This set presents the complete 
                  Orgelbüchlein, not accommodated on one or two CDs, as 
                  is usual, but spread over three discs, with longer pieces at 
                  the beginning and end of each disc. This arrangement obviously 
                  avoids any sense of fatigue in listening to all 46 chorales, 
                  so it seems churlish to point out that all the music here could 
                  just about have been fitted onto two CDs, since that would have 
                  broken the pattern. The playing is large-scale but good of its 
                  kind, the recording wide-ranging and clear. The discs come in 
                  individual stiff cardboard sleeves together with a booklet of 
                  notes, all housed in a cardboard slipcase the size of a single 
                  CD jewel-case. 
                
The title page of the Orgelbüchlein 
                  or ‘Little Organ Book’ dates from Bach’s time at Cöthen but 
                  it is generally agreed that these pieces were mostly written 
                  at an earlier period, in Weimar, before 1717. Bach originally 
                  left space for 165 such pieces but some pages bear the title 
                  only; just 46 were completed. Their purpose is something of 
                  a mystery: the dedication suggests that they were to be used 
                  as models by less-experienced organists who wished to play an 
                  organ prelude before the singing of the chorale in the Lutheran 
                  services. A cycle of such chorales, intended to be sung in unison 
                  by the congregation, existed in Bach’s day; probably the best 
                  known are Luther’s Ein feste Burg which Bach used in 
                  his Cantata No.80 and the Advent chorale Wachet auf! 
                  (Cantata No.140). BWV645, the prelude on Wachet auf! 
                  from Bach’s later collection known as the Schübler Chorales, 
                  will be familiar as the organ piece which ends the King’s College 
                  Cambridge Nine Lessons and Carols broadcast on Christmas 
                  Eve. 
                
The slim but informative 
                  booklet offers a good deal of information about all the pieces; 
                  those interested in discovering more about the Orgelbüchlein 
                  – and about Bach’s music in general – should start with Malcolm 
                  Boyd, The Master Musicians: Bach (London: Dent, 2nd 
                  edition, 1990) pages 48-53. Parts of the booklet are printed 
                  in Courier or a similar typewriter font, which is hard to read. 
                
Whatever their original 
                  purpose, Bach never intended the pieces in the Orgelbüchlein 
                  to be played through in their entirety and recordings which 
                  do so run the risk of sameness. The most recommendable of these 
                  are Wolfgang Zerer’s on a single Hänssler CD (92.094) and Christopher 
                  Herrick’s on Hyperion. The Herrick received a strong recommendation 
                  here on the MusicWeb site from Terry Barfoot when he reviewed 
                  the 16-CD complete collection (CDS44121/36) 
                  but appears also to be still available on one CD (CDA66756), 
                  usually offered at less than full price. Zerer plays the organ 
                  of the Martinkerk, Groningen, essentially a 1984 restoration 
                  of a 1730 organ, parts of which date back to 1450, whilst Herrick 
                  plays the Metzler organ of St Martin, Rheinfelden. Both seem 
                  to be ideal instruments for these works. 
                
              
Nordstoga plays the main 
                organ of Oslo Cathedral. Despite the baroque casework, preserved 
                from the 1727 organ and illustrated in the booklet, this is a 
                modern three-manual instrument (Ryde and Berg 1998). The booklet 
                lists all the stops and the Afontibus website offers more information, 
                including the claim that “the expression 
                of the old baroque façade has had a certain influence on the aesthetics 
                of the new instrument, both in respect of craftmanship [sic] and 
                sound. The new organ has a solemn sound with transparent and fresh 
                harmonics reminicent [sic] of the organ ideals of the 18th century.” 
                (The booklet portrays the organ case in its old grey guise, the 
                website in its newly-restored green.) Neither the booklet nor 
                the website offers details of the registration actually employed 
                for each piece. Why cannot record companies follow the example 
                of Challenge Classics, whose Bach organ CDs offer full details 
                of the registration employed by Jacques van Oortmerssen?  
              
