Originally posted by HighlandDougie
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BaL 18.05.24 - Debussy: Jeux
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Originally posted by Roger Webb View Post
My introduction to Jeux was buying the three Lp box of Haitink and this was my mainstay of Debussy for years. Latterly I tried out many other perfs and brought home the four discs of the complete Debussy by Jean Martinon on EMI. The orchestra (Orch. Nat. de l'ORTF) doesn't quite match Haitink's Concertgebouw, but they are idiomatic and the sound Paul Vavasseur gets in the Salle Wagram is fine. The Haitink Lp set will always be special, but have a listen to Martinon....and not just in Jeux, La Mer is terrific!
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View Post
Indeed, I am predisposed to like pretty much anything conducted by Jean Martinon (most recently the live ORTF Mahler 3) so upgraded the Debussy recordings with a Japanese SACD set of the four CDs a few years ago.
I heard the Orchestre de Bretagne once in Nantes playing a programme of Ravel, Ibert and Paul le Flem, and it was fascinating - pull it apart and you could say the ensemble and intonation were not perfect, but the overall effect was quite moving....rather like the difference between an original soundtrack of a fifties b/w Truffaut and a polished modern version. One sounds idiomatic, the other not.
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There’s a Cluytens recording of the Ravel orchestration of Pictures… the performance is really not great and the sound is quite dodgy but hearing how magnificently the winds blend in some of the smaller Promenades has completely spoilt me for other recordings. In particular, the Promenade before The Old Castle, where the overtones of the bassoon, clarinets and oboes line up in a way that not even modern French instruments can replicate.
I was horribly disappointed listening to one of Martinon’s Ravel recordings with the OdP. I’d forgotten that those were made after Barenboim had made the bassons change to fagotts. When an eagerly awaited bassoon solo came along it was like biting into something I thought was foie gras and getting Leberwurst instead.
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Originally posted by oliver sudden View PostThere’s a Cluytens recording of the Ravel orchestration of Pictures… the performance is really not great and the sound is quite dodgy but hearing how magnificently the winds blend in some of the smaller Promenades has completely spoilt me for other recordings. In particular, the Promenade before The Old Castle, where the overtones of the bassoon, clarinets and oboes line up in a way that not even modern French instruments can replicate.
I was horribly disappointed listening to one of Martinon’s Ravel recordings with the OdP. I’d forgotten that those were made after Barenboim had made the bassons change to fagotts. When an eagerly awaited bassoon solo came along it was like biting into something I thought was foie gras and getting Leberwurst instead.
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Originally posted by Nick Armstrong View Post
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Originally posted by Belgrove View PostThis was the subject of one of our Summer BAL’s
It took quite a while for this work to click with me, and the much lauded Haitink version never helped. I finally ‘got it’ with the aid of Dutois with the Montreal SO, and Boulez with Cleveland. Roth with Les Siècles is the pick of the modern versions. An amazing piece, quicksilver doesn’t do it justice.
Rattle, the reviewer's favourite, reminded me more of a puppy dog - attractive playing and dynamic changes, but he doesn't do ambiguity. A few bars from the end I thought " I bet I know how he will play the last lonely chord" and sure enough it was very predictable. Boulez in 1966 was not.
(ps I enjoyed a beautiful morning in Holker Hall Deer Park, which I discovered has a fascinating new installation/sculpture in slate stones. By 2pm my sunshine quota had been reached. Also I am still searching for my perfect performance of Jeux.)Last edited by Beresford; 18-05-24, 16:41.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
Nobody for tennis? On a beautiful Saturday afternoon, there was very little incentive to stay in and listen, especially if, like me, you already have one recording of Jeux and don't need another.
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I too was outdoors on a glorious day here in York, so didn't listen.
This is what the BBC website reports;
3.00pm
Building a Library
French composer Claude Debussy fashioned a taut and intense ballet around a game of tennis, a work which lasts less than twenty minutes. Flora Willson joins Andrew to propose her ultimate recommendation to buy, download or stream
Recommended version: CBSO, Simon Rattle (conductor) - Warner Classics 9029667941 or 2435752195 (both download only)
No mention of 'also recommended'.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View Post
Flora Wilson has been 10 times a reviewer on BAL. Studying her form, I would suggest a flutter on this recording might pay out.
https://www.prestomusic.com/classica...midi-dun-faune
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI too was outdoors on a glorious day here in York, so didn't listen.
This is what the BBC website reports;
3.00pm
Building a Library
French composer Claude Debussy fashioned a taut and intense ballet around a game of tennis, a work which lasts less than twenty minutes. Flora Willson joins Andrew to propose her ultimate recommendation to buy, download or stream
Recommended version: CBSO, Simon Rattle (conductor) - Warner Classics 9029667941 or 2435752195 (both download only)
No mention of 'also recommended'.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post
No other recordings were apparently recommendable. Sir Velo's choice is a snip on Amazon at £127.
It's also in this box set:
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Originally posted by CallMePaul View Post
Sadly "out of stock at the UK distributor", as I much preferred the excerpts played to Rattle. This seems to be an increasingly common problem with Harmonia Mundi, and I wonder if this isa prelude to deletion of the hard copy Cds and the recordings moving to download only, which does not suit everyone (I've not checked on Amazon but if it is not available via Presto they are likely to charge an exhorbitant price).
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