Reviews for
GMCD 7239 Marcel Dupré
Fono Forum 04/03
Krieg und Zerstörung
Hauptwerk dieser
spannenden CD mit geistlicher französischer Vokalmusik des 20. Jahrhunderts ist
das einstündige Oratorium „La France au CalvaireQ (1952/53) von Marcel Dupré.
Das Libretto reflektiert die Zerstörung Ruens im Zweiten Weltkrieg durch eine
Folge allegorischer Szenen mit Heiligenfiguren. Duprés Komposition variiert
zwischen erregter Unisono-Dramatik und meditativen Passagen und bedient sich
dabei einer expressiven, stark chromatische angereicherten Harmonik. Der
intonationssichere Chor agiert mit großer dynamischer und artikulatorischer
Sorgfalt, klingt aber für den französischen Tonfall der Werke mitunter eine Spur
zu direkt
Interpretation 4
Sterne
Klang : 4 Sterne
Dupré: La France
au Calvaire, Langlais Festival Alleluia, Alain O Salutaris, Messian, O sacrum
convinium, Vasari singers, Jeremy Backhause (2002)
Guild/Musik/Welt
CD 7239 (78’)
MusicWeb Saturday March 08 03
Jean LANGLAIS
(1907-1991): Festival Alleluia (1971) [6’53"]
Jehan ALAIN (1911-1940): O Salutaris
[2’00"]
Olivier MESSIAEN (1908-1992): O sacrum
Convivium (1937) [4’13"]
Marcel DUPRÉ (1886-1971): La France au
Calvaire, Op. 49 (1952/3)* [64’24"]
*Helen
Neeves (soprano); Catherine Denley (alto); Matthew Beale (tenor);
Colin Campbell (baritone)
Vasari Singers conducted by Jeremy Backhouse
Jeremy Filsell (organ)
Recorded at Douai Abbey, Upper Woolhampton, near Reading, Berkshire, 22 – 24
February 2002
GUILD
GMCD 7239 [78’25"]
Guild
already have to their credit a much-lauded intégrale of the organ music
of Marcel Dupré, played by Jeremy Filsell. In February 2001, presumably as an
addendum to that cycle, they recorded the British choir, the Vasari Singers,
accompanied by Filsell, in a superb recital of choral music by Dupré [GMCD
7220], which included the final movement of La France au Calvaire. Just
about a year later the team returned to the same venue, Douai Abbey, and set
down the world première recording of that work in its entirety. That recording
is issued here.
La France
au Calvaire
is a
strange work. It was prompted by Dupré’s despair at the wartime devastation of
his beloved home city of Rouen. (Dupré had previously penned another substantial
organ and choral work in response to the carnage of the First World War. This
was De Profundis, Op. 18 (1917), a dark and powerful setting of Psalm 130
which, by happy coincidence, was included on the Vasari’s earlier Dupré disc,
mentioned above.) For La France au Calvaire Dupré turned to a fellow
native of Rouen, the poet, René Herval, who fashioned for him a somewhat
hyperbolic libretto which the (excellent) notes rightly describe as "curious".
The piece was completed in time for the joint celebrations in 1956 of the
post-war restoration of Rouen Cathedral and of the five hundredth anniversary of
the posthumous pardoning of Joan of Arc.
The work
is in eight movements, comprising a prologue, a series of six tableaux and a
finale. In the Prologue the allegorical figure of France (here sung by Catherine
Denley) kneels at the feet of the crucified Christ, pleading with him to pardon
her countrymen’s sins down the ages. Each of the following tableaux depicts a
saint from French history, including Joan of Arc, St. Denis (the patron saint of
France), St. Louis IX, St. Vincent de Paul, St. Clothilde and St. Theresa. In
the finale we return to Calvary where, amid prayers and praising from the chorus
(the people of France), divine pardon is duly bestowed.
It’s a
moving, deeply felt work, featuring some atmospheric and very effective writing
for the chorus. The whole thing is underpinned by a prodigiously varied and, I’m
sure, fiendishly difficult organ part, conceived on a massive scale. This is
majestically and authoritatively realised by Jeremy Filsell. The organ writing
is extremely imaginative (as are Filsell’s registrations) and the part is
colourful though not in an ostentatious way. Indeed, the piece may strike many
listeners as more austere than might have been the case had not Dupré eschewed
the use of an orchestra. Austere it may be; forbidding, no. There is a notably
dramatic impulse behind much of the music and many of the reflective passages in
which the piece abounds are lovely indeed.
