German composer Günther Becker was born in 1924, two years 
                    before Hans Werner Henze, four years before Karlheinz Stockhausen 
                    and six years after Bernd Alois Zimmermann. As a boy he showed 
                    musical talent on the accordion. As an adolescent he was sent 
                    to the Eastern Front in World War II. When he made it back, 
                    despite suffering severe frostbite, he was sent out again 
                    to Italy, where he was taken prisoner by the American forces. 
                    After the war he studied music in Karlsruhe and composition 
                    privately with Wolfgang Fortner. In Heidelberg he worked as 
                    pianist for ballet classes and in a satirical cabaret. Later 
                    he continued his studies with Fortner at the Detmold Academy. 
                    In 1956 he went to Greece as music teacher and private tutor 
                    to Prince Constantine. He kept in contact with the West-German 
                    music scene, visiting and lecturing several times at the summer 
                    courses in Darmstadt. After the military coup of 1968 he left 
                    Greece and returned to Germany, and founded the live electronic 
                    music group MegaHertz. He taught composition and live-electronics 
                    at the Robert Schumann Institute in Düsseldorf, where he took 
                    on the mantle of Milko Kelemen and attracted a body of pupils 
                    from around the world. Becker retired from teaching in 1989 
                    and moved as a freelance composer to Bad Lippspringe, where 
                    he died in 2007.
                  
Günther 
                    Becker disowned his youthful compositions and distanced himself 
                    from the earliest of his published works. He left the dodecaphonic 
                    classicism of Schoenberg and the epigrammatic style of Webern 
                    and turned to a new style around 1960. His interest in electronic 
                    music obviously influenced his instrumental writing. Linear 
                    thinking is replaced by multi-layered procedures, as introduced 
                    by Ligeti in the sixties. Becker kept one aspect of the hard-core 
                    avant-gardism of Darmstadt alive: his music is highly dissonant 
                    and there are no concessions to the listener. 
                  
The German 
                    label Cybele has taken Becker under its wing with love and 
                    care. This CD is the fifth in their effort to issue the complete 
                    music of a composer, who, despite his importance, could hardly 
                    be labelled a public favourite. So far four titles have appeared: 
                    Portrait – Cybele 660.202 (2CD); Miscellaneous works 
                    by the Notabu.ensemble – Cybele 360.201; Electro-Acoustic 
                    Music – Cybele SACD 960.401; Magnum Mysterium - Cybele 
                    SACD 960.402. It is certainly telling that a piece such as 
                    Magnum Mysterium has had precisely three performances. 
                    That live performance from 1980 was issued in 2004, carefully 
                    upgraded to SACD. The same goes for the three pieces on the 
                    electro-acoustic CD, making that issue highly interesting 
                    for students of this repertoire in its pre-digital phase. 
                  
The CD at 
                    hand is a brand new affair: a pure 5 channel super audio recording, 
                    made in 2008 and containing the complete works for organ. 
                    Martin Schmeding plays the 2004 Sauer organ (III/65) at the 
                    Evangelische Auferstehungskirche in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel. 
                    This instrument bears the name ‘Felix Mendelssohn’ Europa 
                    organ. Its concept was largely developed by Oskar Gottlieb 
                    Blarr, composer, and organist of the Neander Church in Düsseldorf. 
                    The result is an organ in which the horizontal reed stops 
                    of Spain, the principals and tremulants of Italy, the cornets 
                    of France and the mixture stops of Germany are unified in 
                    a single instrument. Its compass has been extended by a large 
                    variety of overtone stops, for instance a blues fourth (1 
                    1/7’ + 16/19’). 
                  
The four 
                    titles on this CD cover a period of almost a quarter century, 
                    beginning in 1969, with what has become Becker’s best known 
                    composition, Meteoron for organ, percussion and two-track 
                    tape recording. Meteoron was written one year after 
                    Becker left Greece, and sounds like a fond farewell. In it, 
                    Becker reacts to recent avant-garde developments in organ 
                    writing, as witnessed in Ligeti’s Volumina and Kagel’s 
                    Improvisations ajoutées. These new techniques include 
                    unusual handling of the instrument, such as switching the 
                    wind machine on and off during play, and manipulating the 
                    sound by opening stops halfway. Becker does not apply any 
                    of these techniques; he remains true to traditional playing 
                    - if one could call it that - as did Olivier Messiaen, another 
                    great modernizer of organ music in the twentieth century. 
                  
Meteoron 
                    is 
                    the name of the main monastery located among the gigantic 
                    Meteora boulders in western Thessaly. Byzantine monks chanting 
                    hymns for Pentecost provide the raw material for the tape 
                    tracks. Organ and percussion are equal partners and build 
                    a monolithic structure out of big granite boulders of sound. 
                    The dry heat and the sun-drenched landscape are almost palpable. 
                    It has proven to be an important addition to the repertoire, 
                    now forty years young and taken up by several organists. 
                  
À la 
                    mémoire de Josquin dates 
                    from 1975 and uses very clear quotations from a number of 
                    masses by this composer. These quotations function as interludes 
                    in a structure that once again is built much like multi-layered 
                    electronic music. Drei kleine Orgelstücke originated 
                    as interludes in a concert of sacred music to commemorate 
                    the wooden sculpture ‘Mother and Child’ by Hans Schweizer. 
                    They are subtitled Meditation I, Litanei and 
                    Meditation II. 
                  
After a 
                    long hiatus Becker returned to the organ in 1993, with Interpolationen, 
                    a free toccata of sorts. Here Becker combines fast passages 
                    of linear sound with great washes of layered clusters. 
                    Messiaen’s Livre d’orgue sometimes springs to mind. 
                    It is a highly virtuosic piece, premiered by Werner Jacob, 
                    who also introduced audiences to Meteoron. 
                  
Martin Schmeding, 
                    organist of the Neanderkirche in Düsseldorf, has made several 
                    fine recordings for Cybele. He is aided and abetted by the 
                    label’s driving force, Ingo Schmidt-Lucas, who has captured 
                    a beautiful and true-to-life sound image in stellar super 
                    audio sound. Schmeding is also involved in a definitive registration 
                    of the complete organ works of Franz Schmidt - not to be missed. 
                    Here he delivers what must certainly be the benchmark recording 
                    of this thorny, but ultimately very rewarding repertoire. 
                    Certainly, Meteoron will prove to be a classic in the 
                    repertoire for organ and electronic sounds. 
                  
Siebe 
                    Riedstra
                  
see 
                    also Review 
                    by Dominy Clements