Jung-A Lee: A Private Organ Recital in Walt Disney Concert Hall (Tape)
$800.00
Jung-A Lee in WDCH (Three Reels)
Jung-A Lee
Analog Tape
Woods and Brooks, Adam Knight Gilbert
Hamburger Totentanz, Guy Bovet
Carrillon de Westminster, Louis Vierne
Elevation: Tierce en taille, François Couperin
Ciacona in C Minor, BuxWV 159, Diderich Buxtehude
Miroir, Ad Wammes
Toccata, John Weaver
Mein junges Leben hat ein End, Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck
Prelude in B Minor, BWV 544, J. S. Bach
Fantasia on Blessed Assurance, Jung-A Lee
Les Anges, Olivier Messiaen
Concert Variations on The Star Spangled Banner, Dudley Buck
15 ips, CCIR curve, tails out
Larry Toy –
Here is most of the article I just published on the What’s Best Forum:
Bob Attiyeh, based in Los Angeles, is one of five producer/engineers of high quality commercial reel to reel tapes in North America, through his company Yarlung Records. Two are the big boys in the field – the granddaddy Tape Project and Chad Kassam’s Ultra Tapes. Both of these license famous and occasionally not so famous albums to transfer to tape. The other three, Yarlung, IPI (Jonathan Horwich in Chicago) and Ultra Analogue (Ed Pong in Toronto) record their own artists. What sets Bob and Yarlung apart, is that he chooses a very wide range of repertoire and artists, from solo and chamber music (both classical and jazz) to very large ensembles – a Mahler symphony and a large choral recital, all recorded in Los Angeles area concert venues and studios. This recording was done at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles, famed for its design by star architect (my architect daughter tells me the proper term is the portmanteau “starchitect”) Frank Gehry and home to the Los Angeles Philharmonic. It is a solo recording, but features the great Rosale Organ, designed and built for the Walt Disney Hall which opened in 2003. The organ is massive – 6134 pipes, reaching down to 16Hz with a 32 foot long pipe. The highest fundamental frequency is 10,548 Hz, so an organ can play both higher and lower than any other instrument – aptly named the “king of instruments.”
What makes this album, entitled “A Private Organ Recital in Walt Disney Concert Hall” so fascinating for me is the sheer joy in the playing. I had a smile on my face as well as a look of amazement, while listening to the album, which I played straight through because it was so entertaining, something I rarely if ever do with an organ album. This is a complete private concert, attended by the recording engineers and a small number of invited guest (who are completely silent), composed of 12 pieces, lasting a total of 75 minutes. The first piece in the album Adam Gilbert’s “Brooks and Streams” is a fun piece that makes use of the range of sounds that an organ can make, while the last piece is a tour-de-force romantic era set of variations on the US National anthem, “The Star Spangled Banner.” In between there are pieces by Bach, Buxtehude, Vierne, Messiaen, and others. The album is three tapes long, making it longer than most. Jung-A Lee is a virtuoso organist, who plays in concerts around the world. She has a master’s from Yale and doctorate from Boston University. While in Boston she was a resident organist at the Harvard Memorial Church. The sonics are spectacular – Bob has captured a wonderful acoustic of Walt Disney (I have attended an LA Philharmonic concert there, but never have heard the organ), so it is a real show piece for your system, particularly if it goes very deep.
If you haven’t heard a classical pipe organ, this is a great way to start.
Larry Toy