Format: Digital Audio CD
Label: PRO ORGANO
Catalog Number: CD 7042
Length: 75′ 36″
Tracks: 17
Organ: E. M. Skinner
Venue: Grand Avenue Temple United Methodist Church, Kansas City, Missouri USA
Recorded: 09/21/1995
Released: 02/20/1996
Producer: Frederick Hohman
Notes Author: Frederick Hohman
Notes Language: English
Graphics Format: 12pp book, traycard, jewel box
UPC #: 636077704222
Opus 190 (Audio CD) Frederick Hohman
Frederick Hohman plays vintage repertoire on the oldest intact 4-manual Ernest M. Skinner organ, Opus 190, at Grand Avenue Temple United Methodist Church in Kansas City, Missouri.
Originally released as a Digital Audio Compact Disc. The Compact Disc is sold out.
Click on the logo of these digital platforms to hear samples, and to stream or download this album and its tracks.






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American Record Guide “Hohman here demonstrates music that might have been heard on this organ along with some that definitely was played on it. … The program concludes with the last two movements of Vierne’s Third Organ Symphony. Hohman plays Vierne about as well as it can be played. He understands the style and he is a very facile player. … Ernest Skinner lived for more than 25 years after he was pushed out by the Aeolian-Skinner merger … I’m sure that he would have been delighted by this recording.” – Blakely
Organ Alternatives, Toronto, Canada “Frederick Hohman gives a first-rate performance of works contemporary with this organ’s installation. His flexibility as an artist is shown as he deftly moves from a theatre to classic style. His playing exudes musicality and expression on a very high level, with flawless technical ability. … All in all, this disc is delight for the ears and the heart… The combination of repertoire and performance result in a very high recommendation.”
The American Organist ” …there are all too few players like Frederick Hohman who combine the necessary artistic affinity for the repertoire with the considerable technique such repertoire demands … a marvelous instrument marvelously played and recorded. Do get it.” – John Ogasapian


