Excellent and unique performance, with some "perfect imperfections" reminding us of the truly human touch often lost in studio recordings, and some very ominous bells at 4:02 miraculously in tune with the music.
Just shatteringly brillent, again, so clean and crisp, never heard this too played so stunningly - again, BRAVO and thank you, you, Dupré and that CC just made my entire decade…..Admiration and love, Adrian in Bermuda ❤️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
You're welcome! I hope you like watching the score along. I personally think this is the best-recorded interpretation of the toccata. I don't understand why Duruflé hated it!
@@julianmatthews5785 You know I like it, since I always try to add the score when possible. Certainly on of the best performances. Comparing to Duruflé's vocal pieces, this is a very different piece, maybe that's why he hated it, maybe he didn't recognize his own basic idea's in it. Just guessing.
6:47 Durufle: now that the organist fingers are ready to fall off, let's change the key signature to 5 sharps and in a few measures make every note an accidental
With the exception of the bells, this is an amazing performance of Duruflé's Tocatta. Fiery and incredible drive, with clean articulation & phrasing. I still find in puzzling why MD really disliked/despised this particular movement and refused to record it. His wife Marie-Madeline loved it.
The reason for this is two-fold; 1) Duruflé was almost masochistically self-critical, hence his low composition-output. 2) He did not like the theme he had come up with for the toccata
I have been bingeing big Romantic organ pieces for the past several months, and I have concluded that this particular recording is by far my favorite of everything I've listened to thus far. There's a frenetic "human-ness" in Dubois's interpretation that I just love.
I loved this performance. Thank you for posting the score (I do have the sheet music myself but i don't think I'll be learning it any time soon). It's insanely difficult - although if you have patience to break it down into very small chunks I suppose it can be learnt. What I did feel was that I was more aware of some of th subtler moments which is really nice.
@@julianmatthews5785 Okay. No offense. I know that the scores for French music are quite expensive, so I couldn't find these anywhere for free. Well, except P2P ;-)
franchement les pubs au pleins milieu d’une œuvre c’est détestables et à mon avis contraire au droit a l’intégrité de l’oeuvre de l’auteur ! et surtout ça gâche tout le plaisir
One of my organ teachers told me that when Duruflé did a workshop on his compositions, he was asked what he thought about the Toccata and he said something along the lines that he really didn't like it or think it was great.
@@julianmatthews5785I love your take on this! It's totally OK for one person to hate it, even the composer, and for another to love it. We totally do not need to unify music preference!! Hearing you play this piece has a good effect on me, and I'm certain that hearing it live would have an even greater good effect. Surely that makes it good already! Thanks for your great performance.
@@julianmatthews5785 Sorry for the late response, but what makes me think its similar to Bach's piece is the part from 1:14 - 2:53 in this video: ruclips.net/video/ho9rZjlsyYY/видео.html&ab_channel=MovieMongerHZ
There is something about this performance that feels unsettling. I have heard lots of performances of this work and somehow this one doesn't meet those other performances. Dubois is excellent, but it lacks a soul.
I’m sorry but i totally disagree, this is probably my favourite recording of this piece that’s why I chose it!What makes you think it doesn’t have a soul?!
I agree to disagree. Let me point out my ideas to show that this performance is outstanding: if organists play exactly as written, which is already an almost impossible challenge, usually follow the mechanical idea of the toccata, resulting in the menacing and fiery flamboyance that we expect from such a score. The unsettling feeling probably comes from the music rather than from the performace, but the artist shows his interpretation in rather sparse points, often unwritten or implied in the score: you may not feel it but Dubois manages to play the inner F#-G from 0:43 like a trill rather than like a measured sextuplet; the entrance of the second theme at 2:35 is prepared and proposed with a very slight rit.-rubato; The ending from 7:46 trashes the tempo ending in a furious ride taking the "senza rall." as "Go nuts!" signal. I pointed out something about tempos, but there are many aspects of interpretation about registration, intention and rhythmic drive that are not so commonplace.
@@DeeCeeHaich I figured that you'd be of the more narrow-minded conservative type, but the inclusion of Scriabin positively surprises me, or are we just talking about early Scriabin?
@@mrtchaikovsky late scriabin. Scriabin is included, because unlike modern composers, he actually makes music. The reason this piece in the video in particular is "garbage noise" is not because I dislike *how* it sounds per se, but rather how poorly it is executed as a musical piece and how lacking it is in any long form coherency. You may aswell bang on your keyboard, as it has the same musical value.
