Beautiful. This piece was played at a friend’s memorial service last year. He was a great lover of organ music and this was one of his favourite compositions.
Love this piece, I ask our talented organist to play this each year on Easter Sunday. It's a triumphant selection for celebrating the Resurrection of Jesus
This was the recessional at our wedding. I can find no other recording of this piece that comes close to the grandeur this performance displays. Thank you.
Why is it that Marshall and Ogletree organs sound so freaking realistic? This is a digital Organ and it sounds many times better than some pipe organs and I’ve heard. Not to mention this performance is beyond phenomenal.
Note perfect, tempo excellent, absolutely stunning. I am so impressed, and as this will be my Easter Sunday voluntary, I take my hat off to you, because I know how much practise you put in to achieve this glorious performance.
His light and shade is excellent. Some organists play this piece and it sounds ‘muddy’.. his rendition is spot on. Sad that this talent, brain, skill, and being has passed.
Whatever you think of the performance (personally I find it excellent but a shade fast) it's astonishing to learn that the late Mr Coriddi was self-taught.
You'll lose all the energy boost provided by the pedal, but also the manual only have a rather complete sounding part here. You can add some octaves here and there
Exactly the comment I anticipated. We're all STILL eagerly awaiting your own performance as you are such an expert. If you think this is too fast, try listening to the version played by Jeremy Filsell on the organ at Christchurch Priory, Dorset. (Produced by WMC Records on their CD entitled "The Power and the Glory")
@@Bemusedlemon1 it's called an opinion bucko. Whether or not I could play it any better is completely, utterly irrelevant. And if I can find the version you mentioned, I will listen to it.
To "*davewvu1*" AND "*M Scott*" AND "*Ed Bolwijn*" : Oh Yes, really.....??? Yes, it's not for funerals, more for weddings, or birth/christening, or other big ecclesiastic or general celebrations. But the composer had absolutely no intention of playing it like a "ride on a cruise missile". So... here's the fun-fact espacially for you (and that kind of people, which are thinking like you) : Lemmens itself remarks a lenght of 3:30 min. for this remarkable and greatfull peace of organ music, which was composed on an french barocque organ. HERE it is played , and that's typical for a lot of american organists (might be, for the most of them), WAYs TOO FAST, exactly in 2:55 min. Got it ?? Any more questions ??