Canteloube: Chants d'Auvergne

 
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MARIE-JOSEPH CANTELOUBE
Canteloube: Chants d'Auvergne
Carolyn Sampson (soprano) / Tapiola Sinfonietta, Pascal Rophé

[ BIS SACD / Hybrid SACD ]

Release Date: Friday 3 September 2021

"Carolyn Sampson is a delightful and highly engaging soloist. She sings the slow, lyrical songs beautifully, investing words and music with great feeling." Recording of the Month Oct 2021 MusicWeb

That Baïlèro, a shepherd's song from the highlands of Auvergne sung in the Occitan dialect of the area, should become a favorite with singers ranging from Victoria de los Angeles to Sarah Brightman by way of Renée Fleming and Karita Mattila, is all because of Marie-Joseph Canteloube de Malaret. As a budding composer in Paris in the 1900s, Canteloube was unable to interest himself in the various musical cliques and currents. Instead he looked for inspiration in Auvergne in central France where he was born, starting to collect the songs of the farmers and shepherds that lived in the mountainous region. But he did so as a composer rather than a musicologist, and between 1923 and 1954 he published a total of thirty Chants d'Auvergne, arranged, harmonized and sumptuously orchestrated. The result is, one might say, idealized folk music: Canteloube largely respects the melodic line of the originals, but adds instrumental introductions, interludes and postludes, and gives an important role to the woodwind section. For the present disc, Carolyn Sampson and Pascal Rophé have selected 25 of the songs - ranging from love songs and lullabies to working songs and laments. They perform them together with Tapiola Sinfonietta, bringing sparkle to Canteloube's luxurious scores halfway between the impressionism of Debussy and the bucolic lyricism of d'Indy.

"Carolyn Sampson is a delightful and highly engaging soloist. She sings the slow, lyrical songs beautifully, investing words and music with great feeling. She's just as successful in the quick, witty numbers; in these you can tell that she's singing with a smile on her face. Her diction is admirably clear and though I'm no expert in the pronunciation of the Auvergnois dialect, what I heard corresponded with what I expected to hear as I followed the texts in the booklet." Recording of the Month Oct 2021 MusicWeb

Tracks:

Joseph Canteloube: Chants d'Auvergne (selection)
1st Series: La pastoura als camps; Baïlèro; L'aïo dè rotso; Ound' onorèn gorda ?; Obal din lou Limouzi

From 2nd Series: Pastourelle; La delaïssádo; N'aï pas iéu de mio; Lo calhé

3rd Series: Lo fiolairé; Passo pel prat ; Lou boussu; Brezairola; Malurous qu'o uno fenno

From 4th Series: Jou l'Pount d'o Mirabel; Oï ayaï; Per l'èfon; Tchut, tchut; Lou coucut

From 5th Series: Quan z'eyro petitoune; Là-haut, sur le rocher; Hé ! beyla-z-y dau fé !; Tè, l'co, tè !; Uno jionto postouro; Lou diziou bé