The four
vocal soloists all have important parts and all acquit themselves very well
indeed. One point of interest is that in the performance of the finale included
on the earlier CD Helen Neeves took the part of ‘La France’ (and very well too)
whereas here the role is allotted to Catherine Denley, presumably as specified
by the composer (I haven’t seen a score). I think that the additional richness
of a contralto voice adds a certain something to these passages. In fact I
enjoyed Miss Denley’s singing throughout the disc. She sings eloquently and with
consistently beautiful tone. Helen Neeves too makes some lovely, affecting
sounds. Of all the soloists it is tenor, Matthew Beale, who sounds the most
French. The plangent, slightly nasal tone he deploys here is absolutely right
for this music. If I seem to rate baritone Colin Campbell less highly than his
peers it’s because I found his voice contained too much vibrato for my taste
though it cannot be denied that he is in command of his roles as St. Denis and
the Voice of Christ..
Jeremy
Filsell gives a stupendous account of the organ part but he is always careful
not to intrude at the expense of the singers. The conducting of Jeremy Backhouse
is spirited and responsive to the many moods of the piece. Clearly he has
prepared his singers with scrupulous thoroughness.
I have to
admit that to some extent I’m still coming to terms with this work, which I had
not encountered before. However, my listening for this review has already
persuaded me that La France au Calvaire is a very significant discovery.
I fear that the work is unlikely to make significant headway outside France so
its availability on CD is all the more welcome. (I must say I’m somewhat
surprised that no French choir has recorded it.) I cannot imagine that it will
ever receive more committed or expert advocacy than it does from the performers
assembled here. Guild accord them a superb recording, which is beautifully
balanced (the organ making its presence properly felt without ever overwhelming
the singers) and very detailed.
The notes
by David Gammie and Jeremy Backhouse are all that could be desired. They
comprise an edited version of Gammie’s excellent biographical introduction from
the earlier CD while I suspect it is Backhouse who contributes the concise but
extremely pertinent notes introducing each movement of the Dupré work and also
each of the three smaller scale pieces. Full French texts and English
translations are provided and, unlike some labels, all the printing is crystal
clear.
To
complete the programme the Vasari Singers perform motets by three pupils of
Dupré, two of which, those by Alain and Langlais, were new to me and, indeed,
receive their first recordings here. Langlais’ Festival Alleluia is a
setting of just one word (‘Alleluia’) like the marvellous setting by the
American, Randall Thompson. Unlike Thompson, Langlais accompanies his choir (a
virtuoso organ part, effortlessly despatched by Jeremy Filsell). His setting
contrasts rhythmically exuberant passages of jubilation with passages in which
joy is expressed with more quiet serenity. It’s an interesting piece but I must
say I think it would have been more effective at half the length. Filsell’s
accompaniment is superb but I wonder what the piece sounds like with the
addition of the optional trumpets and timpani?
The Alain
work is simple and has a grave beauty which reminded me of the choral music of
Pierre Villette. According to the notes, it’s an "adaptation" by his sister, the
distinguished organist Marie-Claire Alain. I’m not entirely clear if this means
she has arranged an organ piece for à capella choir. It matters not; the
result is a lovely little devotional work, serenely sung here. Messiaen’s
luxuriant, ecstatic O Sacrum Convivium is a wonderfully rapt piece which
I first sang when still at school. I’ve loved it ever since. This is one of the
most sensuous pieces of religious music I know and whenever I hear it I regret
that it’s Messiaen’s sole work of this kind. It is splendidly sung here though I
could have wished for a touch more mystery; perhaps the microphone placings were
just a little too close?
All in
all, this is a splendid disc. Both Guild and the performers are to be
congratulated on their enterprise in making it. I have been very glad to
acquaint myself with this major work by Dupré and I hope many other collectors
will take advantage of this release to hear it.
Very
strongly recommended.
