Three works of the highest quality which rarely feature in live performance...
Poulenc Piano Concerto (1950) (with Alexandre Tharaud)
Prokofiev Symphony No.7 (1951-2)
***
Poulenc Stabat Mater (1950)
I've always felt the Prokofiev to be a deeper and darker work than is often assumed, so long as the appalling, tacked-on "happy ending" is omitted. The first movement especially contains some of his most beautiful and elegiac inspirations.
Poulenc's Stabat Mater, introverted sister to his equally wonderful Gloria, is simply one of the choral masterpieces of the 20thCentury, and has been recorded recently by Stephane Deneve with his SWR Stuttgart forces, for which relief... (my own preference is for Baudo/Lyon/HM).
... and the cyclothymic mood-switches of Poulenc's Piano Concerto, whose contrasts are best emphasised rather than neoclassically understated, sets the scene for the gentle, wistful elegies which follow it.
Poulenc Piano Concerto (1950) (with Alexandre Tharaud)
Prokofiev Symphony No.7 (1951-2)
***
Poulenc Stabat Mater (1950)
I've always felt the Prokofiev to be a deeper and darker work than is often assumed, so long as the appalling, tacked-on "happy ending" is omitted. The first movement especially contains some of his most beautiful and elegiac inspirations.
Poulenc's Stabat Mater, introverted sister to his equally wonderful Gloria, is simply one of the choral masterpieces of the 20thCentury, and has been recorded recently by Stephane Deneve with his SWR Stuttgart forces, for which relief... (my own preference is for Baudo/Lyon/HM).
... and the cyclothymic mood-switches of Poulenc's Piano Concerto, whose contrasts are best emphasised rather than neoclassically understated, sets the scene for the gentle, wistful elegies which follow it.
Comment