@@DeeCeeHaich You have no right to say this masterpiece is the same as banging the keyboard, durufle was very self critital and it because people like you who openly hate on this that most of his works never saw the light of day. He worked his entire life on this toccata, kept coming back to improve it. same with many of his other pieces.
Excellent and unique performance, with some "perfect imperfections" reminding us of the truly human touch often lost in studio recordings, and some very ominous bells at 4:02 miraculously in tune with the music.
Just shatteringly brillent, again, so clean and crisp, never heard this too played so stunningly - again, BRAVO and thank you, you, Dupré and that CC just made my entire decade…..Admiration and love, Adrian in Bermuda ❤️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
Thanks for sharing this fabulous recording of Dubois playing this.
You're welcome! I hope you like watching the score along. I personally think this is the best-recorded interpretation of the toccata. I don't understand why Duruflé hated it!
@@julianmatthews5785 You know I like it, since I always try to add the score when possible. Certainly on of the best performances. Comparing to Duruflé's vocal pieces, this is a very different piece, maybe that's why he hated it, maybe he didn't recognize his own basic idea's in it. Just guessing.
One of most prominent works in the whole history of music.
Une oeuvre à la beauté magnétique... Merci à vous
Thank you for doing this with M Dubois. An artist of our generation.
Je ne connaissais pas cette vidéo. Quel remarquable souci d'authenticité ! Grand bravo !!
6:47 Durufle: now that the organist fingers are ready to fall off, let's change the key signature to 5 sharps and in a few measures make every note an accidental
Two of the reasons I don’t like this piece and will never play it!
With the exception of the bells, this is an amazing performance of Duruflé's Tocatta. Fiery and incredible drive, with clean articulation & phrasing.
I still find in puzzling why MD really disliked/despised this particular movement and refused to record it. His wife Marie-Madeline loved it.
The reason for this is two-fold; 1) Duruflé was almost masochistically self-critical, hence his low composition-output. 2) He did not like the theme he had come up with for the toccata
I have been bingeing big Romantic organ pieces for the past several months, and I have concluded that this particular recording is by far my favorite of everything I've listened to thus far. There's a frenetic "human-ness" in Dubois's interpretation that I just love.
GREAT. And I can follow the sheet music too. Thank you!
you are welcome! I am very pleased you like it
This is awesome! What a discovery
That was bloody good. Better than an evening at home fumbling with the Minogue sisters.
I loved this performance. Thank you for posting the score (I do have the sheet music myself but i don't think I'll be learning it any time soon). It's insanely difficult - although if you have patience to break it down into very small chunks I suppose it can be learnt. What I did feel was that I was more aware of some of th subtler moments which is really nice.
Awesome!!!
Happy New Year, Julian!
Oeuvre époustouflante. Naguère, j'ai chanté son Requiem sous la direction de Daniel Kawka . . . . .
7:02 "Senza accelerare" (=don't speed up) at this point it's a miracle you can keep on playing ahahh
To have this performance interrupted by a totally inappropriate advert midflow is just plain stupid by RUclips.
Came here after listening to the hilariously bad recording Virgil Fox made in the NY Riverside Church. Now, *this* is what I call an organ!
Were the bells around 4:03 intentional according to the score or it was just from the bell tower during the recording 😅
No they were not intentional lol
Many French cathedrals have ancient clocks in them that still chime away les heures...
This was not from the 🔔 towers.
The bet clean version to date
Ich fasse es nicht: Man braucht ja 3-4 Hände, um das realisiert zu bekommen😮
Vollkommen irre!
Amazing! Gives OL a run for his money! What year of the recording?
Sorry for the late reply, I didn't notice your comment. The recording is from 2014 I think
Just as a hint... I'm not sure whether it's allowed to publish the score as this is a quite young piece. I guess it's copyrighted.
It’s allowed as it’s been done before, and RUclips hasn’t asked me to remove it
@@julianmatthews5785 Okay. No offense. I know that the scores for French music are quite expensive, so I couldn't find these anywhere for free. Well, except P2P ;-)
@@julianmatthews5785 hahaha yeah, i have over 20 copyright claims as if i cared lol, what u don't want is a strike... Those are bad...
