TACONET: Fourteen Songs / Violin Sonata in D minor
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Georges Taconet (1889-1962) Songs Sonata in D minor for violin and piano At a time when the values of regionalism are beginning to re-emerge in an...
Georges Taconet (1889-1962)
Songs Sonata in D minor for violin and piano
At a time when the values of regionalism are beginning
to re-emerge in an increasingly globalised cultural
context, it is worth looking back over musical life in the
French provinces in the early twentieth century.
Normandy was home to a wide range of musical
activities, based around both schools of music and
enterprising local concert societies. Indeed the province
produced a galaxy of musical stars, including Erik Satie
from Honfleur, Andre Caplet, Arthur Honegger and
Jacques Leguerney from Le Havre, Marcel Dupre from
Rouen, and Maurice Durufle from Louviers, as well as
being the chosen home of Camille Saint-Saëns and
Albert Roussel.
Le Havre was a regular concert venue for
international soloists and ensembles, such as Jacques
Thibaud, Pablo Casals, Alfred Cortot, the Pro Arte
Quartet, George Enescu, Marguerite Long, Pierre
Fournier and Robert Casadesus. The musicologist and
composer Henry Woollett (1864-1936) regularly took
part in and helped organize concerts held in Le Havre,
while Darius Milhaud, Andre Caplet, Albert Roussel,
Charles Koechlin, Arthur Honegger, Francis Poulenc
and Florent Schmitt all had performances of their works
there. The Le Havre Philharmonic Society, established
in 1909, gave concerts of modern works and pieces by
local composers, and between 1924 and 1939 the city
had its own branch of the Schola Cantorum, directed by
Henry Woollett, with Vincent d'Indy its honorary
President.
It was in this environment that Georges Taconet
made his name as a composer and pianist. Born on 17th
August 1889 in Mont-Saint-Aignan, he was the
youngest in a family of three. His grandfather, Eugène
Taconet, was a journalist who had worked with the
Catholic writer Louis Veuillot (1813-1883), while his
father Pierre was a ship-owner who later became an
insurance adviser. Georges studied harmony and
composition with Rene Vierne (1878-1917), brother of
the organist and composer Louis Vierne, and with Paul
Fauchet (1881-1937), who went on to teach harmony at
the Paris Conservatoire between 1927 and 1937.
Like many composers of his generation, Taconet
was involved in the horrors of the First World War and
his friendship with Andre Caplet dated from those years.
His name appears alongside that of Arthur
Honegger in a programme for a concert given on
27th May 1923 in Le Havre, and dedicated to
composers from the city. Honegger accompanied his
own works on the piano, and Taconet performed three
of his songs with Germaine Cernay, who went on to
play Geneviève in the memorable recording of
Debussy's Pelleas et Melisande conducted by Roger
Desormière.
Some of Taconet's works appear to have been
performed in Paris from 1924 onwards at the Grand
Palais. The orchestral version of his triptych L'Attente
mystique was played at the Le Havre Philharmonic
Society on 27th February 1927, then with piano
accompaniment on 20th May the same year at the
Schola Cantorum in Paris. After the première of
Taconet's Piano Quintet on 9th January 1932 at the
Societe Nationale de Musique, his fellow-composer
Paul Le Flem reviewed the work for Comoedia
(25th January 1932), praising its "utterly classical, wellbalanced
structure, reminiscent of Faure in its writing
and melodic charm".
The greater part of Taconet's catalogue comprises a
corpus of around sixty songs. The poets he chose reflect
the prevailing tastes of musicians at the turn of the
twentieth century: Verlaine, Sully Prud'homme, Henri
de Regnier, Leconte de Lisle and Albert Samain. There
are, however, some less familiar names, such as
Georges Audigier, a friend of the family whose work
was also set by Saint-Saëns, Charles Guerin, a poet of
the Lorraine region and a friend of the composer
Ropartz, and the poet and priest Louis Le Cardonnel,
whose own works are rich in mysticism. Dating
Taconet's songs with any precision is a difficult task,
however, since for the most part he did not date his own
manuscripts.
Sully Prud'homme's poem Au bord de l'eau (By
the water) had earlier been set by Faure in one of his
best-known songs. He had treated the text with a gentle
melancholy, using a minor key. Taconet's G major
gives the song a more carefree and engaging air.
