Honegger: Le Roi David: Symphonic Psalm in three parts

Honegger: Le Roi David: Symphonic Psalm in three parts cover $25.00 In Stock add to cart

ARTHUR HONEGGER
Honegger: Le Roi David: Symphonic Psalm in three parts
Jacques Martin / Orchestre de la Cite / Choeur Regional Vittoria de l'Ille de France ; Michel Piquemal, conductor

[ Naxos / CD ]

Release Date: Friday 15 February 2002

"Michel Piquemal directs a wonderfully dramatic cast with style and passion in the smaller-scale original version of Honegger's symphonic psalm. Recommended." BBC Music Magazine

"Le Roi David, a symphonic oratorio was [Honegger's]first major success…the new Naxos recording makes a case for this continually surprising musical dramatization - the biblical story of David and his triumphs over Galiath and Saul. Honegger, in adapting his theater score for the concert hall, introduced a narrator to replace the missing stage action. Though I'm not usually a fan of he spoken word on recordings, I enjoyed Jacques Martin's melodiously intoned declamations. It helps that Honegger gives many of the spoken parts skillful underscoring: the combination of music and speech contributes much to the distinctive quality of the piece.

"All the vocal soloists give theatrically involved, musically sound performances. Soprano Danielle Borst sings with an undulating beauty…her Angel in 'The Death of David' is one of the disc's highlights. Mezzo Marie-Ange Todorovitch brings a lovely tone and perfectly deceptive innocence to Bathsheba's seductive 'Song of the Maid-Servant.' Christine Fersen delivers a fearsomely effective rendition of the Prophetess's incantation, and young Clara Guedj holds her pitches extremely well amidst the dreamy orchestral dissonances of the 'Song of the Sheppherd David.' Tenor Gilles Ragon is especially convincing in the Psalm 'Have mercy on me, O God,' in which he projects the exiled David's despair and confidence with equal force. Michel Piquemal's Orchestre de la Cité (six woodwinds, four brass, piano, harmonium and percussion in this scoring) has several standout moments, especially the Prokofiev-esque 'March of the Philistines,' plus excellent intonation throughout the piece's transparent chamber-ensemble textures."
- Opera News (Joshua Rosenblum), April, 2000

"...this Naxos release offers a particularly welcome means of exploring one of [Honegger's] most interesting works. Le Roi David, written in 1921, was later re-scored for larger forces, but Michel Piquemal bravely opts for the original, with its exotic mix of brass, woodwind, percussion and piano, along with narrator, largish chorus and several demanding parts for soloists. ...Piquemal handles his small forces with skill, and there's no denying the impact the piece can make."
- The Scotsman, December 4, 1999

"Michel Piquemal directs a wonderfully dramatic cast with style and passion in the smaller-scale original version of Honegger's symphonic psalm. Recommended."
- Christopher Dingle BBC Music Magazine, Jan 2000

Born in 1892 at Le Havre to parents originating from Zurich, Arthur Honegger was deeply influenced by this double identity, his Protestant ancestry and the Catholic country in which he was born, the sea and the mountains, Honegger's life, dedicated to music, was relatively uneventful, apart from the difficult war years spent in Paris, after a short period of military service in Switzerland. It was in 1947 that the first signs of heart disease overtook him, during a visit to New York. He died several years later, in 1955, in Paris.

Honegger's musical training began at Le Havre under local teachers and continued in Zurich, where his vocation became clear. At the Paris Conservatoire he was a pupil of Widor for composition and orchestration and of Vincent d'Indy for orchestral conducting, but, more importantly, of André Gédalge for counterpoint. Gédalge, who taught Florent Schmitt, Koechlin, Enesco, Ravel, Milhaud and Ibert, handed down to him the love of a difficulty conquered, the custom of writing down sketches and a solid technical foundation.

The dual nature of Honegger, oscillating between symphony and opera, showed itself in childhood: his first compositions included sonatas for violin and piano in the style of Beethoven, but also fragments of operas and even an oratorio-cantata, Le Calvaire (Calvary). This same duality informed all his work: in accordance with the period and with commissions and helped by a prodigious musical imagination, Honegger wrote a great deal for the theatre, including eighteen ballets (with the Funeral March for the collaborative Les Maries de la tour Eiffel of Les Six), 26 varied stage pieces, including Saul for Andre aide, Antigone for Cocteau and Le Soulier de satin for Paul Claudel, two operas and four operettas, as well as some thirty film- scores. Honegger's taste for so-called pure music is seen in four concertos, chamber music and a large number of orchestral works, including five symphonies and the well-known Pacific 231. Finally, he also wrote a quantity of songs and established the revival of oratorio in the twentieth century.

Although a member of Les Six, with Milhaud, Durey, Auric, Germaine, Tailleferre and Poulenc, Honegger remained distant from the music-hall aesthetic advocated by Cocteau, their mentor, in his manifesto Le Coq et l'Arlequin (The Cock and the Harlequin). He said that he had no admiration for the fairground and the music-hall, but on the contrary for chamber music and symphonic music of greater seriousness and austerity. A balanced man, deeply anchored in musical tradition, Honegger stated his only creed when he said that Debussy and Fauro had provided a very useful counterweight in his aesthetic to the classics and to Wagner.