John Quinn
Gramophone 11.02
Editor’s Choice on Cover CD
Dupré La France au Calvair
Alin. Langlais. Messiaen Motets
Vasari Singers / Jeremy Backhouse with Jeremy Filsell
orgGuild GMCD 7239
Track 6 La France au Calvaire – Sainte-Thérèse
St Teresa of Lisieux (d1897), canonised in 1925, is
portrayed by a soprano soloist
The first recording of
Marcel Dupré’s La France au Calvaire of 1952-53 finds the Vasari Singers
on top form. Dupré wrote the work to commemorate the restoration of Rouen
Cathedral after wartime devastation as well as for the 500th
anniversary of the pardon of St Joan of Arc in 1956. Based on a libretto by the
Rouen-native René Herval, the work envisages the figure of ‘La France’ kneeling
before the crucified Christ interceding on behalf of France using six French
saints as witnesses.
REVIEW
DUPRÉ
La France au Calvaire, Op
49(a) Alain O Salutaris Langlais Festival Alleluia Messiaen
O sacrum convivium!
(a) Helen Neeves sop – Catherine Denley
mez – Matthew Beale ten – Colin Campbell bar
Jeremy Filsell org
Vasari Singers / Jeremy Backhouse
Guild GMCD 7239 (78 minutes: DDD)
Texts and translations included
An extraordinarily powerful work, born
out of fury, superbly performed
Although the Vasari
Singers have already given us a taste of La France au Calvaire
(10/01)this is the first time the complete work has appeared on disc. And an
stonishing work it is, too, setting, to quote the booklet note, 'a curious
libretto' by René Herval who, like Dupré, was a native of Rouen.
Appalled by the devastation wrought on his native city during
the Second World War, Dupré vents all his anger and passion into this 65-minute
oratorio, its movements dedicated to six French saints and framed by a Prologue
and Final.
Principally known for
his organ music, it might seem strange to question Dupré's use of the organ here
as the sole means of instrumental accompaniment. But despite Jeremy Filsell's
stunning virtuosity and brilliant handling of the not-always-perfectly-in-tune
Douai Abbey organ, I can't help feeling that the score cries out for an
orchestra.
No such reservations
about the performance: in a word, stunning. The bleak ugliness of Christ nailed
to the cross is compellingly portrayed by Matthew Beale, Catherine Denley makes
an arresting France appealing for forgiveness for her misguided people, Colin
Campbell fulfils the dual roles of St Denis and the voice of Christ with
suitable gravitas and authority, and Helen Neeves is a beautifully innocent St
Clotilde (magically set against a decidedly Messiaenic organ backdrop).
As for Jeremy Backhouse
and his superb Vasari Singers, they excel even by their own high standards. The
men evoke suitably violent Barbarians as they call for Christ's death, the women
provide a moment of absolute wonder as they sing to St Theresa, and the entire
choir moves from the passionate followers of Joan of Are, through the gloriously
triumphant ('Le Christ est encore'), and the miserably wretched ('J'ai faim') to
the luminously prayerful ('Saints, martyrs, phalanges').
The three motets which
share the disc seem in comparison a trifle disappointing: Langlais' Festival
Alleluia, despite opening with great verve and spirit, overstays its welcome
by a good six minutes; Alain's gentle O Salutaris is really little more
than an exercise in Bach-style chorale writing; and, for all its stature as a
20th-centwy choral classic, Messiaen's O sacrum convivium here lacks a
sense of mystery. But that disappointment is only because the motets precede a
work of extra-ordinary emotional impact and a performance of exceptional power.
Marc Rochester
MUSIC WEB MONDAY 09. SEPTEMBER 02
Marcel DUPRÉ
(1886-1971)
La France au Calvaire Op.49 (1952/3) [64’24"]
Jean
LANGLAIS (1907-1991)
Festival Alleluia (1971) [6’53"]
Jehan ALAIN
(1911-1940)
O Salutaris [2’00"]
Olivier
MESSIAEN (1908-1992)
O sacrum convivium (1937) [4’13"]
Helen Neeves (Soprano)
Catherine Denley (Alto)
Matthew Beale (Tenor)
Colin Campbell (Baritone)
Vasari
Singers/Jeremy Backhouse
Jeremy Filsell (Organ)
Recorded in Douai Abbey, Upper Woolhampton, Nr.