In a recent review I found the sound on Volume 8 of Oortmerssen’s 
                  Bach series (CC72153) bass-heavy, with too much use of 16’ and 
                  32’ stops. Nordstoga sounds far less heavy, producing what many 
                  will find an ideal middle-of-the-road style. Though normally 
                  a lover of a more authentic style, I found the performances 
                  here very enjoyable. The Great Manual has just one 16’ stop, 
                  the Swell two and the Pedals two 32’ stops but I am not sure 
                  that he uses any of these; if he does, the effect is not overdone. 
                  Though Oslo Cathedral is, presumably, a large building, the 
                  reverberation is not excessive as heard on these discs. Perhaps 
                  the engineers have tamed any excessive reverberation; the recording 
                  as a whole, as I have indicated, is bright, clear and wide-ranging, 
                  with no hint of boom in the bass. 
                
The preludes on the first CD cover the period from Advent to 
                  New Year. I compared them with what has hitherto been my favourite 
                  version of these, on a CD of Bach’s Christmas Chorales by Lionel 
                  Rogg (Harmonia Mundi HMA190717 if still avalable).
                
Nordstoga came out well from the comparison, with tempi almost 
                  an exact match; if anything, Nordstoga is usually a second or 
                  two faster, as in his In dulci jubilo, BWV608 (not a 
                  moment too fast at 1:19 against Rogg’s 1:34). Though Rogg’s 
                  Silbermann organ at Arlesheim is a very different instrument, 
                  and I still prefer its lighter, more tremulous sound, these 
                  new performances will take their place alongside Rogg’s. The 
                  New Year chorale, Das alte Jahr vergangen ist, BWV614, 
                  which rounds off the chorales on the Afontibus CD, receives 
                  a particularly successful performance (more of a welcome to 
                  the new year at 2:05 than Rogg’s more wistful look back at the 
                  old at 2:23).
                
              
The Fantasia and Fugue, BWV542, which opens the second 
                CD, provides an opportunity for comparison with Oortmerssen’s 
                version of the Fantasia alone. At 6:14 against Oortmerssen’s 5:52, one might expect Nordstoga to sound ponderous, but such 
                is not the case; with his lighter-sounding registration, less 
                reverberant acoustic and more immediate recording, he actually 
                sounds more lively. I compared Oortmerssen’s performance of this 
                piece unfavourably with Peter Hurford’s (444 410-2, 17 CDs, or 
                a Double Decca, 443 485-2). Between Nordstoga and Hurford honours 
                are about even in this piece.  
              
Few will buy this set for the non-Orgelbüchlein pieces, 
                though they are mostly amongst Bach’s more popular organ works. 
                Two of them, BWV532 and BWV548 are also included on a Naxos disc of Bach Organ 
                Favourites (8.550184). The Flentrop organ of Oberlin College, which Rübsam plays 
                on that CD embodies a philosophy similar to that exemplified by 
                the Oslo organ – a modern instrument inspired by the organ-builders 
                of the past. In both works Nordstoga comes in significantly faster 
                than Rübsam without sounding at all hurried; Rübsam sounds a little 
                ponderous and his registration a little thick by comparison, though 
                perfectly acceptable within the terms of his own recital.  
              
These CDs carry text for those players which can display it, 
                  which proves something of a mixed blessing: the organist’s name 
                  is given as K?re (å is not an ASCI character) and the opening 
                  item on the second disc is displayed as Fantasie in g-moll 
                  (the correct designation in German notation), then BWV516 (incorrectly). 
                  The Fugue which follows is then incorrectly stated to be the 
                  prelude which is actually the third item on the disc. By the 
                  end of the disc we are somehow back to the correct information. 
                
If you want the Orgelbüchlein on its own, then you would 
                  be better served by Herrick or Zerer. If you like the additional 
                  works on the Afontibus set in good, middle-of-the-road performances, 
                  well recorded, you will hardly go wrong. Readers who do not 
                  know the Orgelbüchlein are certainly recommended to try 
                  one of these recordings; I may have made the preludes sound 
                  academic, when they are anything but. Try BWV637, Durch Adams 
                  Fall ist ganz verderbt (verderbt, not verdorben 
                  as in modern German) where the falling sevenths in the pedals 
                  depict Adam’s fall or the descending scales of BWV607, Von 
                  Himmel kam der Engel schar, where the descent of the Christmas 
                  angels is depicted. 
                
I have not encountered the Afontibus label before – Nordstoga’s 
                  earlier recordings are on the Simax label – and am not sure 
                  at what price-level this set is intended to sell; if it is to 
                  be reasonably priced, that is all the more reason to recommend 
                  it.
                  
                Brian Wilson