Ravel - Songs for Voice and Piano (Chanson espagnole Noel des jouets Si morne! and others)

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Ravel - Songs for Voice and Piano (Chanson espagnole Noel des jouets Si morne! and others)
Inva Mula, soprano / Valerie Millot, soprano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano / Gerard Theruel, baritone / Laurent Naouri, baritone / David Abramovitz, pi

[ Naxos / 2 CD ]

Release Date: Friday 28 November 2003

This item is currently out of stock. We expect to be able to supply it to you within 2 - 4 weeks from when you place your order.

From his father, a Swiss engineer, Ravel inherited a delight in precision and, incidentally, in mechanical toys, while from his Basque mother he acquired a familiarity with something of Spanish culture.

Born in 1875 in the small coastal village of Ciboure in the Basque region of France, he spent his childhood and adolescence principally in Paris, starting piano lessons at the age of seven and from the age of fourteen studying the piano in the preparatory piano class of the Conservatoire. In 1895 he left the Conservatoire, after failing to win the prizes necessary for promotion, but resumed studies there three years later under Gabriel Fauré. His repeated failure to win the important Prix de Rome, even when well enough established as a composer, disqualified at his fifth attempt in 1905, resulted in a scandal that led to changes in the Conservatoire, of which Fauré became director.

Ravel's career continued successfully in the years before 1914 with a series of works of originality, including important additions to the piano repertoire, to the body of French song and, with commissions from Dyagilev, to ballet. During the war he enlisted in 1915 as a driver and the war years left relatively little time or will for composition, particularly with the death of his mother in 1917. By 1920, however, he had begun to recover his spirits and resumed work, with a series of compositions, including an orchestration of his choreographic poem La valse, rejected by Dyagilev and the cause of a rupture in their relations. He undertook a number of engagements as a pianist and conductor in concerts of his own works, in France and abroad. All this was brought to an end by his protracted final illness, attributed to a taxi accident in 1932, which led to his eventual death in 1937.

Ravel left some 39 songs, a dozen of which are arrangements of folk-songs. Although any division of Ravel's work into periods of supposed development may seem arbitrary with a composer whose essential style seems, in other respects, to have been formed so early, it is convenient, at least, to take together the earlier songs, settings of individual poems, the composition of which coincides more or less with the composer's association with the Conservatoire. A second group follows the composition of the cycle with orchestra, Shéhérazade, in 1903 and ends with the Chants populaires of 1910. This is followed in 1913 by the Trois poèmes de Stéphane Mallarmé, for voice and instrumental ensemble, not included here, leading to the final Don Quichotte à Dulcinée.

The earliest song is the Ballade de la reine morte d'aimer (The Ballade of the Queen who died for love) [CD 2/6], a setting of a poem by Roland de Marès, suggesting in its reference to Thule the ballad of the King of Thule in Goethe's Faust. The archaising tendency of the text is matched by Ravel's setting in an archaic style that he was soon to explore elsewhere, with elements of illustration in the sound of the bells that announce the death of the queen. There is something sinister about the Verlaine setting of 1895, Un grand sommeil noir (A great black sleep)[CD 1/17], with its menacing accompaniment and agonized climax. The pianist Alfred Cortot remembered his fellow-student as 'a sarcastic, argumentative and aloof young man, who used to read Mallarmé and visit Erik Satie'. For his first published song, Sainte (Saint)[2/13], written in 1896, Ravel turned to Mallarmé, the source of later significant inspiration. It has been suggested that the setting owes something to Satie, in its accompaniment of chords and perhaps in its mood and direction liturgiquement, which suits a poem that gently contemplates St Cecilia. It was first performed in 1907.

It was in 1898 that Ravel wrote his setting of Leconte de Lisle's Chanson du rouet (Song of the Spinning-Wheel) [1/6], a song that cannot help but recall Schubert's setting of Gretchen's spinning-song from Goethe's Faust. The piano echoes the movement of the treadle and the wheel, with a final allusion, in the bass, to the Dies irae when death is mentioned. The same period brought the Deux épigrammes de Clément Marot (Two Epigrams of Clément Marot) [1/10-11], sixteenth-century texts that invited archaism. This is suggested by the open fifths of the accompaniment of the first song, with reflections of the spinet in the piano figuration of the second. The group of early songs ends with the 1903 setting of an indifferent poem by the pseudonymous Paul Gravollet, Manteau de fleurs (Mantle of Flowers) [1/18] in which Ravel effectively prevails over any defects in the text.

The short cycle Shéhérazade, settings of three poems from the collection of that name by his friend Tristan Klingsor, originally with orchestra and not included here, opens a new period in Ravel's songs. Between 1904 and 1906 he set five Greek folk-songs, here sung, as at the first performance, in Greek, but more often performed with the translation by Michel Calvocoressi. Only the third and fourth of the original set were published, with three further songs added for the subsequent publication. The first group of songs were set very quickly to illustrate a lecture and the whole set, with the newly added songs, was first performed at a lecture-recital by Calvocoressi. The Cinq mélodies populaires grecques [1/12-16] is Ravel's first venture into the harmonization of folk-songs. In 1909 he set another Greek folk-song, Tripatos [2/7], before turning the following year to a group of songs in Spanish, Limousin French, Scottish, Italian and Yiddish, the Chants populaires [1/1-5], with apt harmonizations and piano accompaniments that enhance the melodies.