Reading on 22-24
February 2002
GUILD
GMCD 7239
[78’25"]
The main work obviously
on this disc is the Oratorio by Marcel Dupré "La France au Calvaire"
(France at Calvary), inspired by the destruction suffered in Rouen during the
Second World War (Dupré was born in Rouen); he completed this in time for the
joint celebration of the restoration of Rouen Cathedral and the 500th
anniversary of the official pardon of Joan of Arc in 1956. The libretto, written
by another native of Rouen, the poet René Herval, is curious; it begins with the
allegorical figure of La France kneeling at the foot of the Cross, begging the
dying Christ to forgive her countrymen their sins. In support of her plea, the
six succeeding movements present a procession of French saints through the ages.
The Finale returns to Calvary where La France repeats her prayer of the Prologue
and is answered by Christ on the Cross. Dupré did not consider himself a
composer, and was first and primarily an organist, and obviously a very good one
- he performed the complete organ works of J.S.Bach from memory in the early
1920s. He came from a musical family, and studied at the Paris Conservatoire
under Widor. In style he is removed from the other French modernists, and
listening to this work, the impression I gained was one of César Franck
transported into the 20th century. The work has four soloists, chorus and organ,
the latter part being a tour de force. The soloists are very good, with clear
diction and cope well with demanding roles; the only slight criticism I have is
of the baritone, Colin Campbell, who has a marked vibrato, which is just short
of being intrusive. Catherine Denley is of course well known and gives her usual
sound firm performance, and both the tenor and soprano leads are held well, both
with clear fresh voiced soloists. Jeremy Filsell at the organ has the job of
acting as anchor man and continuo, and performs this unobtrusively and
competently; the organ volume is well adjusted and does not drown either the
soloists or the choir. I am not an organist and thus cannot comment on the
registrations used, but certainly the effect is very satisfying.
The Vasari Singers are a
very competent and justly respected choir; they were formed in 1980 by a group
of friends from the London Symphony Chorus, and named themselves after Giorgio
Vasari (1511-1575) a musician, architect, artist and critic in sixteenth century
Italy. They thus committed themselves to performing Italian polyphony, but as
their numbers increased their repertoire widened, and they now embrace a wide
spectrum of music. For this programme, from their photograph, they number 31 and
give an excellent account of themselves. They are virtually semi-professional
these days, and their expertise is reflected in the way in which they cope with
Dupré’s score. I cannot say that I enjoyed the work, rather that it was a most
interesting experience to hear this unusual oratorio; I would not want to listen
to it again, but I’m grateful for the chance of experiencing it. This, together
with the other items on the disc are likely to prove of interest to a student of
modern French choral music. In fact, apart from the Messiaen, none of these
works is otherwise represented in the current catalogue.
Jean Langlais
studied at the
Institute for Blind Youth, and later entered the Paris Conservatoire, studying
organ under Dupré. He later took up an appointment at the Sainte Clotilde church
in Paris (previously held by César Franck and Tournemire). The motet Festival
Alleluia is scored for choir and organ, with optional timpani and trumpets.
It consists of contrasting sections singing for almost 7 minutes to the one word
"Alleluia". I found the whole work tedious because of this, although the singers
and organ performed more than adequately. I am probably missing some finer
points, but it was not for me.
Jéhan Alain
was killed in action in
1940, aged only 29; O Salutaris is a short motet beautifully crafted and
sung. It has been adapted by his sister, the renowned organist Marie-Claire
Alain. It is a very peaceful, easily accessible piece, again well performed, and
which I enjoyed most of any works on this disc.
Olivier Messiaen’s
O sacrum convivium is scored for a capella choir, or soprano and organ;
the choral version is performed here, and again with aplomb by the Vasari
singers. I could not get to grips with this piece, but then Messiaen was ever my
bête-noire and attempts to understand and appreciate his music in the past have
been accompanied by failure!
The recording for all
works is up to Guild’s usual high standards, and reproduction and balance of
parts is very natural. In total a disc for specialists or those liking the
unusual in repertoire.
John Portwood
Page revised 18.05.03
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