Maximum Reger

Diverse
Fugue State Films
FSFDVD011

99,95

6 DVD’s

Availability: In stock

SKU: dfsf011 Category: Tag:

This exhaustive boxed-set establishes Max Reger as one of the early 20th century’s greatest composers.

More than 15 hours of content over 6 DVDs includes three feature-length documentaries, plus filmed performances
of 12 hours of Reger’s best music for orchestra, organ,
voice, violin, piano and chamber ensemble.

The massive programme of music charts Reger’s compositional output from the age of sixteen to the time of his death and includes a third of his 146 opus numbers:

Opus 1, 4, 5, 13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 26, 27, 30, 37, 52, 54, 56, 57, 59, 60, 62, 65, 66, 67, 69, 72, 73, 74, 76, 79, 80, 81, 82, 87, 89, 91, 103, 116, 117, 118, 124, 127, 128, 129, 131, 135, 142 and 143.

Five hours of Reger’s organ music is filmed on the following instruments:

Sauer-Orgel
St Petri Dom, Bremen

Sauer-Orgel
Lutherkirche, Chemnitz

Walcker-Orgel
Stadtkirche, Ludwigsburg

Link-Orgel
Pauluskirche, Ulm

Weimbs-Orgel
Michaeliskirche, Weiden

____________________________________________

A brilliant roster of musicians:

Organists:
Bernhard Buttmann
Bernhard Haas
Graham Barber

Violinists:
Sayaka Shoji
Katharina Wildermuth
Egidius Streiff
Klaudyna Schulze-Broniewska

Pianists:
Markus Becker
Rudolf Meister
Oliver Kern
Andrew Brownell
Alessandro Tardino
Evgenia Rubinova
Bernhard Renzikowski
Hagen Schwarzrock
Julien Quentin
Singer:
Frauke May

Cellists:
Julius Berger
Wen-Sinn Yang
Katharina Troe

Violist:
Roland Glassl

Aris Quartett
Diogenes Quartett
Hyperion Trio

Brandenburgisches Staatsorchester
conducted by
Ira Levin

WDR Funkhausorchester
conducted by
Wayne Marshall

____________________________________________

In Depth

“I consider him a genius.” Arnold Schoenberg on Max Reger.

We’re lucky as organists to know quite a bit about Max Reger (1873 – 1916), whose music shows up in many organ recital programmes and recordings, but is largely absent from orchestral, chamber and instrumental programmes. I’ve been a fan of his music since discovering it as a teenager, but I’m aware that a lot of people, particularly non-organists, don’t know much about him. Therefore making a Max Reger DVD will not only mark his centenary next year, but should bring much needed attention to this great composer.

This should be a most exciting set of films for a number of reasons. The musicians who will be performing are brilliant and should provide searing performances. Much of the music we will record, as well as being great, is unfamiliar, and our goal is to shine a light on a little known musical realm. And the story itself is wild. Reger crammed an extraordinary amount into his 43 years. At the time he was one of Germany’s most successful composers and was constantly touring and performing while also living a life of excess, going on drinking and eating binges that matched with a vast compositional output. But that’s not the whole story. Reger was also a deeply spiritual man, a side that is reflected in his music. He was also described as a seismograph whose music reflected the major issues and struggles of his time. He lived through a period in which Europe struggled with decadence and ultimately marched into the abyss of the First World War. Reger’s music, perhaps culminating in his ferocious Dies Irae, reflects this enormous cultural struggle. Therefore this film about Reger will also provide, from the fascinating viewpoint of a tormented and misunderstood genius who lived at double-speed, a vision of one of the most important periods of European history.

A great composer writing for the organ

Reger was like Franck in that early in his career he turned to the organ as a way of having music he wrote be performed – this was due to the gifted organist Karl Straube championing his compositions. Therefore Reger brought the ambitions and talents of a great composer to the organ, and in his organ music made a genuinely important contribution to the development of European classical music.

For instance, some people have argued that it is in his Opus 73 Variations for organ that Reger became the first composer to write atonal music.

Our main featured organist for this DVD will be Graham Barber, who will perform Opus 73, along with other great works such as the Chorale Fantasia and Fugue on Hallelujah, Gott zu Loben and the Fantasia and Fugue Opus 135b, or organs such as the Sauer organ in the Lutherkirche in Chemnitz, the new “Reger organ” at St Michael’s, Weiden, and also the Schulze organ in Armley where he is organist.

Despite Opus 73, Reger was never heading towards atonality – he told Strauss he would never take that ultimate step. Reger ploughed a unique course for himself and created an unforgettable style that combines astonishing harmony with traditional forms such as the fugue and passacaglia.

In this sense his ne plus ultra is his “Inferno” Fantasia and Fugue in D minor, Opus 57. Surely this is the wildest, most virtuosic, most extraordinary fantasia and fugue ever written. It’s never been filmed professionally before and should be gripping to listen to and watch.

Bernhard Buttmann, a veteran who has recorded all of Reger’s organ music, plays it brilliantly and will perform it on the Link organ of the Pauluskirche in Ulm, alongside various other works.

With works such as Opus 57 and 73, it is no wonder that Reger has developed a fearsome reputation for dense chromaticism. But his Second Sonata, Opus 60, presents another side of him – clear, transparent, to the point, concise. This will be played by Bernhard Haas.

What if you don’t like Reger’s music?

Max Reger has always divided critics, audiences and musicians, on the one hand winning the most extraordinary loyalty and praise, and on the other being dismissed out of hand. Therefore Reger is ripe for reappraisal. What if you just don’t like his music?

We feel that his story is so compelling and touches on so many fascinating themes and concerns that even if you decide you don’t like his music you will enjoy the story and acknowledge reger’s interest and importance. So we relish the opportunity to establish convincingly that he deserves recognition and awareness and should stand alongside Mahler and Strauss as one of the most important composers of his time, worthy of a place in the mainstream of musical life.

Documentary

The documentary about Reger’s life, to be presented on DVD in three 52-minute episodes, will serve as both a biography and also an in-depth survey of his music. Presented by singer Frauke May and conductor Ira Levin, two stories will be told – the past story of Reger’s life, with his many struggles but also his extraordinary accomplishments, and the present story of Levin preparing to conduct a performance of his new arrangement for orchestra of Reger’s famous piano work, the Bach Variations. Therefore the film will cover both the hugely compelling narrative of Reger’s life as well as showing how his music is performed and received today.

May and Levin will interview, in either German or English, all the major Reger scholars and performers, from Susanne Popp and her colleagues at the Reger Institute to performers such as Julius Berger, Bernhardt Buttmann and Graham Barber. We will take advantage of one Reger-performer’s extraordinary resemblance to Reger – Rudolf Meister – who will “stand” in for Reger in scenes about his life. We will use the piano and organ rolls at the Max Reger Institute to recreate Reger’s own performances using an original mechanical player-piano and player-organ.

The documentary will include excerpts from Reger’s most important works for orchestra, piano, chamber ensemble and organ (these works will be included in their entirety on the other CDs and DVDs of the boxed set – never before have all the key works of Reger for whatever instrument been available in one set).

Our aim is nothing less than to establish Reger among the pantheon of great composers, and we will devote all our resources to accomplishing this through making an extraordinary set of films and recordings in exquisite packaging that will bring the attention of the classical music world onto the genius and importance of Max Reger.

Weight 7,0000 kg
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Edition number

FSFDVD011

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