ROUSSEL Évocations. Suite in F (Tortelier)
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Chandos
Magazine Review Date: 08/2018
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 71
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CHAN10957
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Suite |
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer BBC Philharmonic Orchestra Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor |
Pour une fête de printemps |
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer BBC Philharmonic Orchestra Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor |
Évocations |
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer
Albert (Charles Paul Marie) Roussel, Composer Alessandro Fisher, Tenor BBC Philharmonic Orchestra City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra Chorus François Le Roux, Baritone Kathryn Rudge, Mezzo soprano Yan Pascal Tortelier, Conductor |
Author: Tim Ashley
Yan Pascal Tortelier’s recording, made live at Birmingham’s Symphony Hall last year, marks its first appearance on disc since Michel Plasson’s 1988 EMI version with the Toulouse Capitole Orchestra and Orfeón Donostiarra. Both are exceptionally fine, though Tortelier offers the more dramatic interpretation, finding danger as well as beauty in the score. The BBC Philharmonic’s dark-sounding brass suggest dread as well as awe at the sight of the Ellora caves, where Plasson is calmly majestic, and the militaristic fanfares that interrupt the chattering woodwind of the Jaipur scherzo similarly carry deeper intimations of menace in Tortelier’s performance. In the final movement, he presses forwards with greater urgency and has marginally the more focused choir in the CBSO Chorus. Tortelier’s soloists are every bit as good as Plasson’s starrier line-up (Nathalie Stutzmann, Nicolai Gedda, José van Dam), though the Chandos recording places François Le Roux close to the microphones and Kathryn Rudge and Alessandro Fisher too far back.
The companion pieces, both encapsulating the harder-edged style Roussel adopted after the First World War, were recorded in the orchestra’s Salford studio. Pour une fête de printemps, elegant yet dissonant, started life as the Second Symphony’s scherzo before Roussel decided its length was out of proportion to the rest of the score and published it as a separate piece. Tortelier is wonderfully alert to its mercurial shifts in mood and occasional hints of violence. He drives the outer movements of the Suite in F very hard, meanwhile, only relaxing the tension in the central Sarabande with its unnerving melody that never quite goes where you expect, even after repeated hearings. The playing here is exemplary in its rhythmic precision and detail, with all those tricky brass and woodwind solos finely honed and dexterously done.
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