Louis Vierne (1870 - 1937) - Vierne: Symphonies Nos. 1 & 3
Telarc  (1993)
Classical

In Collection
#1812

0*
CD    11 tracks  (75:06) 
   01   Symphony No. 3 - I. Allegro Maestoso             07:50
   02   Symphony No. 3 - II. Cantil ne             05:41
   03   Symphony No. 3 - III. Intermezzo             04:30
   04   Symphony No. 3 - IV. Adagio             07:00
   05   Symphony No. 3 - V. Final             07:30
   06   Symphony No. 1 - I. Pr lude             07:13
   07   Symphony No. 1 - II. Fugue             05:42
   08   Symphony No. 1 - III. Pastorale             10:39
   09   Symphony No. 1 - IV. Allegro vivace             04:41
   10   Symphony No. 1 - V. Andante             07:24
   11   Symphony No. 1 - VI. Final             06:56
Personal Details
Location Telarc Collection

Locator
Disc 1 : CD-80329
Details
Studio Abbatiale St. Ouen de Rouen, Rouen, France
Catalog CD-80329
Packaging Jewel Case
Recording Date 7/30/1992
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
User Defined
Classification: TELARC CLASSICAL
Musicians
Composer/Artist Louis Vierne (1870 - 1937)
Notes
Credits

Art Direction – Ray Kirschensteiner
Composed By – Louis Vierne
Edited By – Rosalind Ilett
Executive-Producer – Robert Woods (2)
Liner Notes – Joseph F. Dzeda, Michael Murray (4)
Organ – Michael Murray (4)
Photography By – Barbara Pease
Producer, Engineer – Jack Renner
Supervised By [Production Supervisor] – Elaine Martone
Technician [Assistance] – Michael Clements

Notes
Michael Murray playing the Caville-Coll Organ at Saint Ouen de Rouen

Total Playing Time: 75:06

Joseph F. Dzeda, Associate Curator of Organs, Yale University.

**** Technical Information ****

Recorded in Abbatiale St. Ouen de Rouen, Rouen, France, July 29-30, 1992.
Mircophones: Schoeps MK-21
Microphone Preamp: Boulder / Jensen Twin-Turbo
Digital Recording Processor: DCS-900 20-Bit, 128 times oversampling A/D
Microphone & Interconnecting Cables: Studer / EMT reusen screened oxygen-free
Monitor Speakers: B&W 801 Matrix II
Power Amplifiers: B&W MPA-810
Digital Editing: Sony DAE 3000

Special thanks to Marie-Andrée Morisset-Balier, Henry Decaëns, Jean-François Dupont, Gary L. Garber, Kurt Lueders, Daniel Roth and Gérard Schoumann.