The younger organists really seem to like this. It is a good piece of music. And it sounds harder than it is. The Bach style pedal passages are also great exercises in technique. I agree there are a number of great organ Toccatas in D minor including those by Bach and Buxtehude.
Great sequences, splendid figures in pedals, the composer did not hide the valuation to organ music of baroque - that is our happiness: we get to enjoy brilliant organ music
Why don't you play the first two eighth notes in tempo each time? I assume you're trying to keep things from getting muddy. But the consequence is exactly the opposite. Not only is it still thick and somewhat muddy, but we lose the one grounding thing we need to pull us from the muddiness, which is the sense of rhythm/time. It's very disconcerting. But I love the piece, nonetheless.
@@bennaarsongidi9269 Thank you for your profound and erudite lesson in music criticism. Your sterling prose and profound ideas stand as inspirations to us all. Alas, I have not yet been able to discover a way of conveying the sound of beef stew boiling in the pot to a UA-cam audience--except through the circular means of citing the unfortunate performance on this video. Should I discover such a way, I shall be sure to contact you posthaste.
Brilliant piece and actually not very difficult to master - try it!
Belle Toccata d'un compositeur qui m'était inconnu, merci M.Oberzaucher ! Un instrument digne de cette pièce.
The younger organists really seem to like this. It is a good piece of music. And it sounds harder than it is. The Bach style pedal passages are also great exercises in technique. I agree there are a number of great organ Toccatas in D minor including those by Bach and Buxtehude.
Reminds me Vivaldi and some of Bach: how to get a grandious effect with easy and simply written music.
No kidding :D
Great sequences, splendid figures in pedals, the composer did not hide the valuation to organ music of baroque - that is our happiness: we get to enjoy brilliant organ music
Eblouissant specimen d'orgue romantique ...sur un superbe instrument !
bien belle toccata ! merci de nous l'avoir fait découvrir.
Splendid toccata! Excellent performance./Dr. Fred Ussery
Musique intéressante ! Je ne connaissais pas ce compositeur ...
Juste magnifique
Amazing!
why is this so beautiful
Magistral interpretación!!
Hermoso .música 🎶
All toccatas in D minor are great by nature ;)
@@chronochromie772 I knew you were gonna reply that XD
Just kidding ya ;)
@AntoniusTertius: Like BWV 565 ...
but why doesnt the organist play the first two eight notes in tempo?
You are right, bad
Is this available to download to print the score???
Why don't you play the first two eighth notes in tempo each time? I assume you're trying to keep things from getting muddy. But the consequence is exactly the opposite. Not only is it still thick and somewhat muddy, but we lose the one grounding thing we need to pull us from the muddiness, which is the sense of rhythm/time. It's very disconcerting. But I love the piece, nonetheless.
I certainly noticed something not quite right but don’t know the piece well. I think you’re correct on that point.
Wo kann man es kaufen?
Surprisingly beautiful music for the time; but the performance is terrible-sounds like beef stew rather than music.
It’s sometimes better to just post what it’s meant to sound like .
Talk is cheap .
@@bennaarsongidi9269Do you mean that musical performances must never be criticized?
@@danielwaitzman2118 its superior to criticise by showing examples so
clarity of the said position becomes obvious
@@bennaarsongidi9269 Thank you for your profound and erudite lesson in music criticism. Your sterling prose and profound ideas stand as inspirations to us all. Alas, I have not yet been able to discover a way of conveying the sound of beef stew boiling in the pot to a UA-cam audience--except through the circular means of citing the unfortunate performance on this video. Should I discover such a way, I shall be sure to contact you posthaste.
In my humble opinion I prefer it played at a slower pace where the beauty of the work can be enhanced