Sealed new in shrinkwrap.  Can drop ship as a gift! 

Please see my other listings for other works by these performers.  I'm happy to combine shipping.

Violinist Dr. Robert Murray and organist Dr. Ardyth Lohuis play rarely heard works -- a delight to the ears!

All of the works recorded here are by composers who were born between 1834 and 1900 and thus exploit the Romantic idiom as represented by many nationalities including the United States, France, Sweden, Italy, Germany, England, and Norway.

Oreste Ravanello (1871 - 1938)
1 Andante, Op. 117, No. 1 ¥ [4:27]

Otto Olsson (1879 - 1964)
2 Romance, Op. 24 ¥ [8:52]

Albert Becker (1834 - 1899)
3 Adagio, Op. 81 ¥ [4:22]

Amy Beach (1867 - 1944)
4 Invocation, Op. 55 ¥ [4:07]

Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875 - 1912) Suite de pieces pour violon et orgue, Op. 3*
5 Pastorale [2:19]
6 Cavatina [2:51]
7 Barcarolle [2:42]
8 Contemplation [2:23]

Marie-Joseph Erb (1858 - 1944)
9 Piece de concert sur le motif "Pater Noster" - "Gib uns heute," Op. 71* [10:11]

Oscar Lindberg (1887 - 1955)
10 Gammal fäbodpsalm från Dalarna* [3:55]

Johan Severin Svendsen (1849 - 1911)
11 Romanze in G Major, Op. 26* [7:19]

Eleuthere Lovreglio (1900 - 1972)
12 Arioso ¥ [5:44]

Gustav Jensen (1843 - 1895)
13 Arioso & Rondo patetico, Op. 40* [8:41]

Total time: [69:12]

Robert Murray was concertmaster of the Amici della Musica Chamber Orchestra, the Chicago Chamber Orchestra and a player in the Nashville String Quartet. Leo Sowerby selected him to premiere his Fifth Sonata. Early work in Nashville includes recordings with Chet Atkins, Floyd Cramer, Eddie Arnold, and others for RCA, Columbia and MGM. He has taught at the University of North Colorado, Greeley; Baylor University and Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.

Organs: 1929 E. M. Skinner, Op. 712, St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
1951/68 Aeolian-Skinner, Op. 1110, St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, Richmond, Virginia

Violin: Carlo Bergonzi,Cremona, Italy, 1729 Bows: François Tourte, c. 1780; François Nicolas Voirin, mid-19th-century; and modern graphite-fiber CodaBow