Unlimited Streaming
Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps
Start my trial period and start listening to this albumEnjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription
SubscribeEnjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription
Digital Download
Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.
When in 2017 Iveta Apkalna was allowed to play the opening concert for the new organ of the Konzertkirche Neubrandenburg (Germany), she probably had already inwardly made the plan to record an album with exactly this instrument one day. It would also not be the first time that she has made such a first recording, which we could already experience with the organ of the Hamburg Elbphilharmonie as well as the double organ of the Taiwanese Kaohsiung Center for the Arts. It took her three years to get to know the Neubrandenburg organ better, to study its personal sound and characteristic subtleties during many rehearsals and concerts, and finally to record her very personally selected program Triptychon at Berlin Classics.
With the composers Vasks, Bach and Liszt, the concert organist presents a repertoire that not only spans over three centuries, but also three religious denominations. And yet, for Apkalna, the connection is abundantly clear: "All three of these composers pray through their music, look in the same direction, and give us the same perspective and space to reflect and perhaps find ourselves as new human beings." The personal closeness Apkalna maintains with her compatriot Vasks is also audible in the recordings - as if the composer and she share the same secret and pass it on to the listener through the music. With Bach and Liszt it seems no different - the organist manages to do more than justice to both, such different composers. Both Bach's quietly contemplative sound and Liszt's tempestuously agitated tone come into their own uniquely. A premiere for the organ and the artist, who manages to get all the stops out of the instrument. © Lena Germann/Qobuz
---
Having garnered the ultimate accolades from a host of arts review pages for her premiere recording on the Hamburg Elbphilharmonie’s organ and on the double organ of the Taiwanese Kaohsiung Center for the Arts, concert organist Iveta Apkalna now presents her third release on the Berlin Classics label as a triple album. "Triptychon" spans three centuries and three religious confessions on one single organ: Johann Sebastian Bach, Franz Liszt and Pēteris Vasks can be heard on this, the first release of a recording played in Neubrandenburg’s Concert Church on the organ which she helped to develop and inaugurated.
Apkalna opens the first altar panel with three works by her compatriot and personal friend: alongside Arvo Pärt, Pēteris Vasks is the best known and most often played Baltic composer. “Latvia is Pēteris Vasks and Pēteris Vasks is Latvia”, explains the organist. “I hear the landscape of Latvia in his music, the far horizons of our flat country, the meadows and forests, birdsong and the sea. Pēteris Vasks is undoubtedly a truly Latvian character, though he also breathes the "global air". Otherwise people all around the world would not love his music”.
Johann Sebastian Bach is at the heart of Iveta Apkalna’s triptych – just as he is central to the career of any organist. For her, his Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major BWV564, the Trio Sonata in D minor BWV 527 and the 6 Schübler Chorales, BWV 645-650 represent the greatest possible stylistic, compositional and tonal variety backed up by personal motives. “I believe this is truly a phenomenon: Bach’s music touches everyone, really everyone, and leaves its mark on the lives of every human being, even those who normally have nothing to do with music”.
Franz Liszt, who achieved worldwide fame as a travelling virtuoso and visionary composer, was also a formidable organist who, towards the end of his career, took holy orders. His oeuvre too is close to Iveta Apkalna’s heart; indeed, she defines as a sort of calling card the Prelude and Fugue on B-A-C-H or the chorale arrangement of Nun danket alle Gott, which has a link with Apkalna’s “home organ” in Riga Cathedral, since Franz Liszt contributed the work for the inauguration of the instrument. The contrast could hardly be greater: Vasks, the pastor’s son with a close spiritual affinity to nature, Bach, the monumental Protestant music-maker, and Liszt, the lounge lizard with his adoring groupies who found his vocation in later life.
To play all these works by such highly diverse composers on the same organ is not something to be taken on lightly. The former Marienkirche in Neubrandenburg, which was deconsecrated in 2001 and then revived as a secular concert hall, was gifted an organ in 2017 thanks to the generous sponsorship of businessman Günther Weber. The job of building a new organ was entrusted to two long-established organ-building workshops, Klais (Bonn) and Schuke (Berlin). As the two organ builders Philipp Klais and Martin Schwarz explain: “The concert church in Neubrandenburg has its very own, unique acoustic, one that we organ builders greatly appreciate”.
