I first heard the lovely old organ of Espoo Cathedral when 
    it was recorded for the very last time in 2009-2010 (
review). 
    Then, as now, it was played by Petri Koivusalo, the cathedral’s organist 
    and director of their chamber choir. It seems fitting that he and his brother 
    Mika, the man behind all these Fuga and Alba releases, jointly saw out the 
    old and ushered in the new. The previous instrument, much modified over the 
    years, was scheduled for further renovations but prohibitive costs meant an 
    entirely new one was the more sensible option. The Finnish organ builders 
    Veikko Vertanen began work on the organ in the autumn of 2011, and it was 
    finally inaugurated on 3rd June 2012. 
      
    Listening to Petri and Mika’s first Espoo recording in preparation for 
    this review I was struck anew by the love and care they showed in compiling 
    that programme and recording it. Indeed, this time around I surrendered even 
    more willingly to the winsome sound of that old instrument; also, I found 
    Petri’s playing even more committed than I’d remembered. This 
    is no parish organist just busking his way through the music with more enthusiasm 
    than accuracy; dynamics are finely judged, registrations are carefully chosen, 
    and this recording is well up to the high standards of Mika’s earlier 
    ones. 
      
    Given my renewed affection for the first disc I approached the second one 
    with some trepidation. I had no qualms about the programme - even though I 
    would have to negotiate a large chunk of Bach - but I did wonder how this 
    modern instrument would sound in this venerable space. Well, in the spirit 
    of something old, something new the joyful tolling of Oskar Merikanto’s 
    
Wedding Hymn is the perfect opener. My initial impression was that 
    the new organ has greater heft and is more secure and well rounded in its 
    delivery. Its tone seems darker, more ‘woody’, than before, and 
    some of the open-hearted character of the old one has gone. That was inevitable, 
    I suppose, but the good news is that the gains far outweigh any perceived 
    losses. 
      
    Make no mistake this is still a most beguiling sound, and the contrapuntal 
    writing of the Bach pieces is as lively and articulate as it should be. However, 
    the pedals’ oaken quality here is an acquired taste, and I yearned for 
    something less attention-seeking. That’s a minor quibble, for Petri’s 
    playing is always spontaneous and, despite all that Bach, it’s surprisingly 
    varied too. The emphasis on the Lutheran hymn tune 
Ein feste burg 
    ist unser Gott (A mighty fortress is our God) is a nice touch, for it 
    neatly underlines the cathedral’s enduring influence across the ages. 
    
      
    As for the wonderfully spacious, well-balanced recording it’s everything 
    we’ve come to expect from someone who is pre-eminent in the field; whether 
    one opts for the CD layer or to the Super Audio one the sheer prowess of this 
    production shines through. Listening to the heartfelt loveliness of Brahms’s 
    
Herzlich tut mich verlangen - so gracefully pitched, so naturally caught 
    - confirms that the brothers’ priorities are all the right ones; the 
    music always takes precedence over self-seeking showmanship or empty spectacle, 
    and that’s not a given in such programmes. 
      
    Wilhelm Rudnick’s 
Allein Gott in der höh’ - simple, 
    understated, immersive - is a real find, and Petri brings out the work’s 
    quiet, devotional character in the most direct and unaffected way. Goodness, 
    this really is playing of sensitivity and style, virtues that pretty much 
    sum up the disc for me. After that intimacy the Mendelssohn sonata has compensating 
    breadth and brio, and Petri’s own pieces add some bravura to the mix. 
    Gregarious but not overblown, there are moments of repose too; the celestial, 
    bell-like tones of 
Herzlich tut mich verlangen, the second of his chorale 
    suites, are utterly captivating, and this time the pedals aren’t at 
    all intrusive. 
      
    The last two items - the Nicolai-Liszt especially - are the kind of pieces 
    that draw many to the ‘king of instruments’ in the first place. 
    All too often such displays tend to degenerate into a fatiguing cacophony 
    of sound, but thanks to judicious playing and a rock-solid, unexaggerated 
    recording that’s never a problem here. In short, if you’re familiar 
    with Mika’s methods you’ll know exactly what to expect from this 
    most engaging collection. 
      
    The disc begins and ends in a mood of celebration, and how appropriate in 
    the context of this new - and rather magnificent - instrument. Any reservations 
    I may have had at the outset seem churlish in the face of such splendour; 
    factor in the brothers’ good liner-notes and eye-catching photographs 
    and you have a very desirable package indeed. 
      
    Quietly triumphant; a heartfelt homage to a fine cathedral and its new organ. 
    
      
    
Dan Morgan
    http://twitter.com/mahlerei 
    
      
    Quietly triumphant; a heartfelt homage to a fine cathedral and its new organ.