Complainte

From Organ Playing Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search

from Vingt-quatre Pièces en style libre by Louis Vierne

Background

Dedicated to Albert Perilhou.

 D-flat Major
 2 pages
 3-4 voice texture

Registration and Organs

 G. Fonds 8 doux Nasard
 R. Flutes 8', 4'
 Ped. Fonds doux 16', 8'
 Tirasse G.

Fingering and Pedaling

 Two eight-bar sections of manuals only
 Pedaling throughout the rest of it
 A lot of extended tying in various voices
 Use of expression pedal for one diminuendo

Articulation and Phrasing

"Legato playing is best suited to the organ for, by the very nature of the instrument, the evenness of all notes in the same register quite naturally calls for precisely connecting these notes one after the other."[1]


Vierne stressed to make certain that the inner voices are legato and that the pedal be played legato as well. He advised "playing the black keys 'on the very edge to facilitate, when practical, sliding onto the naturals.'"[2]

Ornamentation

Replace this text with any specific information on ornamentation

Tempo and Meter

 3/4, Andante moderato, quarter note = 50

Scores and Editions

File:24 Pieces en style libre, No. 3 - Complainte.pdf

Recordings

Replace this text with any specific information on recordings

Free Online

Replace this text with any specific information on online recordings that are available free

Pay to Listen

A Notre-Dame de Paris: Organ Works by Vierne, Pierre Moreau, $0.99 MP3 Album

Other Resources

Replace this text with any information on other resources pertinent to performing these works

Notes

  1. Louis Vierne,"Renseignements Généraux pour l'Interpretation de l'Œuvre d'Orgue de J.S. Bach," Œuvres pour Orgue de Bach (Paris: Éditions Maurice Senart, 1924) v.
  2. Rollin Smith, Louis Vierne: Organist of Notre Dame Cathedral, 571. The Complete Organ No. 3. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press, 1999.

This space is for automatic insertion of footnotes. To enter a footnote from anywhere in the article, start by typing the tag <ref> and then enter the text, and type the tag </ref> to end the footnote. The footnote will then appear in this "Notes" section automatically.