The auditorium has an ideal combination of clarity and reverberation time. This acoustic characteristic was the point of departure in deciding on the tonal concept. This was achieved in close cooperation between the organ workshops in coordination with Iveta Apkalna, whom Günther Weber had requested to provide artistic advice.
With its 2852 pipes, measuring between 8 millimetres and almost 7 metres high, the organ has 70 stops. There are 65 pipes in the organ case, the visible part of the instrument: 45 metal pipes in front and 20 wooden ones in the sides of the case. All of the visible pipes are sonorous. Iveta Apkalna is impressed: “The organ sounds incredibly warm, velvet-textured and well rounded. And thanks to its clearly defined 70 stops, it provides the organist, whether playing solo or with orchestra, with every opportunity to play works ranging from the early Baroque through the Romantic literature to modern compositions. Thanks to the detailed process involved and the intensive, friendly collaboration with the two organ-builders Philipp Klais and Martin Schwarz and with the organ’s sponsor Günther Weber, this instrument really turned into a personal love story”. © Berlin Classics
You are currently listening to samples.
Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.
Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.
From £10.83/month
Peteris VASKS, Composer - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist - Schott Music GmbH & Co KG, MusicPublisher
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Peteris VASKS, Composer - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist - Musikverlag Hans Sikorski GmbH, MusicPublisher - Schott Music GmbH & Co KG, MusicPublisher
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Peteris VASKS, Composer - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist - Schott Music GmbH & Co KG, MusicPublisher
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
DISC 2
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Johann Sebastian Bach, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
DISC 3
Franz Liszt, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Franz Liszt, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Franz Liszt, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Franz Liszt, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Franz Liszt, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher - Iveta Apkalna, Organ, Artist, MainArtist
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Album review
When in 2017 Iveta Apkalna was allowed to play the opening concert for the new organ of the Konzertkirche Neubrandenburg (Germany), she probably had already inwardly made the plan to record an album with exactly this instrument one day. It would also not be the first time that she has made such a first recording, which we could already experience with the organ of the Hamburg Elbphilharmonie as well as the double organ of the Taiwanese Kaohsiung Center for the Arts. It took her three years to get to know the Neubrandenburg organ better, to study its personal sound and characteristic subtleties during many rehearsals and concerts, and finally to record her very personally selected program Triptychon at Berlin Classics.
With the composers Vasks, Bach and Liszt, the concert organist presents a repertoire that not only spans over three centuries, but also three religious denominations. And yet, for Apkalna, the connection is abundantly clear: "All three of these composers pray through their music, look in the same direction, and give us the same perspective and space to reflect and perhaps find ourselves as new human beings." The personal closeness Apkalna maintains with her compatriot Vasks is also audible in the recordings - as if the composer and she share the same secret and pass it on to the listener through the music. With Bach and Liszt it seems no different - the organist manages to do more than justice to both, such different composers. Both Bach's quietly contemplative sound and Liszt's tempestuously agitated tone come into their own uniquely. A premiere for the organ and the artist, who manages to get all the stops out of the instrument. © Lena Germann/Qobuz
---
Having garnered the ultimate accolades from a host of arts review pages for her premiere recording on the Hamburg Elbphilharmonie’s organ and on the double organ of the Taiwanese Kaohsiung Center for the Arts, concert organist Iveta Apkalna now presents her third release on the Berlin Classics label as a triple album. "Triptychon" spans three centuries and three religious confessions on one single organ: Johann Sebastian Bach, Franz Liszt and Pēteris Vasks can be heard on this, the first release of a recording played in Neubrandenburg’s Concert Church on the organ which she helped to develop and inaugurated.
