Program: #24-17 Air Date: Apr 22, 2024
To listen to this show, you must first LOG IN. If you have already logged in, but you are still seeing this message, please SUBSCRIBE or UPGRADE your subscriber level today.
World-premiere recording of suites by Pancrace Royer with Les Talens Lyriques, Josquin’s Missa Malheur me bat, and Gottfried van der Goltz with some Bach (and some works no longer attributed to the great man).
I. Pancrace Royer: Surprising Royer (Les Talents Lyriques/Christophe Rousset) Aparte Music AP298.
Taken from Royer’s operatic works – and (with the exception of a live version of Pyrrhus) never previously recorded – these choreographic pieces reveal a new facet of the composer.
The brilliance and virtuosity of his harpsichord compositions are well known; here we discover his gift for refinement and lyricism. These dances show Royer’s singular sense of harmony and fine use of orchestral contrasts, as well as an almost whimsical rhetoric of the unexpected. Some of his best-known pieces, including the famous “March of the Scythians” from Zaïde, are to be heard here in their orchestral form.</em >
From Early Music review: It is not clear why it should be ‘surprising Royer’, Royer being Pancrace Royer (1703-1755). He was born of French parents in Turin, his father, an engineer, having been seconded by Louis XIV to assist the house of Savoy. The family returned to Paris while he was still a child. The connections with the royal family stood Royer in good stead; he became a teacher of the royal children, his links securing him his first opera commission, the tragédie Pyhrrus, composed to celebrate the birth of the Dauphin in 1729 and subsequently first performed at the Paris Opéra in 1730. That same year he was appointed maïtre de musique at the Opéra, where he oversaw the production of Rameau’s first opera, Hippolyte et Aricie (1733). </em >Later Royer would become director of the famous Parisian concert society, Le Concert Spiritual and the composer of a virtuosic and highly successful book of keyboard works that included transcriptions from his own operas.
They number five works in addition to Pyhrrus and from them Christophe Rousset has chosen orchestral extracts, mostly dances, from four: Pyhrrus, the ballet-heroïque Le pouvoir de l’Amour (1743), Zaïde, reine de Grenade (1739), another ballet-heroïque and the acte de ballet Almasis (1748). The opening overture to Le pouvoir immediately reveals a composer not only thoroughly competent in contrapuntal technique but also one with an impressive command of orchestration and orchestral colour. If Royer’s dances overall lack the supreme distinction of those of his contemporary Rameau – in particular we find only rare glimpses of the languid sensuality that is just one of many reasons for Rameau’s greatness as a dance composer – there are many that have thoroughly attractive qualities of their own. The two from a hunting scene in Zaïde that was apparently much applauded, an ‘Entrée des chasseurs’ and an ‘Air pour les chasseurs’ creating exciting evocations of the hunt, while some of the more extended dance movements are also particularly striking. Among these is a long and effective Chaconne from Le pouvoir that contrasts airy, diaphanous writing for the flute with more animated passages for the full orchestra. Another extended movement, an ‘Air tendrement’ again with restful trilling flutes and a counter melody featuring bassoons, is arguably the closest Royer comes to Rameau. And if you want irresistible verve, the two ‘Tambourins’ from Royer’s penultimate opera, the one-act Almasis fills the bill admirably.
To say that no one does this kind of music with the élan, the insight and the sensitivity that Christophe Rousset does has by now become virtually a cliché rather than an observation. Rhythms are sprung with refined grace, melodies shaped with elegance, but above all comes the feeling that dancers are never far removed from Rousset’s ‘mind’s eye’. Add to this superb orchestral playing by Les Talens Lyriques – just listen to the rich depth of the bass string section with its six cellos – and it becomes clear that this is a CD that needs no further endorsement from me or anyone else. If you have any kind of feeling for French baroque music you need to hear this. Post haste.
Brian Robins
Suites from:
Le pouvoir de l'Amour (1743)
Zaïde, reine de Grenade (1739)
Almasis (1748)
Pyrrhus (1730)
II. Josquin Desprez: Malheur me bat (Gli Angeli Geneve/Stephan MacLeod). Aparte Music AP338.
Josquin was the most emblematic composer of his time, famous throughout Europe for his compositions both secular and sacred.
This recording explores those two aspects of his output, which are more closely related than one might think.
Here in a small line-up, Gli Angeli Genève deliver a virtuoso vocal performance that is sensitive and empathetic.
With only two voices per part, they play on the timbre and individuality of each voice, and thus create an intimacy and a meditative mood that invite the listener to share with the singers in the deeply moving humanity of Josquin’s music.
1.
|
Missa Malheur me bat: Kyrie 03:21
|
2.
|
Douleur me bat 03:43
|
3.
|
Missa Malheur me bat: Gloria 05:43
|
4.
|
Nymphes des bois. Déploration [sur la mort] de Johannes Ockeghem 05:28
|
5.
|
Missa Malheur me bat: Credo 07:52
|
6.
|
Miserere mei, Deus 15:42
|
7.
|
Missa Malheur me bat: Sanctus 09:38
|
8.
|
Mille regretz 02:28
|
9.
|
Missa Malheur me bat: Agnus Dei 07:16
|
10.
|
Preter rerum seriem 06:26
|
III. Bach: Sonatas for Violin and Continuo (Gottfried von der Goltz, v./Annekatrin Beller, ce/Torsten Johann, harpsichord). Aparte Music AP276.
Various attempts to locate missing chamber by Johann Sebastian Bach have brought to light many pieces, and it is often difficult to separate authentic works from others that are not.
In this album, Gottfried von der Goltz, leader of the Freiburger Barockorchester, directs our gaze towards a number of these compositions: three sonatas (BWV 1021, 1023 and 1024) and a fugue (BWV 1026).
Also on the program are the Sonata in A major, long attributed to J.S. Bach but now recognized as a composition by Telemann, and an anonymous sonata in C minor dating from the 1720s.
Sonata for violin and continuo in G major BWV 1021
- I. Adagio
- II. Vivace
- III. Largo
- IV. Presto
[Sonata for violin and continuo in C minor BWV 1024]
- I. Adagio
- II. Presto
- III. Affettuoso
- IV. Vivace
Violin sonata in C minor (D-Di Mus. 2-R-8, 53)
- I. Adagio
- II. Allegro
- III. Siciliana
- IV. Allegro
- Fugue in G minor BWV 1026
- BWV 1019a~Gavotte
Sonata for violin and continuo in E minor BWV 1023
- I. [Preludio]
- II. Adagio ma non tanto
- III. Allemanda
- IV. Gigue
Sonata for violin and continuo in A major BWV Anh.II 153
- I. [Adagio]
- II. [Vivace]
- III. [Largo]
- IV. Allegro
- V. [Fuga]