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Harald Vogel plays Baroque music on the 1699 Schnitger organ in Ganderkesee 

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From a NDR-Kultur broadcast on May 23, 2015.
Harald Vogel plays on the 1699 Schnitger organ in St. Cyptian- und Corneliuskirche of Ganderkesee.
Dietrich Buxtehude
0:01 Praeludium in g-Moll, BuxWV 163
7:59 Wie schön leuchtet der Morgenstern, Choralfantasie G-Dur, BuxWV 223
15:34 Passacaglia d-Moll, BuxWV 161
22:10 Toccata in F, BuxWV 157
27:33 'Vater unser im Himmelreich' (4 Verses), BuxWV 207
36:07 Heinrich Scheidemann: Toccata in C
40:23 Samuel Scheidt: Magnificat noni Toni, SSWV 148
52:06 Johann Lorentz: Praeludium in d
Organ description: (source: GoArt Arp Schnitger Organ Database)
The location was first mentioned in the late ninth century, and it is likely that at this early time there was already a wooden church. In 1050, Archbishop Adalbert of Bremen established a synodal church, which was located in a wooded area west of Bremen.
The oldest part of the church is the Romanesque west tower built of fieldstone, whose lower story dates from the twelfth century. The size of the Gothic three-nave hall church is surprising, and almost corresponds to the dimensions of a town church. After the restoration of the twentieth century, in which the double galleries from the Baroque period disappeared, the church now has a reverberant acoustic, which beneficially amplifies the sound of the organ.
The contract with Schnitger on April 19, 1699 was for a two-manual organ with Hauptwerk, Brustwerk and pull-down pedal with 16 registers. On October 17 of that year the organ was approved. This short construction time gives us a way to measure the capacity of the Schnitger workshop. The year before in the city of Bremen alone, Schnitger had delivered the two grand organs in the Dom and in St. Stephani for which he produced more than 90 registers. It is also possible that the Hamburg workshop relied on existing components to be able to deliver this very inexpensive project. In the Brustwerk, which has a rare plank windchest, a reed register is missing.
In 1760 Johann Hinrich Klapmeyer added an independent pedal with 6 registers in two side towers. The façade of the Hauptwerk and Pedal each have a Principal 8'.
In the nineteenth century, three generations of the Schmid organ-builder family from Oldenburg worked at the organ, the Pedal mixture was replaced by a Subbass 16'. In 1890 some high Schnitger registers and reeds were replaced with new ones in the style of the day. In 1917 the Schnitger façade pipes did not need to be given up to the war effort because they had a high lead content.
Alfred Führer (Wilhelmshaven) began efforts to return the organ to its pre-nineteenth-century state already in 1934-35, which continued in 1966, but with an inadequate technical concept. With the thorough restoration by Heiko Lorenz (Wilhelmshaven), which was completed in 2005, a return to the eighteenth-century state of the organ could be achieved. The Subbass, which in previous work in the twentieth century had not been adequately replaced, was now replaced using old construction methods. The old manual keyboards were fitted with rounded natural keyplates, as they are still preserved in Dedesdorf in the style of the Schnitger workshop.
Hauptwerk CDEFGA - c3 (45 keys)
Principal 8' 1699
Quintadena 16' 1699
Rohrflöte 8' 1699
Octave 4' 1699
Super Octave 2' 1699
Wald Flöte 2' 2005
Quinte 1 1/3' 2005
Sesquialtera II 1699/2005
Mixtur IV 2005
Trompete 8' 2005
Brustwerk CDEFGA - c3 (45 keys)
Gedackt 8' 1699
Blockflöte 4' 1699
Octave 2' 2005
Spitzflöte 2' 1699
Sifflöte 1 1/3' 2005
Scharff III 2005
Pedal CDE - d1
Principal 8' 1760
Subbass 16' 2005
Octave 4' 1760
Posaune 16' 1760/1820
Trompete 8' 2005
Trompete 4' 2005
Tremulant
Schiebekoppel/Shove coupler BW/HW
Temperament: Modified meantone at a1 ≈ 466 Hz

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16 окт 2020

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Комментарии : 8   
@HarpsichordVinylGallery
@HarpsichordVinylGallery 4 года назад
Nice to wake up with my favourite Buxtehude work this way :-)
@joannescouchet7038
@joannescouchet7038 4 года назад
Which one is it? Mine is BuxWV 159, followed by probably 142 :)
@HarpsichordVinylGallery
@HarpsichordVinylGallery 4 года назад
@@joannescouchet7038 The opening which is indicated as a 'prelude'. I must say I am more of a hpschd-listener and it is played on the hpschd too. The first time I heard it the fugue with the voice of just one repeating note blew my mind. Beethoven is a master in repeating figures but that was much later. Everything is great in that little suite. Still love it after so many years.
@joannescouchet7038
@joannescouchet7038 4 года назад
@@HarpsichordVinylGallery You know Reincken's fugue in G minor? Also both fugue subjects in BWV 566 have lots of repeating notes! And both fun to play.
@HarpsichordVinylGallery
@HarpsichordVinylGallery 4 года назад
@@joannescouchet7038 The 159 chaconne I heard several times by Winsemius in the Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam when they played there on a regular base. Unfortunately those days are over with the policy of the directors board.
@joannescouchet7038
@joannescouchet7038 4 года назад
@@HarpsichordVinylGallery What happened? When I was there in 2017 there were still regular concerts. Covid?