Poulenc: Chamber Music Vol. 3

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FRANCIS POULENC
Poulenc: Chamber Music Vol. 3
Laurent Lefevre, Jacques Mauger, Ronald van Spaendonck, Alexandre Tharaud, Guy Touvron

[ Naxos / CD ]

Release Date: Saturday 10 February 2001

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

This is excellent-warm, cozy, and digitally clean-American Record Guide

"With the exception of the masterly Sonata for horn, trumpet, and trombone, we are dealing with duos of one sort or another. Of much interest is the music for two pianos. The Sonata is of course one of the grand works of the two-piano repertory. Built around one of the fine slow movements ever composed, it remains one of the most 'serious' works Poulenc penned, a conversational piece of the utmost skill and integrity. Our pianists like master builders, careful not to step on one another's toes. I cannot recall hearing a more satisfying version of this seminal work.

"Samuel Barber was the dedicatee of the Capriccio d'après Le Bal Masque; another fairly late work that embodies all of the wistful, prismatic coloring that Poulenc was capable of. The poignant Elegie for two pianos was dedicated to a great patroness of the arts, Princess Marie-Blanche de Polignac. A footnote in the score proves illuminating as to the temperament of the work: 'Play this elegie as if improvising, a cigar in your mouth and a glass of cognac on the piano. All the offbeat rhythms must scarcely be touched. On the whole, too much pedal must not be used.'- To Poulenc, a cigar and cognac while meditating on a lost friend was the best tribute.

"The short L'ebarquement pour Cythere is culled from a two-piano score Poulenc wrote for a film. It is light and pleasant, an engaging divertissement. The Sonata for piano duet retains all the marks of youth-steely, uncompromising, yet seeded with the germs of growth that would later blossom into full-fledged Poulenc. The composer is always concerned with the understanablity of his music; hence his general avoidance of long pieces for solo instruments.

"The sonatas for two clarinets and bassoon and clarinet are early, minor jewels that hold your attention and prove a delightful entertainment. Our young wind layers are well matched to the challenge at hand, not too syrupy or sentimental (though Poulenc is always trying to cloak his sentiment), but just the right amount of brashness and seductive toying to make us wink right back at him.

"The Sonata for horn, trumpet, and trombone is a fairly mature, novel, exciting work that gets an A+ performance here. Did I mention the sonics? Naxos has found a way to get the sheet-metal edge off their sound. This is excellent-warm, cozy, and digitally clean."
- American Record Guide (Steven E. Ritter), Nov / Dec, 2000

"The first volume in this series of Poulenac's chamber music was a bit of a mixed bag. ...there are wonderfully spiky moments from Graf Mourja in the Stravinskian Violin Sonata, and Ronald Van Spaendonck's control of the haunting slow movement of the Clarinet Sonata is mesmerising."
- BBC Music Magazine (Christopher Dingle), October 2000

"Naxos' triumphant march through Poulenc's complete chamber music continues with this latest release containing, among a host of smaller items, a smashing performance of the magnificent Sonata for Two Pianos, one of the composer's greatest large works in any medium. Alexandre Tharaud and Francis Chaplin play beautifully…hypnotically seductive in the slow introduction and third movement, while the faster music has the right rhythmic skittishness and crisp articulation. The other outstanding performance here is the Sonata for horn, trumpet, and trombone. This awkward but charming piece has seldom sounded better balanced and more natural (not to mention in tune), and it's very well recorded in a warm acoustic. The other pieces are trifles, but no less enjoyable for that. Another winner."
- Classics Today (David Hurwitz)

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One of the most famous and fashionable French composers of the 20th century, Francis Poulenc carries the popular image of an outstanding composer of religious choral music and brilliant orchestral scores. Yet he was essentially a miniaturist, with a prolific output of chamber music and songs. Rapsodie nAgre was his first published work, and demonstrates his ability to work with poems of an ambiguous nature. Over the following two years, 1918-19, he completed the ambitious project of setting six songs by Apollinaire for Le bestiaire. The composer described Le bal masqu? as 'a nostalgic romp' through his past, and from his later life comes the El?gie for horn and the Sarabande, his only work for guitar.

Tracks:

- Capriccio d'apres Le bal masque for two pianos
- Elegie for two pianos
- L'embarquement pour Cythere (Valse-Musette for two pianos)
- Sonata for Clarinet and Bassoon
- Sonata for horn, trumpet and trombone
- Sonata for two clarinets
- Sonata for two pianos
- Sonate for piano duet14