Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) Complete Chamber Music, Volume 1 'Francis Poulenc is music itself, I know no music more direct, more simply expressed nor which...
Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) Complete Chamber Music, Volume
1
'Francis Poulenc is music itself, I know
no music more direct, more simply expressed nor which goes so unerringly to its
target.' This praise from his friend, the composer Darius Milhaud, can only be
equalled by that from Arthur Honegger who admired 'the man, a born composer,'
who, 'in the midst of fashions, systems, prescriptions, has stayed true to
himself with that rare courage which demands respect.'
A French musician par excellence, Francis
Poulenc grew up in the heart of Paris, between the Madeleine ('my home town'),
the Marais ('my village') and Nogent-sur-Mame ('my countryside... my paradise
with its open-air cafes, its chip-sellers and its bals musettes'). A precocious
pianist, his creativity fed on Debussy who had 'awakened him to music',
Stravinsky whom 'he took as his guide', Ravel and, above all, Satie, who
influenced him considerably 'more aesthetically than musically.' Though he
considered Chabrier a 'grandad', the music-hall fascinated and enthralled him.
For many years, Poulenc had to put up with being labelled a 'superficial' and
'light' composer. Nothing is further from the truth. His correspondence,
collected by Myriam Chimènes, and the magnificent biography by Renaud Marchart,
both bear witness to this. ' And his music remains brazenly up-to-date.'
From the first work that he dared make
public, the Rapsodie nègre, at the advanced age of nineteen years, to
the very last, the Sonata for clarinet and piano and Sonata for oboe
and piano, completed shortly before his unexpected death, Francis Poulenc
devoted himself intermittently to chamber music, sometimes following an urgent
desire to write, sometimes in response to the wishes of virtuosi friends. He
liked to say, 'To write what seems right to me, when I want to, that is my
motto as a composer.'
Saturated with the Parisian excitement
greeting the end of the Great War, Poulenc's first chamber works display 'the
New Attitude', the often jocular musical vitality of the circle of friends
which the critics referred to as the Groupe des Six. The Rapsodie
nègre, the Sonata for two clarinets, the Piano Sonata for four
hands, the Bestiaire and Cocardes were created by a man yet
to reach his twentieth birthday, who, replying to a request from his London
publisher, described himself as follows. 'I was born in Paris on 7th January
1899... I studied piano under Vines and composition almost solely through books
because I was fearful of being influenced by a teacher I read a lot of music
and greatly pondered musical aesthetics... My four favourite composers, my only
masters, are Bach, Mozart, Satie and Stravinsky, I don't like Beethoven at all...
I loathe Wagner ...In general, I am very eclectic, but while acknowledging that
influence is a necessary thing, I hate those artists who dwell in the wake of
the masters ... Now, a crucial point, I am not a Cubist musician, even less a
Futurist and, of course, not an Impressionist. I am a musician without a
label.' (Letter of 6th September 1919, quoted in Correspondence)
Trusting his instinct, Poulenc was 'like
all Latins... more into harmony than counterpoint.' Though he had refused to
join the Schola Cantorum or the Conservatoire, to increase his knowledge he
turned to Charles Koechlin, a musician more renowned as a teacher than a
composer. From the four years, 1921-25, when he concentrated on improving -
among other things - his knowledge of counterpoint, Poulenc has left us a Sonata
for Clarinet and Bassoon, a Sonata for Horn, Trumpet and Trombone and
a Trio for Oboe, Bassoon and Piano. The chamber music was definitively
associated with wind instruments.
