Poulenc Le Bal masqué etc.
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Francis Poulenc
Genre:
Opera
Label: Decca
Magazine Review Date: 3/1997
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 76
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 452 666-2DH
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Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
(Le) Bal masqué |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor Dominique Visse, Marquise de Montonson, Contralto (Female alto) Francis Poulenc, Composer François Le Roux, Monsieur Médor, Baritone French National Orchestra Soloists Lambert Wilson, Pénultième, Vocalist/voice Pascal Rogé, Piano |
(Le) Bestiaire ou Cortège d'Orphée, 'Book of B |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Anatoly Kocherga, The Servant, Baritone Anatoly Kocherga, The Servant, Baritone Anatoly Kocherga, The Servant, Baritone Charles Dutoit, Conductor Francis Poulenc, Composer François Le Roux, Baritone French National Orchestra Soloists Maria Guleghina, Francesca, Soprano Maria Guleghina, Francesca, Soprano Maria Guleghina, Francesca, Soprano Sergei Larin, Paolo, Tenor Sergei Larin, Paolo, Tenor Sergei Larin, Paolo, Tenor |
Rapsodie nègre |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor Francis Poulenc, Composer François Le Roux, Baritone French National Orchestra Soloists Gwendoline Killebrew, Waltraute, Mezzo soprano Ilse Gramatzki, Wellgunde, Soprano Norma Sharp, Woglinde, Soprano Pascal Rogé, Piano |
Cocardes |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor Emanuel List, Baron Ochs, Bass Francis Poulenc, Composer François Le Roux, Baritone French National Orchestra Soloists Friedrich Schorr, Faninal, Baritone Marita Farell, Sophie, Soprano |
(3) Mouvements perpétuels |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Dorothy Larsen, Sieglinde, Soprano Francis Poulenc, Composer Lauritz Melchior, Siegmund, Tenor Mogens Wedel, Hunding, Bass Pascal Rogé, Piano |
(Le) Gendarme incompris |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor Francis Poulenc, Composer French National Orchestra Soloists George London, Scarpia, Baritone Lambert Wilson, Wheel of Fortune Woman Piero de Palma, Spoletta, Tenor Piero de Palma, Spoletta, Tenor Piero de Palma, Spoletta, Tenor Silvio Maionica, Angelotti, Baritone Silvio Maionica, Angelotti, Bass Silvio Maionica, Angelotti, Baritone |
(4) Poèmes de Max Jacob |
Francis Poulenc, Composer
Charles Dutoit, Conductor Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Annina, Soprano Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Annina, Soprano Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, Annina, Soprano Erich Kunz, Doctor Falke, Tenor Erich Kunz, Doctor Falke, Baritone Erich Kunz, Doctor Falke, Tenor Francis Poulenc, Composer François Le Roux, Baritone French National Orchestra Soloists Nicolai Gedda, Duke of Urbino, Tenor Nicolai Gedda, Duke of Urbino, Tenor Nicolai Gedda, Duke of Urbino, Tenor |
Author: Lionel Salter
A disc that fans of the early gamin Poulenc will fall on with cries of joy. He was always happiest when writing for voice and piano, and here we have a splendid collection, including some rarities, in captivating performances. The biggest surprise is probably the four poems by Max Jacob, here recorded for the first time: it was thought that Poulenc had discarded them, but four years ago Milhaud’s widow found the manuscript among the papers of her husband, who had conducted the first performance. The surprise is not this reappearance but Poulenc’s musical language: while the second and fourth poems are set in his familiar frolicsome madcap style, the other two, largely atonal, reveal that in 1921 he had been toying with Schoenbergian ideas. The other near novelty (its first modern recording) is the “playlet interspersed with songs” Le gendarme incompris, a farce about a marquise cross-dressed as a priest who is arrested by a periphrastic gendarme and brought before an easily corruptible police chief. I recommend this enthusiastically even to those who don’t understand much French, since Le Roux (as the police chief) and Visse (as the indignant marquise) prove to be as brilliant as actors as they are as singers. The whole piece is wildly hilarious (quite apart from the literary joke of cocking a snook at Mallarme and Verlaine).
On rather more familiar ground Le Roux, as usual, shines with his subtle sense of style – Poulenc insisted that even his most frivolous pieces should be treated au grand serieux – and his exemplary enunciation. Pascal Roge sparkles in the “Intermede” of the impudent Bal masque (as does a solo violinist in its “Bagatelle”), performed with zest by all, and equally gambols in the “Ronde” of that blague, Poulenc’s first work to be publicly performed, the Rapsodie negre (here presented in its original 1917 version). On the other hand, the popular Mouvements perpetuels are given in a later instrumentation, possibly by another hand than Poulenc’s own. Le Roux’s versatility is again demonstrated in the circus/fairground atmosphere of the Cocardes and the epigrammatic Bestiaire (I love the way he evokes the melancholy longevity of the carp).
The excellent soloists from the French National Orchestra are recorded with great clarity; and James Harding, braving Jacob’s and Cocteau’s minefield of puns, Joycean wordplay and surrealist juxtapositions, provides spirited translations (except of the gibberish Rapsodie negre); but why render “dromadaire” as “camel”?'
On rather more familiar ground Le Roux, as usual, shines with his subtle sense of style – Poulenc insisted that even his most frivolous pieces should be treated au grand serieux – and his exemplary enunciation. Pascal Roge sparkles in the “Intermede” of the impudent Bal masque (as does a solo violinist in its “Bagatelle”), performed with zest by all, and equally gambols in the “Ronde” of that blague, Poulenc’s first work to be publicly performed, the Rapsodie negre (here presented in its original 1917 version). On the other hand, the popular Mouvements perpetuels are given in a later instrumentation, possibly by another hand than Poulenc’s own. Le Roux’s versatility is again demonstrated in the circus/fairground atmosphere of the Cocardes and the epigrammatic Bestiaire (I love the way he evokes the melancholy longevity of the carp).
The excellent soloists from the French National Orchestra are recorded with great clarity; and James Harding, braving Jacob’s and Cocteau’s minefield of puns, Joycean wordplay and surrealist juxtapositions, provides spirited translations (except of the gibberish Rapsodie negre); but why render “dromadaire” as “camel”?'
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