L'Attente mystique I (Mystical Expectation I), to a
poem by Louis Le Cardonnel, reflects the composer's
spiritual aspirations. All the elements of this work, its
tonal plan, melodic motifs, registers, the song-like
nature of the piano-writing, the strong relationship
between the voice and the piano, and expressive
contrasts, are masterfully controlled and organized by
thought and emotion, all the while leaving an
impression of great freedom. The song ends with a
powerful expressive gesture, almost desperate and
imploring in feeling, worthy of Duparc's Lamento. This
song, with its tightly focused musical construction, is
without doubt one of the composer's greatest and as
such, should be counted as one of the great French
melodies.
It would be interesting to be able to date the
Chanson aux eternels murmures (Song of Eternal
Murmuring) which sets a poem by Georges Audigier.
The harmonic style, still quite simple, would suggest
that this is an early work, yet certain more mature
characteristics make it seem likely that this is not in fact
the case. The melodic line, pure and limpid, is
accompanied by a rich texture in the piano, at times
reminiscent of Rachmaninov.
Hier on parlait de choses et d'autres (Yesterday we
spoke of one thing and another) from Verlaine's
collection La Bonne Chanson, but not used by Faure in
his cycle based on the same collection, is dedicated to
Taconet's future wife. This song, published in 1916, is
punctuated with chromaticisms and bold harmonic
sequences which bear witness to the composer's
sophisticated ear.
Élegie by Henri de Regnier is one of Taconet's
most pared-down works, and perhaps also one of his
most sublime. The recitative style of the outer sections
stands in contrast to the central episode, marked Un peu
plus anime, echoing the poetic metaphor. The song ends
in a mood verging on ecstasy, as the lovers seem to fuse
with the natural elements around them. It seems
astonishing that such a fine and moving work should
have remained neglected among the composer's papers:
there is no evidence to suggest that this unpublished
work has ever been performed in public. This recording
is in all likelihood then its first public airing.
Les Sources (Springs), published in 1916, sets
another poem by Henri de Regnier. The fluid writing
for the left hand, in regular quavers, creates an
undulating backdrop over which the right hand and the
voice travel in almost total melodic autonomy.
Charles d'Orleans' Rondel is given an
appropriately archaic feel, and its hints of plucked
stringed instruments (right-hand staccatos), wideinterval
chords in the left hand, superimposed fifths and
final plagal cadence give us a glimpse into a more
objective world. The text had earlier been set by
Debussy, in 1904, as one of his Trois Chansons de
France.
The intentional monotony in the accompaniment of
En regardant passer la vie (While watching life go by),
which is almost entirely dominated by a continuous
movement of quaver triplets, does not outweigh the
beauty of the vocal curve with its varied inflections.
Although not published, this song seems to have been
one of those most frequently performed during
Taconet's lifetime.
L'Attente mystique II is the second in Taconet's
Louis Le Cardonnel triptych, and forms a contrast with
the first in that it is even more severe in nature and
spare in texture. A recitative style predominates, before
the song ends in silence and nothingness.
Quand au matin je vois (When in the morning I
see), to a poem by Charles Guerin, is another of
Taconet's musical successes. Ropartz had set the same
text in 1913-14, in his collection Le Rêve sur le sable,
entitling it Prière du matin (Morning Prayer). The
hesitant accompaniment initially alternates triplets and
binary division, allowing the vocal line to soar within a
supple and variable time signature.
Soir (Evening) sets a poem by Albert Samain and
acts as another link between Faure and Taconet. It must
be noted here that Faure's song is a nocturne, to whose
harmonic sophistication Taconet cannot aspire with his
clear tonal plan matching the different strophes of the
poem. Unlike Faure, who set only the first three
strophes, Taconet adds the fourth, thereby creating a
symmetry with the second by means of partial musical
repetition.
Anges (Angels) is a fairly long poem by Le
Cardonnel, only part of which was set by Taconet. This
is one of his particularly well-elaborated songs; a
mystical-artistic meditation rich in harmonies, during
which the vocal and piano lines both develop with
notable independence. The work ends with a wonderful
piano postlude, whose breadth is worthy of
Rachmaninov.
