
I know Sandrine Piau principally as a singer of Baroque and Classical music, but she has recently been venturing into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and this is the second disc in a series, which began with a disc of orchestral songs by Strauss, Berg and Zemlinsky entitled Clair-Obscur. The notes accompanying the disc tell us that that earlier disc sought to explore “the confrontation between shadow and light,” whilst this one “evokes the nuances and transparencies of the French mélodie.”
Essentially what we have here is a nicely put together programme of French orchestral song, starting with Berlioz and taking us through to Britten’s early Ravelian Quatre chansons Françaises via Duparc, Koechlin, Debussy and Ravel himself. The programme is not long (under an hour) and is fleshed out with André Caplet’s orchestration of Debussy’s Clair de lune and Ernest Ansermet’s of the sixth of his 6 Epigraphes antiques. Admirably as the orchestra plays throughout under Verdier, these add very little to the programme and I would have welcomed more songs, maybe something by Chausson, Delage or Canteloube, or more by Koechlin, who is not so well represented in the catalogue. If I’m honest, I prefer the Debussy items in their original piano guise. Unlike Ravel’s orchestrations of his own piano pieces, the arrangements don’t really improve on the originals.
The Koechlin songs were new to me, and I rather wish Piau had explored more than the three we have here. If they pique your curiosity, as they did mind, then they are available sung by Juliane Banse, along with a lot more of Koechlin’s vocal works with orchestra, in a two disc set in Hänssler’s Koechlin edition. What we have here is two songs from his early 4 poèmes d’Edmond Haraucourt. Op.7, and one from the slightly later 3 mélodies, Op. 17. If they lack some of Duparc’s natural melodic gift, they are nonetheless lushly orchestrated and rather beautiful and make an excellent partner for the two Duparc songs.
If the Koechlin songs afforded me the most pleasure, that could be because I didn’t know them before and therefore had no point of comparison, whereas I know all the other material rather well. I’ve loved the Britten songs since they were first recorded in the 1980s. Admittedly one can hear the influence of Ravel, particularly of Shéhérazade, but they are remarkably assured from a boy of fourteen and they do not feel out of place here, whilst the sparer textures of Ravel’s Mallarmé settings, written for two clarinets, two flutes, piano and string quartet, provide a nice contrast to the lush orchestrations of the rest.
Piau is now in her fifties and the voice has lost a little of its bloom on high. She also uses what the late John Steane once referred to as a squeeze-box method of vocal production, a tendency to move note by note rather than in a long line, which, once noticed, is hard to ignore. I also hear a slight sense of strain in the Britten songs, particularly at the close of the final song, which is not as radiant as it should be, and as it is in the performances of Jill Gomez, who made the first recording of them for EMI under Simon Rattle, and Felicity Lott, who recorded them for Chandos under Bryden Thomson.
The opening Berlioz Le spectre de la rose is taken a mite too fast for my taste and is a little on the cool side, but it does rather set the general tone of the recital. If you like it, then you will no doubt like the whole disc, but I found Piau a little lacking in involvement, a little detached.
I don’t want to belabour the point too much, because this is a very enjoyable programme, well considered and well put together and, for the most part, Piau’s singing is quite lovely, but, in the Berlioz, Duparc, Ravel and Britten, I found myself inwardly hearing the voices of some of those who have preceded her. Still, if you’re looking for a mixed programme of nineteenth and early twentieth century French orchestral song, then this disc will provide a lot of enjoyment.
Philip takes me to artists that I would otherwise never hear. As a taster for Reflet, a link https://youtu.be/gkMmAhGVWw4?si=AAQswqMs3H2D8KmF
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks, David, for this review of a disc that seems, all in all, uncompetitive. Away from the top tier of well known singers, Jill Gomez was brilliant, Rachel Yakar superb in her discs, and the more recent Marie-Nicole Lemieux (mezzo), lustrous in voice and eloquent in declamation. Banse’s discs of Koechlin are fascinating readings of this underrated, original composer.
Disappointing, hackneyed program with “bleeding chunks”….Piau imho is not being well advised.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Hi John, It’s Philip, not David. (remember).
This disc has had great reviews on BBC Music Magazine, Gramophone and in the Guardian and I was beginning to think my ears were missing something. Maybe these reviewers don’t make comparisons, but I have so many performances in my mind’s ear and these just aren’t memorable. For the Berlioz, I turn to Baker, Steber, Hunt Lieberson and Von Stade, for the Duparc to the incomparable Maggie Teyte and Baker, for the Ravel to Gomez, Baker and Lott and for the Britten to Gomez and Lott.
LikeLike
Philip, it may be that today’s reviewers are under more pressure to write favorable reviews that help the record companies as sponsors. I don’t believe this was as true in the generation of John Steane, Alan Blyth, et al. Lieder and song reviewers have gone the way of lieder recitals >sigh<.
Even established critics are fading mentally, I’m afraid. Richard Fairman (G-phone) wrote a review last week where he referenced “Freud’s discovery that parents have an effect on their children’s lives [sic], so it’s probably time to put some of the enfeebled out to pasture in favor of the younger generation — we might be surprised.
I’m finding that, in the established song literature, there are recorded interpretations so bland and characterless that they really are DOA. Recently I was listening to a Strauss lied when I said to myself “that’s not the way it’s supposed to go!” Sure enough, I pulled out Janet Baker’s rendition which in every phrase cut to the heart of the matter. So without serious musical coaching, or critics, the future of lieder will be like looking through the wrong end of a telescope.
Thanks again, Philip, for your fine efforts.
John H
LikeLiked by 1 person