Reviews and occasional notes on classical music

Reviews and occasional notes on classical music

"Music, both vocall and instrumental, so good, so delectable, so rare, so admirable, so super excellent, that it did even ravish and stupifie all those strangers that never heard the like." - Thomas Coryat, after hearing 3 hours of music at the Scuola di San Rocco in Venice, 1608.

Friday, May 16, 2025

Thoughful orchestral music from a true original

 

Charles Koechlin: Symphony no. 1

Charles Koechlin's First Symphony began in 1916 as a String Quartet - his Second - and was reconfigured for full orchestra by the composer in 1927. He adds orchestral colour in such a tasteful way; nothing garish, but subtle touches here and there, especially from the brass, opening things up from chamber music to a full romantic symphony orchestra experience. This is a modernist sound that also hearkens back to French music before Debussy and Ravel: one of his teachers at the Paris Conservatoire was Jules Massenet, and his fellow students included George Enescu and Florent Schmitt. Later he studied with Gabriel Fauré, along with Maurice Ravel, and it's Fauré who had the greatest influence on him. There isn't a lot of drama or incident in the symphony, but rather a thoughtful development of attractive themes. As with so much French music of the period, one can also hear the echoes of Richard Wagner, but strained through a French, and specifically Parisian, sensibility. This is music that deserves more attention, and it has a wonderful advocate in conductor Ariane Matiakh and the Württembergische Philharmonie Reutlingen.


In the eight years between 1935 and 1943, Koechlin produced his 4-volume Traité de l'Orchestration (available to download at IMSLP here). Surely he made good use of his experience in adapting his String Quartet for full orchestra in the creation of this major project. Besides this work and his own compositions, Koechlin is known for his biography of Fauré (the first), and his significant work as a teacher. Among his pupils were Germaine Tailleferre, Roger Désormière, Francis Poulenc and Cole Porter.

There are two additional works on this album: the Symphonic Poem Au Loin, op. 20, from 1900; and 3 Mélodies, op. 17, written in the period 1895-1900. The latter are orchestrated by Robert Orledge, and sung beautifully here by soprano Patricia Petibon. Au Loin, as its name suggests, has a far away feeling, a high Romantic piece sounding more of the 19th century than the 20th. Both this and the songs owe a lot to Fauré, and I'm sure the teacher was proud of his student's work.

Charles Koechlin is such an appealing character: a fine composer embedded in the French conservatory tradition who charted his own course in his compositions. He was a passionate cinemaniac, writing his Second Symphony, "The Seven Stars" (also recorded by Ariane Matiakh) as an homage to the great Hollywood idols of the time. I love this portrait of the composer from 1948, two years before his death at 83. A wonderful playoff beard! A highly recommended recording.

Koechlin by Boris Lipnitzki, 1948


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