CONNESSON Violin Concerto. Lucifer
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Guillaume Connesson
Genre:
Orchestral
Label: Deutsche Grammophon
Magazine Review Date: 01/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 65
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 481 1166
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Concerto for Violin and Orchestra |
Guillaume Connesson, Composer
Guillaume Connesson, Composer Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Conductor Jerôme Pernoo, Cello Monte Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra |
Lucifer |
Guillaume Connesson, Composer
Guillaume Connesson, Composer Jean-Christophe Spinosi, Conductor Monte Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra |
Author: David Gutman
Now in his forties, Connesson is a professional to his fingertips, and should you warm to the work of the classier commercial composers and orchestrators you may find his world wholly congenial. It is those sympathetic to the traditional contemporary music scene who might be taken aback by the brazenness of it all. Connesson’s retro, razzle-dazzle eclecticism knows no bounds: a bouncy rhythm borrowed here, a shiny instrumental effect there, glass harmonica and all. Dangerously familiar shards of Adams, Lutosawski et al can be the one ‘modern’ element enlivening a conventional romantic texture. Blink and Lucifer (2011) reverts back into Daphnis or Jeux or Spartacus or The Rite of Spring. The list is almost endless. For a ballet score contemplating Satan’s casting out of heaven alongside the legends of Prometheus and the Grail, Connesson would seem to have gone easy on the metaphysics.
Is his really a major voice? There’s no doubting the enormous effectiveness of the ballet music in particular. Unprofound yet glamorous and self-evidently danceable, it makes several recent full-length scores of its type seem that much thinner. But whatever happened to the old idea that a composer should craft an idiom if not indubitably new then at least indubitably his own? On its own terms the present disc is a conspicuous success. The Monte Carlo forces are galvanised by Jean-Christophe Spinosi into playing of fire and energy, and the booklet takes in a helpful composer interview. Non-sceptics should seek out the earlier Cosmic Trilogy (Chandos, 3/10), immortalising Connesson’s association with the Royal Scottish National Orchestra and its erstwhile Music Director Stéphane Denève. DG’s sound is a little less spacious, its physical presentation oddly flawed. The album’s French-language text is not difficult to read but the English translation, grey then brown on grubbily framed off-white, is presumably not intended for the over-fifties. Perhaps we oldies aren’t expected to dabble in postmodernism.
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