Apkalna opens the first altar panel with three works by her compatriot and personal friend: alongside Arvo Pärt, Pēteris Vasks is the best known and most often played Baltic composer. “Latvia is Pēteris Vasks and Pēteris Vasks is Latvia”, explains the organist. “I hear the landscape of Latvia in his music, the far horizons of our flat country, the meadows and forests, birdsong and the sea. Pēteris Vasks is undoubtedly a truly Latvian character, though he also breathes the "global air". Otherwise people all around the world would not love his music”.
Johann Sebastian Bach is at the heart of Iveta Apkalna’s triptych – just as he is central to the career of any organist. For her, his Toccata, Adagio and Fugue in C major BWV564, the Trio Sonata in D minor BWV 527 and the 6 Schübler Chorales, BWV 645-650 represent the greatest possible stylistic, compositional and tonal variety backed up by personal motives. “I believe this is truly a phenomenon: Bach’s music touches everyone, really everyone, and leaves its mark on the lives of every human being, even those who normally have nothing to do with music”.
Franz Liszt, who achieved worldwide fame as a travelling virtuoso and visionary composer, was also a formidable organist who, towards the end of his career, took holy orders. His oeuvre too is close to Iveta Apkalna’s heart; indeed, she defines as a sort of calling card the Prelude and Fugue on B-A-C-H or the chorale arrangement of Nun danket alle Gott, which has a link with Apkalna’s “home organ” in Riga Cathedral, since Franz Liszt contributed the work for the inauguration of the instrument. The contrast could hardly be greater: Vasks, the pastor’s son with a close spiritual affinity to nature, Bach, the monumental Protestant music-maker, and Liszt, the lounge lizard with his adoring groupies who found his vocation in later life.
To play all these works by such highly diverse composers on the same organ is not something to be taken on lightly. The former Marienkirche in Neubrandenburg, which was deconsecrated in 2001 and then revived as a secular concert hall, was gifted an organ in 2017 thanks to the generous sponsorship of businessman Günther Weber. The job of building a new organ was entrusted to two long-established organ-building workshops, Klais (Bonn) and Schuke (Berlin). As the two organ builders Philipp Klais and Martin Schwarz explain: “The concert church in Neubrandenburg has its very own, unique acoustic, one that we organ builders greatly appreciate”.
The auditorium has an ideal combination of clarity and reverberation time. This acoustic characteristic was the point of departure in deciding on the tonal concept. This was achieved in close cooperation between the organ workshops in coordination with Iveta Apkalna, whom Günther Weber had requested to provide artistic advice.
With its 2852 pipes, measuring between 8 millimetres and almost 7 metres high, the organ has 70 stops. There are 65 pipes in the organ case, the visible part of the instrument: 45 metal pipes in front and 20 wooden ones in the sides of the case. All of the visible pipes are sonorous. Iveta Apkalna is impressed: “The organ sounds incredibly warm, velvet-textured and well rounded. And thanks to its clearly defined 70 stops, it provides the organist, whether playing solo or with orchestra, with every opportunity to play works ranging from the early Baroque through the Romantic literature to modern compositions. Thanks to the detailed process involved and the intensive, friendly collaboration with the two organ-builders Philipp Klais and Martin Schwarz and with the organ’s sponsor Günther Weber, this instrument really turned into a personal love story”. © Berlin Classics
About the album
- 3 disc(s) - 20 track(s)
- Total length: 02:25:48
- Main artists: Iveta Apkalna
- Composer: Various Composers
- Label: Berlin Classics
- Genre: Classical
2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH 2021 Berlin Classics/Edel Germany GmbH
Improve album informationWhy buy on Qobuz...
-
Stream or download your music
Buy an album or an individual track. Or listen to our entire catalogue with our high-quality unlimited streaming subscriptions.
-
Zero DRM
The downloaded files belong to you, without any usage limit. You can download them as many times as you like.
-
Choose the format best suited for you
Download your purchases in a wide variety of formats (FLAC, ALAC, WAV, AIFF...) depending on your needs.
-
Listen to your purchases on our apps
Download the Qobuz apps for smartphones, tablets and computers, and listen to your purchases wherever you go.