Moondog - A New Sound Of An Old Instrument
Kopf Records KD 13 30 17 Format: CD Kopf Records, a division of Roof Music GMBH, Prinz Regent Str. 50-60, 4630 Bochum
Sleeve Notes The organ has not been called the "King of Instruments" for nothing, because of all instruments it has the widest range of possibilities, lending itself to any mood or style. In suffering the organ to emit secular and even profane music, namely dance music, I do not find it out of place, since I am fully aware of the organ's pagan beginnings, the pipes of Pan. The organ is capable of producing a percussive quality, provided the notes are played staccato, and more importantly, if the "spitting" flute stop is used. This stop is also known as "chiff", having almost the jazz sound of saxophones playing staccato. especially in a large room with good acoustics. I think an organ can do anything a good jazz band can do, as good, if not better. Moreover, when it comes to long, sustained contrapuntal lines, the organ is unapproachable. The organ sounds good with or without percussion. I added percussion to most of the pieces which are in the dance idiom. SINGLE FOOT and MIRAGE are two "desert" pieces, written in scales suggesting Asia Minor. The drum beat in SINGLE FOOT represents the hoof beats of a horse at a gait known as "single foot", when each foot comes down separately, affording the easiest and most pleasant ride imaginable. I know this from my own experience, having ridden on a horse who had such a gait. It was owned by Bill Lucky, a famous trapper and hunter. FROST FLOWER is named after the phenomenon occurring in the Antarctic, where frost sometimes rises in a shape suggesting a flower, as delicate and intricate as a snow flake. I write logs with and without pedalpoints. All the logs on this album have pedalpoints. Log means canon, to me, at least. When a log is written over a ground, I call it logrundr. A double 2-part log consists of two 2-part canons, each having its own theme, yet both fitting together, making quadruple counterpoint. Some of the logrundrs are in a-b-a form, in which case the b-part is a development, also in log or logrundr form. In 1938 I came across the old musical landmark
"Summer Is Acomin' In". It made a deep impression on me. Forty years later
I wrote, as a tribute to its unknown author, a musical answer to it, LOGRUNDR
in D. It is similar in form, having a ground consisting of a 2-part canon
in the pedals, over which is a 4-part canon for the hands. After a long
pause the pedlas begin the inversion of the whole piece with a lively version
of the pedal canon in 5/4. The development is near the end, where the pedal
theme is given to the hands in a double 2-part canon over a double ground.
The piece ends on an expressive note, lingering over the opening figure
of the main theme. The composer Louis T. Hardin, also known
as "MOONDOG" was born in Marysville, Kansas 1916. he lived in New York
for 30 years and has been in Germany since 1974. Both, Fritz Storfinger and Wolfgang Schwering studied in the master class of Professor Sieglinde Ahrens at Folkwang conservatory. All compositions by Louis T. Hardin Organ duets played by Fritz Storfinger and Wolfgang Schwering. Organ solos played by Fritz Storfinger. Produced by managarm and ROOF-Music Recorded on the Breil organ at Herz-Jesu-Kirche in Oberhausen. recording engineer: Friedbert Keuken Mixing: Helmut Rohlfing. Thanks to Michael J. Cross for the track listing and sleeve notes for this page. |