Ravel wrote his own words for the charming Noël des jouets (The Toys' Christmas) [1/7] of 1905, with its child-like wonder at the figures of the crib. The piano suggests the bells of Christmas, with a vocal line that seems to prefigure both the Histoires naturelles [2/1-5] of 1906 and the later collaboration with Colette, L'enfant et les sortilèges. The first of these is a successful attempt to set prose rather than verse. Jules Renard, author of the famous novel of unhappy childhood Poil de carotte, turned from verse to the writing of prose sketches, at their most successful in the poetic observation of nature depicted in Histoires naturelles, a collection of prose-poems illustrated by Toulouse-Lautrec, Bonnard and others. Ravel sought to interpret these texts in musical terms, the vocal line largely following the rhythms and intonations of the words. Renard, who enjoyed a very considerable reputation, had doubts about the need for musical intervention, but was persuaded to hear the first performance of Ravel's work, with its echoes, perceived by the critic Emile Vuillermoz, of Ravel's own spoken intonations.

The middle period of Ravel's songs includes a setting in 1906 of Les grands vents venus d'outremer (The great winds that come from beyond the sea) [2/12], a poem by the poet and novelist Henri de Régnier. The turbulence evoked is reflected in the setting, as the winter winds blow, leading to the bleak ending. Sur l'herbe (On the grass) [2/14) sets an evocative poem from Verlaine's Fêtes galantes, with its snatches of conversation in an idealised past world of Watteau. The Vocalise [2/16], a study in the form of a habanera, was commissioned for the Paris Conservatoire and later won wider fame in various instrumental transcriptions.

Ravel's Deux mélodies hébraïques (Two Jewish Songs) [1/8-9] include the important Aramaic Kaddish text, the cantor's melismatic chant sparely supported by the piano. The second song, L'énigme éternelle (The Eternal Enigma) is in Yiddish and of a very different kind, but imparting an air of mystery. The Trois chansons (Three Songs) [2/8-10] of 1914-15 were adapted as solo songs by the composer from his four-part original unaccompanied settings of the same date. The words are by the composer and refer obliquely to the war in the birds of paradise, with their blue, white and red colours, the last bringing a soldier's death. Nicolette has a simple narrative, illustrated by the piano, and the final Ronde is a comic song.

Ronsard à son âme (Ronsard to his soul) [2/11] of 1923-24 was Ravel's contribution to a tribute to Ronsard, the Tombeau de Ronsard, for which a number of leading composers provided settings. The flavour of the period is reflected in the open intervals of the accompaniment, with its suggestions of organum, recalling the earlier of the two Marot songs. The evocative little setting of Rêves (Dreams) [2/15], a poem by Léon-Paul Fargue was written in 1927.

Ravel completed his Chansons madécasses (Madagascan Songs) [2/17-19] in 1926, settings of three poems allegedly translated but possibly written by the Creole poet Evariste-Désiré de Forges, Vicomte de Parny, and published in 1787. For voice, flute, cello and piano in their original version, the songs were written in response to a commission from Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge and reflect an eroticism that matches the texts but is unusual in Ravel. This is particularly evident in the first song, Nahandove. The cautionary Aoua! and the final Il est doux are bitonal, the latter expressive of sultry languor.

The three songs of Don Quichotte à Dulcinée (Don Quixote to Dulcinea) [1/20-22] were written in 1932-33 to texts by Paul Morand. They were originally intended for the great Russian singer Shalyapin in a film about Cervantes, but not used for that purpose. In this final work Ravel returns to Spain, basing each of the songs on a Spanish or Basque dance rhythm. The extravagant promises of Chanson romanesque are followed by the solemn prayer to St Michael of Chanson épique and the final more boisterous celebration of Chanson à boire (Drinking Song).
- Keith Anderson



Tracks:

Chanson espagnole
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano

Chanson francaise
David Abramovitz, piano / Gerard Theruel, baritone

Chanson ecossaise
David Abramovitz, piano / Inva Mula, soprano

Chanson italienne
David Abramovitz, piano / Valerie Millot, soprano

Chanson hebraique
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Chanson du rouet
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano

Noel des jouets
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano

Deux melodies hebraiques
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Deux epigrammes de Clement Marot
10. D'Anne qui me jecta de la neige 02:48
11. D'Anne jouent de l'espinette 01:55
David Abramovitz, piano / Gerard Theruel, baritone

Cinq melodies populaires grecques
David Abramovitz, piano / Inva Mula, soprano

Un grand sommeil noir
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Manteau de fleurs
David Abramovitz, piano / Valerie Millot, soprano

Si morne!
David Abramovitz, piano / Valerie Millot, soprano

Don Quichotte a Dulcinee
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Histoires naturelles
David Abramovitz, piano / Gerard Theruel, baritone

Ballade de la reine morte d'aimer
David Abramovitz, piano / Inva Mula, soprano

Tripatos
David Abramovitz, piano / Inva Mula, soprano

Trois Chansons
David Abramovitz, piano / Valerie Millot, soprano

Ronsard a son ame
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Les grands vents venus d'outremer
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Sainte
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Sur l'herbe
David Abramovitz, piano / Laurent Naouri, tenor

Reves
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano

Vocalise - etude en forme de habanera
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano

Chansons madecasses
David Abramovitz, piano / Claire Brua, mezzo-soprano