In 1908 the Vaudois poet Reno Morax established a theatre in the village of Mézières. The stage was deep enough to allow large-scale productions and Gluck's Orphée had been mounted there before 1914. The First World War brought a pause in the activity of the theatre until1921, when René Morax struck on the idea of the biblical subject of King David for the re-opening. It was in February, with the rehearsals about to start in the following month, that the poet became worried about the music. The Swiss composers he had approached having refused, he sought the advice of the conductor Ernest Ansermet, who proposed the name of Honegger, then little known in his own country. Morax hesitated but was encouraged in this choice by Stravinsky himself.

Honegger began by composing the choral parts, which made use of a number of amateurs. It was, however, only after an unexpected visit to the bedside of his mother, who was seriously ill, that he envisaged two important movements, the Dance before the Ark and the Death of David. Everything was completed on 28th April, in two months, apart from the orchestration for a small ensemble of six woodwind, four brass, a harmonium, a piano, two timpani, a double bass, a gong and a tam-tam.

The work was a success, both musically and with the public. Shortly afterwards an enthusiastic patron provided an opportunity for Honegger's work to be heard in Paris, strangely coupled with Fauro's Requiem. The orchestra was enlarged to include strings, without detracting in any way from the sound qualities of the original version. The transfer of a stage work to the concert hall, however, posed the problem of the action, met, on the advice of Morax, by the introduction of a narrator. This change had an unexpected effect. Honegger revived, almost by chance, the oratorio, giving it new vigour by the use of spoken narration. The form was a productive one and some years later gave rise to another masterpiece, Jeanne d 'Arc au Bucher (St Joan at the Stake), with the collaboration of Claudel.

Honegger's music is not afraid to suggest, to accompany action descriptively: the various fanfares, such as No.3bis, the entry of Goliath, the victorious military marches of the Cortege and March of the Hebrews or absurdity in the March of the Philistines. Sometimes the music paints the scene, as in the nocturnal atmosphere disturbed by trumpet-calls in Saul's Camp or the divine anger of the Psalm In this terror. Above all, though, the music underlines the various ideas in the text, like a mosaic. The Psalm Have pity on me, O God is the best example of this. the tortured chromatic language of the first part is followed by the shining brass chords that underline the idea of confidence recovered.

Often present in the French theatre but rare in oratorio, melodrama unites the music subtly to the text. The mournful atmosphere of the Incantation comes principally from this unusual combination of music and speech that reinforces the poignant sorrow of the Lament of Gilboa or gives solemnity to the Crowning of Solomon. Beyond that, however, Honegger, for whom the unity of a work came from the relationship between music and words, uses the spoken text and music to reinforce the structure of the whole work.

The oratorio benefits enormously from this search for unity, realised through various elements, chords of fourths superimposed, the use of the oriental augmented second and from the beginning the various sections built on repetitions, such as the Lament of Gilboa and the Servants' Song, but also from the desire for balance, from the dramatic order and structure, between the different characters present in the work. A synthesis of this art of combining, the contrapuntal mastery of Honegger is heard in all its power in the final movement, with the clever superimposition of Alleluia over the bass theme of God tells you.

Honegger's own view of Le Roi David developed with time, but he continued to value the two principal sections, the Dance before the Ark and the Finale, as well as the penitential chorus. No doubt the success of the work annoyed him, as did that of Pacific 231, for it worked to the detriment of compositions of similar quality. Yet the deeply dual nature of Honegger is expressed strongly at the heart of Le Roi David: a pervasive pessimism stemming from the impression of living at the end of a civilisation goes together with the delicate and confident lyricism of the final works, as the Death of David carries with it the seed of the future. "A day shall come when a flower shall blossom from your stem, green once more."
- English version by Keith Anderson

Tracks:

Le Roi David Part I
01. Introduction: Narrator 02:04
02. Song Of The Shepherd David (A Child's Voice) 01:19
03. Psalm: Praised Be The Lord 02:02
04. Song Of Victory 00:39
05. Procession: Narrator 01:35
06. Psalm: Fear Nothing 01:48
07. Psalm: O For The Wings Of A Dove 03:18
08. Psalm: Song Of The Prophets 01:21
09. Psalm: Have Mercy On Me, O God 02:27
10. Saul's Camp: Narrator 01:58
11. Psalm: The Lord Is My Light 01:03
12. Incantation: The Prophetess 03:15
13. March Of The Philistines:Narrator 01:22
14. Lament Of Gilboa 04:54

Le Roi David Part II
15. Narrator 01:34
16. Dance Before The Ark: Narrator 10:50

Le Roi David Part III
17. Canticle 01:04
18. Track 18 02:03
19. Penitential Psalm 02:04
20. Psalm 03:42
21. Psalm 01:41
22. The Songs Of Ephraim 01:01
23. March Of The Hebrews: Narrator 02:21
24. Psalm 02:21
25. Psalm 01:10
26. The Crowning Of Solomon: Narrator 01:58
27. The Death Of David 05:08