Organ Gala Launch Concert, Royal Festival Hall | reviews, news & interviews
Organ Gala Launch Concert, Royal Festival Hall
Organ Gala Launch Concert, Royal Festival Hall
Mighty instrument meets its audience for the first time in nearly a decade

The newly restored Royal Festival Hall organ was inaugurated in a celebratory atmosphere with this gala launch concert, which also marks the beginning of the Pull Out All the Stops organ festival.
The varied programme included works for solo organ, as well as combined with brass and choir, and included two world premieres composed specially for the concert, one by Sir Peter Maxwell Davies and one by the late John Tavener. Four organists took turns (John Scott, Jane Parker-Smith, Isabelle Demers and David Goode), two conductors (Jessica Cottis and Sam Laughton), plus Alison Balsom, the combined forces of the London Philharmonic Brass Ensemble and Philharmonia brass Ensemble, the Elysian Singers, and massed choir of school children brought together by the Southbank Centre’s Voicelab.
Entering the Festival Hall to see the complete organ was thrilling in itself – it is nearly a decade since it was packed away for the hall’s restoration, with no financial provision made at the time for its reinstatement.
 The concert opened with Gigout’s Grand choeur dialogué arranged for brass and organ, with its fanfares allowing the organ to clear its mighty throat in style. John Scott had the honour of opening proceedings, and he also stayed on to perform Bach’s monumental Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. Canadian organist Isabelle Demers (pictured right) then stepped up to play the Scherzo and Nocturne from Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, delving with remarkable virtuosity into the organ’s palette and showing off a number of colourful registrations.
The concert opened with Gigout’s Grand choeur dialogué arranged for brass and organ, with its fanfares allowing the organ to clear its mighty throat in style. John Scott had the honour of opening proceedings, and he also stayed on to perform Bach’s monumental Passacaglia and Fugue in C minor. Canadian organist Isabelle Demers (pictured right) then stepped up to play the Scherzo and Nocturne from Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, delving with remarkable virtuosity into the organ’s palette and showing off a number of colourful registrations.
David Goode then took the mantle, and was joined by Alison Balsom for her trumpet and organ arrangement of Bach’s Concerto in D for keyboard. This worked well, with Balsom’s expressive tone ducking and weaving through the organ’s sterner textures.
There followed the first of the world premieres, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies’ A Wall of Music for organ, brass and children’s choir. Setting a poem by Jo Shapcott titled Questions for the Machine, which expresses childlike wonder at the magnificent organ, this was really the festive centrepiece of the evening, and perfectly judged by the composer. The presence of dozens of primary school children in the massed choir was, to quote Davies’ own programme note, "suitably affirmative", and Jessica Cottis conducting brought everything together.
 The second half of the concert began with the premiere of Sir John Tavener’s Monument for Beethoven for chorus and organ, with John Scott back the organ and the Elysian Singers. Short episodes of blaring organ chords or jagged horror-movie motifs were contrasted with ethereal choir passages. As monuments go it was fairly insubstantial but certainly put the organ’s more strident traits in the spotlight.
The second half of the concert began with the premiere of Sir John Tavener’s Monument for Beethoven for chorus and organ, with John Scott back the organ and the Elysian Singers. Short episodes of blaring organ chords or jagged horror-movie motifs were contrasted with ethereal choir passages. As monuments go it was fairly insubstantial but certainly put the organ’s more strident traits in the spotlight.
The rest of the programme was devoted to the organ as a solo instrument of many colours, with Jane Parker-Smith playing Franck’s Fantaisie in A and her own rather demented fairground arrangement of Liszt’s Mephisto Waltz No 1. Isabelle Demers then brought the evening to a close with a positively athletic performance of one of Marcel Dupré’s mindbogglingly intricate preludes and fugues.
In all, a very satisfying welcome back for this spectacular instrument.
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Comments
Insubstantial? I think not.
Isabelle Demers is Canadian,
Thanks for pointing this out
Thanks for pointing this out - have now corrected.
Whatever her nationality she