André Marchal playing Johann Sebastian Bach in St. Eustache, Paris

André Marchal (1894-1980)


With great thanks to The European Archive (http://europarchive.org) I’ve got permission to use their collection of public domain organ recordings. I haven’t altered anything beside cutting the sound into tracks and renaming them.
The first item from EA is an LP released in France around 1945-1950 with André Marchal playing works by Johann Sebastian Bach in his church Saint Eustache in Paris.

André Marchal (1894-1980) was a French organist and organ teacher. He was one of the great initiators of the organ revival in France.
Marchal was born blind. He studied the organ under Eugène Gigout at the Paris Conservatoire where in 1913 he won their premier prix. He also won the prix d' excellence for fugue and counterpoint in Caussade's class (his counterpoint teacher) in 1917.
He taught organ at Institut National des Jeunes Aveugles in Paris, and was titular organist of the Saint-Germain-des-Prés (1915-1945) and Saint-Eustache (1945-1963), his resignation in 1963 being brought about over a conflict over the correct organ builder to be hired to restore Saint-Eustache's instrument.
He was an unparalleled improviser and was even recognized as such by Fauré. Among his students were many brilliant musicians like Louis Thiry or Jean-Pierre Leguay, one of four titulaires des grands orgue of Notre-Dame de Paris.
(From Wikipedia)

As mentioned in the Wiki-text Marchal was one of the key figures of the French “Orgelbewegung”. His ideas were partly shaped by his teacher Eugene Gigout, who had already begun to teach and point his students toward these new ideas, so along with fellow organists like Joseph Bonnet they were part of the generation of musicians who had a growing interest in the classical and baroque music and organ building. His advocacy of the neoclassical style was to shape the future generation(s) of organ playing.

It’s quite interesting though, that his playing heavily relies on the romantic way of organ playing, with the legato style, long melodic lines and the use of register crecscendo and extensive use of the swell box. Recorded somewhere between 1945-1950, we are able to hear the old Ducroquet organ of Saint Eustache.

The LP used for this transfer is, as far I can see, an American release of the French recording original done for the label Ducretet. Further information about André Marchal and the complete discography can be found here: http://www.andremarchal.com



Download detailed playlist

Download link:
http://www.ihorc.com/ihorc/IHORC-07/IHORC07_-_Selected_Andre_Marchal.rar

Comments

  1. Hello, I just wish to let you know that, surely due to a packing mistake (...working until late in the night?... ;) what should be the MP3 file of the Fantasia in G minor BWV 542, is instead a duplicate of the Fugue in G minor. The Fantasia is actually missing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yes, I found the same problem, alas.

    Lars, would it be possible to upload the BWV 542 Fantasia? (It's no. 5 of the 6 packed music files.)

    Very much appreciated!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm still finding the same problem - track 5 and 6 are the same fugue - track 5 should be the fantasia.
    Hope you can fix this! Thank you very much!
    And especially thank you for all this amazing music you're sharing with us!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi everybody.
    Thank you all for your comments on my work.
    I've just seen your replys now - sorry!
    The problem should be solved now. Yes, you some times forget things when you work until late night :-)

    Best wishes, Lars.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thank you very much for this!

    this is the same version?
    http://www.ebay.nl/itm/Andre-Marchal-plays-Bach-organ-Fantasias-/380367564007

    ReplyDelete

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