With Goûte, me dit le soir de juin (Savour, that
June evening said to me), Taconet again uses words by
Charles Guerin, and creates a melody in strophic form
(ABCA). The prevailing mood here is one of peace,
relaxation and innocence, in a sensory evocation which
is perfectly controlled by means of his subtle shaping of
musical phrases and motifs, and of a pure vocal line
without any unnecessary adornment.
Chanson (Song) is stylistically related to the
traditional French chanson, though closer to the
territory of Canteloube than to the smoke-filled rooms
of Montmartre, as visited from time to time by Satie,
Debussy and Poulenc.
We do not know exactly when the Sonata in
D minor for violin and piano was composed, although it
was definitely earlier than 27th February 1927, as it is
mentioned in a Le Havre Philharmonic Society concert
programme of that date. It therefore takes its place in
the rich history of the French sonata just before similar
works by Ropartz (his Third Sonata) and Ravel, both of
which date from 1927. The sonata was first performed
in Le Havre on 8th December 1935 with the violinist
Émile Damais, and the composer himself at the piano.
This is the most well-developed of Taconet's three
sonatas, and the only one in four movements. The
D minor, sonata-form Allegro agitato ma moderato
presents two themes. The first is introduced by the
piano alone in a long opening section, the second, in
F major, enters in a slighter quicker tempo than that of
the main theme. The development section opens by
transporting the first subject into a romantic, dream-like
atmosphere, before moving on to a febrile, passionate
treatment of the second subject. The movement comes
to an end with an ethereal coda in the tonic major key.
The lively, mercurial nature of the Scherzo, in F sharp
major, means that it, of the four movements here, best
represents that vein of spirited French music, with its
short figurations, chromaticisms which are decorative
rather than charged with expressive tension, and its
rapid changes in colour as the violin switches between
pizzicato and bowed notes. The 2/4 Trio in D flat
creates a contrast with its more intrinsically romantic
character, unfurling in long lyrical violin phrases and
more stable, broader harmonic sonorities on the piano.
The Andante is the expressive heart of the work; the
modulating central section of its tripartite structure
introduces a sense of menace into the predominantly
meditative and introverted music, before the movement
ends in an atmosphere steeped in dreaminess and
serenity. The final Allegro vivace in D major is in
sonata-rondo form (ABACABA), the first theme acting
as the refrain. In accordance with the criteria of the day,
the many relationships between the themes of the
different movements show that unity and coherence are
central to this work.
Gerald Hugon
English version: Susannah Howe
Au bord de l’eau (By the water) (more info)
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Au bord de l?au (By the water) - 2:14
L’Attente mystique I (Mystical Expectation I) (more info)
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L?ttente mystique I (Mystical Expectation I) - 4:39
Chanson aux eternels murmures (Song to Eternal Murmuring) (more info)
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Chanson aux eternels murmures (Song to Eternal Murmuring) - 2:11
Hier on parlait de choses et d’autres (Yesterday we spoke of one thing and another) (more info)
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Hier on parlait de choses et d?utres (Yesterday we spoke of one thing and another) - 2:58
Elegie (more info)
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Elegie - 4:30
Les Sources (Springs) (more info)
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Les Sources (Springs) - 2:01
Rondel (more info)
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Rondel - 1:07
En regardant passer la vie (While watching life go by) (more info)
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En regardant passer la vie (While watching life go by) - 1:33
L’Attente mystique II (Mystical Expectation II) (more info)
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L?ttente mystique II (Mystical Expectation II) - 4:46
Quand au matin je vois (When in the morning I see) (more info)
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Quand au matin je vois (When in the morning I see) - 2:39
Soir (Evening) (more info)
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Soir (Evening) - 3:04
Anges (Angels) (more info)
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Anges (Angels) - 4:44
Goute, me dit le soir de juin (Taste, the June evening tells me) (more info)
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Goute, me dit le soir de juin (Taste, the June evening tells me) - 3:07
Chanson (Song) (more info)
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Chanson (Song) - 1:48
Violin Sonata in D minor (more info)
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I. Allegro agitato ma moderato - 7:47
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II. Scherzo: Leger et vif - 4:15
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III. Andante: Penetrant - 5:39
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IV. Allegro vivace - 6:15