Franck & Brahms: Chorals Benjamin Righetti

Album info

Album-Release:
2019

HRA-Release:
11.04.2019

Album including Album cover

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  • César Franck (1822 - 1890):
  • 11er Choral en mi majeur, FWV 3816:07
  • Johannes Brahms (1833 - 1897):
  • 2«Mein Jesu, der du mich» Op. 122 No. 104:35
  • 3«Herzliebster Jesu» Op. 122 No. 203:11
  • 4«Es ist ein Ros’ entsprungen» Op. 122 No. 802:48
  • 5«O wie selig seid ihr doch, ihr Frommen» Op. 122 No. 601:53
  • César Franck:
  • 62e Choral en si mineur, FWV 3913:30
  • Johannes Brahms:
  • 7«Herzlich tut mich erfreuen» Op. 122 No. 402:43
  • 8«O Gott, du frommer Gott» Op. 122 No. 704:37
  • 9«Schmücke dich, o Liebe Seele» Op. 122 No. 502:31
  • 10«Herzlich tut mich verlangen» Op. 122 No. 902:05
  • 11«Herzlich tut mich verlangen» Op. 122 No. 1003:41
  • César Franck:
  • 123e Choral en la mineur, FWV 4013:48
  • 13«O Welt, ich muss dich lassen» Op. 122 No. 302:50
  • 14«O Welt, ich muss dich lassen» Op. 122 No. 1103:00
  • Total Runtime01:17:19

Info for Franck & Brahms: Chorals



Between the two great responsibilities of an artist, renewal and continuity, this recording certainly offers well-known pages, but under a lighting probably unprecedented: to our knowledge, these chorales of C. Franck and J. Brahms had indeed never found themselves side by side interlaced on the same album. Yet, even if many aspects oppose them, the common points between these two works are not lacking. Although it refers to very different realities, the similar title of "chorale" is the most obvious link.

For J. Brahms, his choice does not pose a question: the choral prelude is a normal and functional part of the German Lutheran liturgy, which introduces the song of the assembly. The tribute to previous generations is evident, with JS Bach and his organ chorales in the foreground. Under the pen of one of the greatest masters of the Lied, the choice to write instrumental pieces from these chorales, and not vocal works, to keep only the melodic line and to abandon the text. is obviously not trivial. This focus on pure music is reminiscent of F. Mendelssohn who, before him, already chose to remove the words of his "Lieder ohne Worte", romances without words, to overcome this limitation, to try to express what the words precisely prevent from saying.

To put side by side these two works on a single recording, it was still necessary to have an instrument at the height, able to bend to the divergent requirements of the romantic esthetics French and Germanic! The great organ of Saint-François in Lausanne is obviously a central player in this album, and it is probable that without having had to play it regularly, the idea of ​​this assembly project would not have gone beyond the sketch stage.

It is a very large instrument of 75 registers equipped with a direct mechanical traction for the five keyboards and the pedals, of bases with engravings and slides, an assistance "levers Kuhn" for the ten couplings of the keyboards, built and modified successively by Scherrer (1777), Walker (1867/1880), and Kuhn (1936/1995).

At the end of this text, ready to give way to music, it is on the human and collective dimension of the work of musician that I would like to conclude. A work of collaborations and therefore of dependencies, where humility and greatness must meet each other. "O world, I must leave you" will say the last echoes of the program. Surely, to be able to leave him in such a disturbing beauty, with so much passion and serenity all at once, it took that César Franck and Johannes Brahms love it very much. That the sharing of their pages reminds us, helps us to follow their example, helps us turn our eyes.

Benjamin Righetti, organ



Benjamin Righetti
"Gifted, inventive thirty-year-old" (Le Temps), "one of the most brilliant organists of his generation" (Revue musicale de Suisse romande), "an immensely talented performer" (Diapason), Benjamin Righetti is a Swiss musician, titular organist at St. François and professor at the University of Music, Lausanne (HEMU). Concurrently, he concertizes regularly on an international basis (more than 600 concerts to date). He has made numerous recordings (CDs, Radio-TV, Web) and as a researcher, he is writer for La Tribune de l'Orgue and the website orgue.art. M. Righetti loves both the mountains and the lakes of his small country and tries to balance his varied activities with rigor and joy.

This album contains no booklet.

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