@@julianmatthews5785 FWIW, I have a copy of the sheet music that I purchased, so this was a real treat being able to follow along on screen.
@@daveluttinen2547 glad you like it
Wirtuozerski utwór. Brawa dla wykonawcy.
Wow! You are so good! Vinvent Dubois has nothing on you.
hENLO
franchement les pubs au pleins milieu d’une œuvre c’est détestables et à mon avis contraire au droit a l’intégrité de l’oeuvre de l’auteur ! et surtout ça gâche tout le plaisir
Je suis bien d'accord! C'est youtube qui met les pubs pas moi...
One of my organ teachers told me that when Duruflé did a workshop on his compositions, he was asked what he thought about the Toccata and he said something along the lines that he really didn't like it or think it was great.
Yeah, its pretty well known that Duruflé himself hated this piece, he says it on the masterclass video on youtube even, although i think its great !
@@julianmatthews5785I love your take on this! It's totally OK for one person to hate it, even the composer, and for another to love it. We totally do not need to unify music preference!!
Hearing you play this piece has a good effect on me, and I'm certain that hearing it live would have an even greater good effect. Surely that makes it good already!
Thanks for your great performance.
@@JSB2500 thanks but please note taht its not me playing! maybe one day ahah. but in the video its the great Vincent Dubois !
@@julianmatthews5785 Ah - I wondered!
@@julianmatthews5785 'Tis a great performance, to be sure! Thanks for making it available.
Amazing!, This reminds me of J.S Bach's Toccata and Füge. Is it possible Durufle got inspiration from that piece for this piece?
Why do you think it’s similar? I can’t hear any resemblance to be honest
@@julianmatthews5785 Sorry for the late response, but what makes me think its similar to Bach's piece is the part from 1:14 - 2:53 in this video: ruclips.net/video/ho9rZjlsyYY/видео.html&ab_channel=MovieMongerHZ
@@MrSpyfelis no worries, i still can’t hear any similarities though lol
Your ass hears an organ piece and immediately go: BatChest !!! It's like the famous vampire piece!
There is something about this performance that feels unsettling. I have heard lots of performances of this work and somehow this one doesn't meet those other performances. Dubois is excellent, but it lacks a soul.
I’m sorry but i totally disagree, this is probably my favourite recording of this piece that’s why I chose it!What makes you think it doesn’t have a soul?!
I agree to disagree. Let me point out my ideas to show that this performance is outstanding: if organists play exactly as written, which is already an almost impossible challenge, usually follow the mechanical idea of the toccata, resulting in the menacing and fiery flamboyance that we expect from such a score. The unsettling feeling probably comes from the music rather than from the performace, but the artist shows his interpretation in rather sparse points, often unwritten or implied in the score: you may not feel it but Dubois manages to play the inner F#-G from 0:43 like a trill rather than like a measured sextuplet; the entrance of the second theme at 2:35 is prepared and proposed with a very slight rit.-rubato; The ending from 7:46 trashes the tempo ending in a furious ride taking the "senza rall." as "Go nuts!" signal. I pointed out something about tempos, but there are many aspects of interpretation about registration, intention and rhythmic drive that are not so commonplace.
I agree completely. No music. And too fast. Just rushing through it. Frantic.
@@julianmatthews5785 I agree - this is the most enjoyable to me throughout - the tempos, stop choices, crescendi timing, fermata timing, all of it
Awful.
Garbage noise
I've run into quite a few of your dismissive comments under various videos, so I really wonder what music and composers you actually like.
@@mrtchaikovsky Scriabin, Chopin, Wölfl, Mozart, J.C. Bach, J.S. Bach and Rachmaninoff.
@@DeeCeeHaich I figured that you'd be of the more narrow-minded conservative type, but the inclusion of Scriabin positively surprises me, or are we just talking about early Scriabin?
@@mrtchaikovsky late scriabin. Scriabin is included, because unlike modern composers, he actually makes music. The reason this piece in the video in particular is "garbage noise" is not because I dislike *how* it sounds per se, but rather how poorly it is executed as a musical piece and how lacking it is in any long form coherency. You may aswell bang on your keyboard, as it has the same musical value.
@@DeeCeeHaich You have no right to say this masterpiece is the same as banging the keyboard, durufle was very self critital and it because people like you who openly hate on this that most of his works never saw the light of day. He worked his entire life on this toccata, kept coming back to improve it. same with many of his other pieces.
Bravo!