Catalogue
HAVPCD361 – L’Orgue Mystique – Charles Tournemire (1870-1939)
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| Disk Title | L’Orgue Mystique – Charles Tournemire (1870-1939) |
| Adrian Gunning plays the Cavaillé-Coll organ at Notre Dame d’Auteuil Paris | |
| Soloists | Adrian Gunning (Organ) |
| Location | Notre Dame d’Auteuil, Paris |
| Date Recorded | 28th & 29th October 2009 |
| Audio Tracks | 12 |
When Tournemire began work on l’Orgue Mystique in 1927 he was 57 years old. As organist of the Basilica of Sainte-Clotilde for almost thirty years, and successor of the legendary César Franck, he was universally recognised as a towering presence in the Parisian organ world, and the greatest living master of the art of improvisation. But as an organ composer, at this date he was no more than a minor figure. Tournemire’s contemporary and fellow Franck-pupil, Louis Vierne, had already written nearly all his organ music (the two sets of 24 pieces, and five of the six Symphonies); the early works of Marcel Dupré were attracting widespread attention, and even younger composers like Duruflé were starting to appear.
Tournemire had written almost nothing – a few early harmonium and organ pieces (which he dismissed as ‘sins of my youth’), and just one big work, the Triple Choral of 1910. He had been far from idle during the past thirty years, but his ambitions as a composer extended far beyond the organ-loft, and he had devoted most of his time to the composition of major works for orchestra, many of them with voices, including eight symphonies and three operas. The ‘musical legend’ Le Sang de la Sirène won the prestigious Prix de la Ville de Paris in 1904, and the ‘lyric drama’ Les Dieux sont morts (1912) was staged at the Paris Opera in 1924. But none of these works achieved more than a handful of performances at best, and most of the music that Tournemire wrote after the First World War was neither published nor performed.
In the liberated, pleasure-seeking Paris of the 1920s, Tournemire had become an increasingly isolated figure. A visionary idealist inspired by a profound catholic faith, he believed that the only true purpose of music was the expression of spiritual truth: music that was not written for the glory of God was inutile – a waste of time.
| Trk. | Duration | Track Title | Composer |
| 1 | 07:44 | 14. Quinquagesima. V: Verrière | Charles Tournemire |
| 2 | 04:23 | 14. Quinquagesima II: Offertoire | Charles Tournemire |
| 3 | 06:15 | 3. Christmas. II: Offertoire (Molto Adagio) | Charles Tournemire |
| 4 | 09:29 | 26. The Holy Trinity. V: Triptyque | Charles Tournemire |
| 5 | 03:12 | 48. All Saints. IV: Communion | Charles Tournemire |
| 6 | 05:28 | 38. 12th Sunday after Pentecost. V: Choral No. 3 | Charles Tournemire |
| 7 | 04:02 | 4. Sunday after Christmas. II: Offertoire | Charles Tournemire |
| 8 | 08:34 | 1. 3rd Sunday of Advent. V: Toccata | Charles Tournemire |
| 9 | 05:27 | 35. The Assumption of the BVM. II: Offertoire | Charles Tournemire |
| 10 | 02:52 | 35. The Assumption of the BVM. IV: Communion | Charles Tournemire |
| 11 | 06:37 | 43. 16th Sunday after Pentecost. V: Choral Alleluiatique No. 1 | Charles Tournemire |
| 12 | 02:52 | 50. 22nd Sunday after Pentecost. IV: Communion | Charles Tournemire |
He was naturally attracted to the esoteric fringes of the Catholic Revival in 19th-century France; one of his favourite authors was the aesthete convert Huysmans, and his brother-in-law was the eccentric Joséphin Péladan, self-styled ‘Sâr’ of the Rosicrucians. At Sainte-Clotilde Tournemire evolved his own unique style of rhapsodic liturgical improvisation, in which he crystallised his own uncompromising vision of the organ as ‘the voice of prayer’. Inspired by the fervour of his faith, the limpid beauty of the Gregorian chant, and the matchless poetry of the Bible, he conjured up every Sunday magical evocations of heavenly bliss and blazing visions of glory. His symphonic music was all inspired by the same ideals, but even in middle age he had not really found a distinctive musical language to match these ideals.
ADRIAN GUNNING is organist of the Roman Catholic Church of St John the Evangelist, Duncan Terrace, Islington, London. Prior to this appointment he was organist at the celebrated Roman Catholic Church of St James’s, Spanish Place in Westminster, London, from 1977-1985. During this time he discovered the mystical and unmistakable sound world of Charles Tournemire’s organ music, which was so well suited to that building and its liturgy. Since then he has made a particular study of this music, having performed, recorded and broadcast it in Europe and America. His interpretations have been applauded by many critics in numerous articles published in the musical press. He is known by many as a leading interpreter of Charles Tournemire’s organ music and especially of his famous cycle L’Orgue Mystique. This recording marks his third CD of major works from this vast cycle.

