Boulez conducts Boulez
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: Pierre Boulez
Label: DG
Magazine Review Date: 12/1995
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 70
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: 445 833-2GH
Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Notations |
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Ensemble InterContemporain, Paris Pierre Boulez, Composer Pierre Boulez, Conductor Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Piano |
Structures, Book 2 |
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Ensemble InterContemporain, Paris Florent Boffard, Piano Pierre Boulez, Conductor Pierre Boulez, Composer Pierre-Laurent Aimard, Piano |
...explosante-fixe... |
Pierre Boulez, Composer
Emmanuelle Ophèle, Flute Ensemble InterContemporain, Paris Pierre Boulez, Composer Pierre Boulez, Conductor Pierre-André Valade, Flute Sophie Cherrier, Flute |
Author: Arnold Whittall
Though he may well disapprove of the designation, in ... explosante-fixe... Pierre Boulez has written one of the great flute concertos of this or any other century. At nearly 37 minutes, it is also probably the longest, and the expansiveness of the score, dating from 1991-3, gives the lie to all those persistent tales about Boulez's reluctance to compose. He has never lacked for ideas: he's just been unusually fastidious in his concern to do those ideas full justice.
This is music of prodigious melodic inventiveness – and if you believe Boulez incapable of lyricism, try... explosante-fixe... from as early as 1'50''. It shares a relish for regular rhythmic patterns with other later works (Messagesquisse, Repons), but its primary concern is with the possibility of enhancing natural sound by electronic means. There are no sound effects, no 'funny noises', but a subtle enrichment of pitch and tone colour as the principal flute and its two satellites interact with ensemble and electronics in music that moves absorbingly between turbulence and poetic reflection in Boulez's uniquely personal way.
This is a brilliantly engineered recording, and my only regret is that it wasn't possible to present it as a sequence of tracks cued to a fuller commentary in the notes. No less engaging are the performances of Notations andStructures, Livre 2, the former revealing the very early Boulez's debts to Debussy, Stravinsky and Bartok, the latter displaying the full, formidable power of his still-youthful originality. For both books of Structures one still has to turn to the pioneering recording by the Kontarsky brothers (Wergo, 6/93), but Livre 2 can well stand alone, and here Pierre-Laurent Aimard and Florent Boffard provide a finely characterized reading, as gripping in explosiveness as in restraint, and the pianos are recorded with exemplary naturalness.
This is a superb disc. The energy and sensitivity of the works it contains puts a great deal of other contemporary music deeply into the shade, and performances and recordings are equal to the music's stature.'
This is music of prodigious melodic inventiveness – and if you believe Boulez incapable of lyricism, try
This is a brilliantly engineered recording, and my only regret is that it wasn't possible to present it as a sequence of tracks cued to a fuller commentary in the notes. No less engaging are the performances of Notations and
This is a superb disc. The energy and sensitivity of the works it contains puts a great deal of other contemporary music deeply into the shade, and performances and recordings are equal to the music's stature.'
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