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.

Showing posts with label Dutilleux. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dutilleux. Show all posts

Sunday, August 7, 2016

A vital Dutilleux Centennial project


Henri Dutilleux's centennial year in 2016 is coming along nicely. There are four BBC Proms concerts this summer that include works by the great French master, plus some major recording projects this year and in last year's run-up, most notably the Erato 7-disc Dutilleux Centenary Edition. But the undertaking I'm most excited about is this 3-disc collection of the Orchestral Works with the Seattle Symphony conducted by Ludovic Morlot, on the Symphony's own label, Seattle Symphony Media. Back in 2014 I gave the first disc in Morlot's series a very positive review. While I somehow missed the second disc in 2015, it too got nothing but raves from the critics, especially for the violin concerto L'arbre des songes with Augustin Hadelich, and it won a Grammy Award that year. The third disc is due, along with this compilation, on August 12, 2016.

Hadelich is back for the final disc in the set, playing the Nocturne for violin & orchestra "Sur le même accord". This is amazingly accessible music, with almost cinematic effects: shifting atmospheres, dramatic outbursts and always a wide range of virtuosic effects that Hadelich manages with aplomb on his 1723 Kiesewetter Stradivarius violin. The highlight, though, is a live performance of the great Timbres, espace, mouvement. Morlot ensures that scrupulous attention to detail doesn't interfere with the long arcs of this music; the virtuosity of the orchestral players, and their musicianship, is obvious.

From my balcony I can see sometimes just the tip of Mt. Rainier peaking out, but only on the clearest of days (not lately because of haze from wildfires on the Olympic Peninsula). It's somehow a comfort to know that not too far that way there's an orchestra that can play this great music of core French repertoire as well as any in the world. I need to hop on the ferry soon, and often, to hear it play live!

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Great release from a new label

From May 19, 2014:


The 31-year old Henri Dutilleux renounced all of his music written before his Op. 1 piano sonata in 1947-48. His 1st Symphony followed in 1951, so it can be considered a piece of his early maturity. His writing for orchestra is, however, completely assured. There is a feeling that not a single note is out of place, and that the Symphony is unfolding in the real world exactly as Dutilleux imagined it.

The work has a simple and logical structure, slowly fading in to a Passaglia in the first movement, quickly gaining momentum in a Scherzo, extending this forward momentum in the 3rd movement Intermezzo, and fading out at the end of the Finale with variations. The orchestration is meticulous, and the sound world seems French to me - Ravel and Messiaen come to mind. Dutilleux’s symphonies are well represented on disc, with excellent versions from Tortelier/BBC and Graf/Bordeaux. Ludovic Morlot and the Seattle Symphony don’t let down the composer at all in the first symphony; I hope they’ll follow up with the second soon!

A cello concerto in all but name, Tout un monde lointain from 1970 has even more excellent versions on CD, including recordings by Lynn Harrell, Martyn Hill, and the cellist who inspired the work, Mstislav Rostropovich. Xavier Phillips has the measure of the piece in this performance; his playing is controlled but not too careful, and the orchestral support from the Seattle players is excellent.

Conductor Ludovic Morlot completes an outstanding recording by leading the orchestra through a dramatic and inspired live recording of the 1997 piece for orchestra and children’s voices, The Shadows of Time. The excitement of this work is enhanced by the lifelike, transparent sound provided by the engineers of the new Seattle Orchestra Media label. This Dutilleux disc is one of three discs in the inaugural release from the label. I look forward to listening to the other two (Ravel/Saint-Saens and American composers), and future recordings as well.