian-Skinner, Kilgore, Texas (1995)

Artist: Lorenz Maycher
Title: Organ Music of Leo Sowerby: Lorenz Maycher & Aeolian-Skinner, Kilgore, Texas
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Raven
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:12:21
Total Size: 253 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Organ Music of Leo Sowerby: Lorenz Maycher & Aeolian-Skinner, Kilgore, Texas
Year Of Release: 1995
Label: Raven
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:12:21
Total Size: 253 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Lorenz Maycher – Comes Autumn Time (05:55)
2. Lorenz Maycher – Requiescat in pace (08:26)
3. Lorenz Maycher – Suite: III. Air with Variations (06:48)
4. Lorenz Maycher – Arioso (09:02)
5. Lorenz Maycher – Whimsical Variations (10:23)
6. Lorenz Maycher – Sonatina: I. In a placid and easy going manner (05:18)
7. Lorenz Maycher – Sonatina: II. Very slowly (06:15)
8. Lorenz Maycher – Sonatina: III. Fast and Perky (07:03)
9. Lorenz Maycher & Jimmy Culp – Dialog (06:12)
10. William Watkins – Carillon (06:57)
Reviews David Mulbury in American Record Guide:
Lorenz Maycher is an unusually gifted American organist . . . It is difficult to imagine anyone not falling in love with this exciting disc, so well recorded and produced. The recording is an appropriate tribute to Leo Sowerby, an important American composer, whose beautiful music should be more widely appreciated and enjoyed . . . While there is rich diversity and scope in Sowerby's music (over 550 scores), it is often bittersweet, nostagic, and evocative of an era now past — a time that unfortunately cannot be brought back except through such music . . ."
Lorenz Maycher is an unusually gifted American organist . . . It is difficult to imagine anyone not falling in love with this exciting disc, so well recorded and produced. The recording is an appropriate tribute to Leo Sowerby, an important American composer, whose beautiful music should be more widely appreciated and enjoyed . . . While there is rich diversity and scope in Sowerby's music (over 550 scores), it is often bittersweet, nostagic, and evocative of an era now past — a time that unfortunately cannot be brought back except through such music . . ."