| Author/Contributor(s): | Ochse, Orpha |
| Publisher: | Indiana University Press |
| Date: | 08/22/2000 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Organists and Organ Playing in Nineteenth-Century France and Belgium
Orpha Ochse
From the catastrophes of the French Revolution to a Golden Age of organ culture.
[O]ne simply must recommend this highly coherent and well-illustrated book. . . .--L'Orgue
Even the well-informed reader will find a number of surprises. Who knows, for example, that Fryderyk Chopin played the organ for a funeral service and that Lefébure-Wély, in turn, played the great pianist and composer's Préludes for his funeral at the Madeleine? The abundance of details, we should add, does nothing to obscure the architectural clarity of this book. --La Flûte harmonique
Now Ms. Ochse has succeeded in producing still another landmark work. . . . Although the work is extraordinarily well documented, the prose retains a narrative quality throughout, at times even taking on the character of good storytelling. --The American Organist
Orpha Ochse, Professor Emerita at Whittier College, is author of The History of the Organ in the United States (Indiana University Press). She is well known as a teacher, lecturer, recitalist, and church musician.