Label: Lawo Classics
Format: CD
Barcode: 7090020181813
Catalog number: LWC 1159
Releasedate: 07-09-18
Format: CD
Barcode: 7090020181813
Catalog number: LWC 1159
Releasedate: 07-09-18
- Saxophone and organ sound good together and complement each other well, yet little music has been written for this instrumental combination
- Various repertoire, Bach, Paradis, Satie, Fauré, Rachmaninoff
- Saxophonist Vegard Landaas & organist Anders Eidsten Dahl
- Mühleisen organ, Strømsø Church, Drammen, Norway.
- Various repertoire, Bach, Paradis, Satie, Fauré, Rachmaninoff
- Saxophonist Vegard Landaas & organist Anders Eidsten Dahl
- Mühleisen organ, Strømsø Church, Drammen, Norway.
A common theme on this recording is traditional music. [“Nøringen” is the name of a well-known 'gangar', a Norwegian traditional dance. It was especially popular in Vestlandet, the region along the Atlantic coast of southern Norway. The dance tune was played the morning after the wedding, when the guests were served food and drink, often after having danced all night. The word means nourishment (food).]
FROM THE ARTISTS:
Saxophone and organ sound good together and complement each other well, yet little music has been written for this instrumental combination. For this reason, we are always looking for music that works well and often it is music written for instruments other than our own. Part of the effort of finding good music involves getting accomplished composers and arrangers to write for us. This recording is the concrete result of a concert tour we undertook in Slovakia during some hectic days in the summer of 2017. It features a broad range of music, and the quality, we feel, merits being presented on this album. In addition to the rehearsed repertoire, Bjørn Luksengård (b. 1956), church organist in Sande, Vestfold, sent us his arrangements and compositions during the tour. To some extent we developed the repertoire between the concerts and also tried out some of the music in concert situations.
Not long after returning to Norway, we met for several intense days of recording in Strømsø Church in Drammen. It is one of Norway’s largest wooden churches and acquired its Mühleisen organ with 31 stops in 2011. The melodious organ and the church’s good acoustics gave us the conditions we were looking for.
FROM THE ARTISTS:
Saxophone and organ sound good together and complement each other well, yet little music has been written for this instrumental combination. For this reason, we are always looking for music that works well and often it is music written for instruments other than our own. Part of the effort of finding good music involves getting accomplished composers and arrangers to write for us. This recording is the concrete result of a concert tour we undertook in Slovakia during some hectic days in the summer of 2017. It features a broad range of music, and the quality, we feel, merits being presented on this album. In addition to the rehearsed repertoire, Bjørn Luksengård (b. 1956), church organist in Sande, Vestfold, sent us his arrangements and compositions during the tour. To some extent we developed the repertoire between the concerts and also tried out some of the music in concert situations.
Not long after returning to Norway, we met for several intense days of recording in Strømsø Church in Drammen. It is one of Norway’s largest wooden churches and acquired its Mühleisen organ with 31 stops in 2011. The melodious organ and the church’s good acoustics gave us the conditions we were looking for.
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1Gammel-Sjugurmarsjen03:26
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2Kom hjerte, sjung en aftensang04:42
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3Sicilienne03:12
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4Sonata in E-flat major, BWV 1031I. Allegro Moderato03:51
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5Sonata in E-flat major, BWV 1031II. Siciliano02:23
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6Sonata in E-flat major, BWV 1031III. Allegro03:33
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7Nøringen04:52
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8Brureslått fra Øre02:00
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9Gymnopédie No. 103:29
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10Sicilienne03:29
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11Visa efter Torn Erik05:21
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12Vocalise05:11
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13Kornet har sin vila08:04
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14Air03:04
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15Afrikansk springer02:24