Pachelbel Organ Works Volume 1 Naxos

Jed Distler

Artistic Quality:

Sound Quality:

Wolfgang Rübsam, one of the finest, busiest, and most prolifically recorded organists on Planet Earth, launches the first volume of a cycle devoted to the complete organ works of Pachelbel. The first impression you’ll get from placing this disc in your trusty CD changer will be the pungency of the bright, reedy stops characterizing the organ by Johann Nepomuk Holzhey at Wiessnau (built in the 1780s). Naxos’ transparent, up-close engineering further underscores the instrument’s timbral distinctions. Listen, for example, to the registral clarity in the three Christmas Chorale Preludes, the brooding G minor Fantasia (what heartbreakingly gorgeous low-register harmonies!), or the flowing, reflective Komm, Gott Schöpfer, heiliger Geist. The two Toccatas in C major boast snarling pedal-points from which vivid, trumpet-like lines proudly take wing. Rübsam’s slight ritards and breath marks throughout the D minor Chaconne, together with his strikingly varied couplings, add welcome drama and color to the score. Some listeners might prefer the steadier rhythm and restrained registration of Joseph Payne’s more conservative reading on Centaur, but I lean toward Rübsam.

Payne’s Pachelbel cycle, nearly complete at 10 volumes, employs a different organ for each installment. Will Rübsam do the same? That is, if he’s been designated to record the whole Naxos Pachelbel cycle himself (remember, the label’s Dupré organ music cycle is given over to different players). Artistically speaking, Rübsam and Payne complement rather than compete with each other. Even if you’ve acquired all or many or some of the Payne volumes, give Rübsam’s Pachelbel a fair shot. What can you lose at Naxos’ rock bottom price? Stay tuned for Volume 2.


Recording Details:

Reference Recording: This one, Payne (Centaur)

JOHANN PACHELBEL - Organ Works Vol. 1

    Soloists: Wolfgang Rübsam (organ)

  • Record Label: Naxos - 8.55438
  • Medium: CD

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