Composer: Petr Eben
Performer: Janette Fishell
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Brilliant Classics
Catalogue: 96312
Release: 2022
Size: 3.03 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
A Voice Crying in the Wilderness – Works of the Young Composer Musica Dominicalis
01. I. Fantasia I
02. II. Fantasia II
03. III. Moto Ostinato
04. IV. Finale
Laudes for Organ
05. I. Largo – Con moto – Largo
06. II. Lento – Allegro solenne – Poco più Mosso
07. III. Fantastico – Agitato – Più Mosso
08. IV. Gravemente – Allegro – Vivace Fermo
Fantasia Corale
09. I. “O Grosser Gott”. Allegro risoluto – Più moderato – Largemente
10. II. “Svatý Václav”. Agitato Appassionato
The Devil is in the Details – Faust for Organ
11. I. Prolog
12. II. Mysterium
13. Lied des Leiermannes
14. Osterchöre
15. Studentenlieder
16. Gretchen
17. Requiem
18. Walpurgisnacht
19. Epilog
Versetti
20. I. Ad offertorium super “pueri Hebraeorum”
21. II. Ad Communionem super “adoro Te”
Job for Organ
22. I. Destiny
23. II. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 1, verses 1-3, 6-21
24. III. Faith
25. IV. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 2, verses 1-10
26. V. Acceptance of Suffering
27. VI. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 3, verses 1-2, 11-13, 20-23
28. VII. Longing for Death
29. VIII. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 7, verses 16-21
30. IX. Despair and Resignation
31. X. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 38, verses 1-12, 33, 35
32. XI. Mystery of Creation
33. XII. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 4, verses 1-6
34. XIII. Penitence and Realisation
35. XIV. Narration. The Book of Job, Chapter 42, verses 10, 12-13, 15-17
36. XV. God’s Reward
37. Kleine Choralpartita on “O Jesu, all mein Leben bist Du”
The start of an exciting new series: the complete organ works by Petr Eben! Petr Eben (1929-2007) was born in Žamberk, northeastern Bohemia. The son of two teachers, he studied music from an early age, becoming “conscripted” as organist when the men from his town were away at war. Eben was raised in his mother’s Catholic faith but because of his father’s Jewish heritage he was captured and imprisoned by the Nazis in Buchenwald, remaining there for the duration of the war. After the war he was admitted to the Prague Academy for Music, and there he studied piano with František Rauch and composition with Pavel Bořkovec. A rising star, he refused to join the Czech Communist Party and continued openly attending church, thus forfeiting many career advancements before 1989. After the Communist government crumbled, however, he was given several important appointments and awards, among them presidency of the Prague Spring Festival (1989). In 1991, Eben was awarded the title of Knight of the French Ministry of Culture, Arts and Letters, evidence of his manifold international contributions to the art of music and cause of artistic freedom.
Over more than half a century Eben produced music in diverse genres. He wrote numerous vocal, choral, symphonic, piano, and chamber works, but it was organ music which remained his greatest love and in which he was most prolific. Stylistically, Eben was uncompromising when others were willing to write politically correct music. Not that Eben’s works are especially difficult or inaccessible; most listeners would find his expressive language no further advanced than that of Britten or Messiaen, two composers who may well have influenced him. Eben was considered a master at improvisation on the organ and his music has been widely performed and recorded since about 1980, with his popularity still apparently on the rise.
When Petr Eben died in 2007, he was renowned and performed the world over as a composer for choirs and organ. Nevertheless, 15 years on, this album inaugurates the first attempt at a complete survey of his output for the organ – an output so rich and individual that it has come to define a late 20th-century sound for the instrument as characterfully as Marcel Dupré achieved some six decades earlier.
Eben’s individuality as a composer may be traced in part to the influence of the environment in which he was brought up, the Renaissance town of Český Krumlov. This background shaped his humanist mission for art, a conviction arising perhaps from his wartime internment at the concentration camp in Buchenwald. Nevertheless, a deep faith also burns within large-scale cycles such as Job, which battles with matters of life and death in a richly chromatic language, evidently informed by the composer’s own formidable gifts as an improviser.
Alongside Job, the first volume of this projected integrale presents the monumental Faust cycle for organ, which tells the story of Goethe’s antihero in nine vividly illustrative pieces, including an Easter chorus, a drinking song, a Witches’ Sabbath and finally a sublime epilogue. Eben first came to international attention as an organ composer with the Laudes composed in 1964: the stern, archaic and magnificent quality of these hymns has proved adaptable to organs across the world and interpretations by countless organists.
In Janette Fishell, Eben’s music for organ finds a supremely dedicated interpreter of international experience and technical finish. As professor of organ at Indiana University, she is recognised as a leading scholarly authority on Eben’s organ music, the subject of her doctoral dissertation; she produced the first study of his organ works in English. Subtitled “Velvet Revolution”, this complete survey will be illustrated by a series of online films about Eben’s life and work; Fishell supplies authoritative annotations to her own performances on this album, which will make essential listening for all students and enthusiasts of 20th-century organ music.