The Organ of Oslo Cathedral Kåre Nordstoga
Album info
Album-Release:
2016
HRA-Release:
19.02.2019
Label: Lawo Classics
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Instrumental
Artist: Kåre Nordstoga
Composer: Johann Sebastian Bach (1685–1750), Edvard Grieg (1843–1907), Arild Sandvold, Oskar Lindberg, Max Reger (1873-1916), Charles Gounod (1818 – 1893)
Album including Album cover
- Johann Sebastian Bach (1685 - 1750): Toccata and Fugue in D Minor:
- 1 Toccata and Fugue in D Minor 09:32
- Edvard Grieg (1843 - 1907): Holberg Suite:
- 2 Holberg Suite: I. Praeludium 03:07
- 3 Holberg Suite: II. Sarabande 03:21
- 4 Holberg Suite: III. Gavotte 03:26
- 5 Holberg Suite: IV. Air 06:03
- 6 Holberg Suite: V. Rigaudon 04:06
- Arild Sandvold (1895 - 1984): Variations on the Norwegian Folk Tune:
- 7 Variations on the Norwegian Folk Tune "Eg veit I himmerik ei borg" 07:19
- Oskar Lindberg (1887 - 1955): Gammal Fäbodspsalm från Dalarna:
- 8 Gammal Fäbodspsalm från Dalarna 04:24
- Trad.: Rosa:
- 9 Rosa (Hardanger fiddle tune from Telemark) 04:18
- Max Reger (1873 - 1916): Chorale Fantasia:
- 10 Chorale Fantasia "Wie schön leucht’ uns der Morgenstern", Op. 40, No. 1 17:36
- Charles Gounod (1818 - 1893): Meditation on "Prelude in C Major" by J. S. Bach:
- 11 Meditation on "Prelude in C Major" by J. S. Bach 03:11
Info for The Organ of Oslo Cathedral
The Organ of Oslo Cathedral is a richly varied album, showing off the full breadth of the cathedral’s Ryde & Berg organ built in 1998. The organ facade is the original one from the Baroque organ of 1727 built by the Danish organ builder Lambert Daniel Kastens, who studied and worked with the famous North German organ builder Arp Schnitger.
The album features great works of Bach and Reger, two composers who over the years have been cornerstones of the cathedral’s organ tradition, not least due to the influence of former organist and choirmaster Arild Sandvold. Sandvold’s variations over “Eg veit I himmerik ei borg” can be heard on the recording. Nordstoga’s own organ version of Grieg’s “Holberg Suite” has been performed on a number of occasions, and now — after many requests — it has found its place on a recording. And with the inclusion of two exquisite samples of Swedish and Norwegian traditional music, together with a meditation of Charles Gounod, we see the contours of an album of organ music where many traditions meet.
Oslo Cathedral, formerly Our Saviour’s Church, is a cruciform church located at Stortorvet in Oslo city centre. Completed in 1697, it is the main church for the Diocese of Oslo and the parish church for downtown Oslo. It is, at the same time, Norway’s national church , used by the royal house and the government for weddings, funerals, and other officlal occasions.
The Baroque organ, once Scandinavia’s largest, was completed in 1727 and built by Lambert Daniel Kastens, a Danish organ builder who studied and worked with the famous North German organ builder Arp Schnitger. Kastens’s organ façade, together with the altarpiece, pulpit, and baptismal font, constitutes the cathedral’s acanthus-carved Baroque interior, the organ façade being the only one of these treasures that has stood in the church continuously over the course of time.
Kare Nordstoga, organ
No biography found.
This album contains no booklet.