BOESMANS Au Monde

Record and Artist Details

Composer or Director: Philippe Boesmans

Genre:

Opera

Label: Cyprès

Media Format: CD or Download

Media Runtime: 114

Mastering:

DDD

Catalogue Number: CYP4643

CYP4643. BOESMANS Au Monde

Tracks:

Composition Artist Credit
Au Monde Philippe Boesmans, Composer
Charlotte Hellekant, Elder Daughter, Mezzo soprano
Fflur Wyn, Soprano
Frode Olsen, Father, Bass
Patricia Petibon, Second Son, Soprano
Patrick Davin, Conductor
Philippe Boesmans, Composer
Ruth Olaizola, Foreign Woman
Stéphane Degout, Baritone
Symphony Orchestra of La Monnaie
Werner van Mechelen, Elder Son, Bass-baritone
Yann Beuron, Husband, Tenor
Belgian composer Philippe Boesmans, just turned 79, was a close associate-cum-student of Henri Pousseur and the composers around him in Liège. The regular support of his country’s leading opera company La Monnaie and of recording companies has enabled several Boesmans operas, often based on classic plays – Reigen (Schnitzler), Wintermärchen (Shakespeare, including a whole act accompanied by a jazz/folk group) and Julie (Strindberg) – to make an impact in Europe.

Au monde, his latest (2014), is a setting of a play by the contemporary French author/director Joël Pommerat. In the CD’s booklet-note the composer supplies a pithy summary of his work: ‘Just as Chekhov is a distant model for Joël Pommerat, early-20th-century French opera is a model for me. My music is of course not that of Debussy, yet elements of the prosody will make one think of it.’

Like Pelléas et Mélisande too, dramatically much in Au monde happens internally and mentally – but little in terms of visible, epic drama. The enclosed family of a wealthy industrialist – the old father, three daughters and one husband, two sons and a mysterious ‘femme étrangère’ played by an actress – are meeting to decide who will take over the family business. Issues are raised about the identity of the youngest daughter (Fflur Wyn) and about the presence of the ‘foreign woman’ who speaks another language, sings verses (with a male voice in English) of ‘My way’ and is perhaps murdered by Ori, the only named son who is going blind but will inherit the business. All this woman’s scenes carry the stage direction ‘this may be a dream of the second daughter’, the most extended role vocally and a kind of narrator or Everywoman manquée (Patricia Petibon).

Boesmans’s music is quite lush and essentially tonal, although harmonically it suggests a good ear for later 20th-century musical grammar. Scenes are linked, again Pelléas-like, with little interludes (or codas and introductions), many with an inventive range of orchestral colour. Vocal lines lie naturally for each character and are crucial in maintaining a pulse where there might have seemed a lack of narrative flow. The score of Au monde is a fluent vehicle for its economically told symbolic story. The two live performances edited down here present a well-organised and comfortably recorded reading of the opera by the committed cast.

Explore the world’s largest classical music catalogue on Apple Music Classical.

Included with an Apple Music subscription. Download now.

Gramophone Print

  • Print Edition

From £6.87 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Club

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive
  • Reviews Database
  • Events & Offers

From £9.20 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Reviews

  • Reviews Database

From £6.87 / month

Subscribe

Gramophone Digital Edition

  • Digital Edition
  • Digital Archive

From £6.87 / month

Subscribe

                              

If you are a library, university or other organisation that would be interested in an institutional subscription to Gramophone please click here for further information.