Following a fairly long period when he
moved away from the genre, Poulenc set out to write for strings and piano. The Sonata
for Cello and Piano was first written in 1940 and reworked eight
years later, whilst his Sonata for Violin and Piano was first performed
in 1943 with Ginette Neveu. From this same period date L 'Histoire de Babar and
Poulenc's collaboration with the dramatist Jean Anouilh, for whom he composed
incidental music for Leocadia and L 'Invitation au Château. The
start of the 1950s saw the creation of a profusion of pieces for two pianos for
'les boys', the American pianists Arthur Gold and Robert Fizdale: L
'Embarquement pour Cythère, a capriccio in the style of Le Bal
masque, the Sonata and the Elegie. From 1956 Poulenc renewed
his relationship with the wind instruments, with an Elègie for Horn and
Piano. 'I believe that specialising in the woodwind side is the solution
for me at the moment,' he wrote to Pierre Bernac. Like Debussy and Saint-Saëns
before him, at the height of his powers he composed three sonatas for wind
instruments and piano. The Sonatas for Flute and Piano, for Clarinet and
Piano and for Oboe and Piano each represent a poignant homage to a dear
departed friend.
Contrary to the persistent assumption,
Poulenc did not find writing easy. In this respect, the composition of the Sextet
for piano, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon and horn is revealing. Six years
after the 1933 performance, Poulenc took up again his 'old Sextet never
published by Hansen', created at the time of Le Bal masque. 'There were
some good ideas in it but the whole thing was badly put together,' he explained
to Nadia Boulanger. 'With the proportions altered, better balanced, it comes
over very clearly.'
'Very fast and fiery,' the Allegro
vivace dashes along in dazzling, energetic rhythms which give way to a
slower section introduced by a lyrically melancholic bassoon. If The Rite is
not far away, the sad sweet song, expressed by the piano and then by the
different instruments, conceals a poignant poetry. The original pace returns,
full of rhythmic phrases and vigour. The Divertissement, marked andantino,
is written within a three-part slow-fast-slow structure whilst the Finale,
a prestissimo in rondo form, exploits the different instrumental
colours with gay generosity. This lively, warm surge where sparkling
Stravinskian touches and sudden lyrical flights are intertwined, gives way to a
coda with 'pretty and somewhat false chord progressions,' poignantly sad, with
a tender and nostalgic sweetness. This Sextet is dedicated to Georges
Salles, curator at the Louvre, who for some time accommodated Poulenc in his
Montmartre residence.
Performed after the composer's death by
Pierre Pierlot and Jacques Fevrier, the Sonata for Oboe and Piano is one
of Poulenc's last works. During his 'only real holiday of the year' at
Bagnols-en-Forêt in 1962, he wrote to Pierre Bernac. 'I've sketched out quite a
few things... I've found the makings of a Sonata for Oboe. The first
section will be an elegy, the second a schelzando and the last a
sort of liturgical chant.' Dedicated to the memory of Sergey Prokofiev, whom he
had known in the 1920s and with whom he was equally content to sit at the piano
or to play bridge, the Sonata for Oboe and Piano adopts a slow-fast-slow
structure which contrasts with the classical sonata form. Both the initial Elegy,
to be played 'peacefully' and the 'very animated' Scherzo take on an
eloquent, simple yet sophisticated idiom. With its solemn introductory bars of
solo piano, the third movement, Deploration, echoes the starkness of
sacred works. The melancholic oboe unfolds its sad lament over the poetic,
discreet nimbus of the piano.
'I quite like my Trio because it
comes over clearly and is well balanced. For those who think I don't care about
form, I wouldn't hesitate to reveal my secrets here: the first movement follows
the plan of a Haydn allegro and the final Rondo that of the scherzo
from the second movement of Saint-Saëns's Concerto for Piano and
Orchestra.' (Entretiens) Announced and postponed so many times, the Trio
for Piano, Oboe and Bassoon was born of years of labour in a period of
stylistic searching. The first sketches date from 1921, the year when Poulenc
looked to Charles Koechlin to improve his knowledge. The Trio was
completed in 1926, about a year after the last lessons. 'I worked on it a lot.
It's in a style new to me yet at the same time very Poulenc,' he wrote to the
critic Paul Collaer in November 1924. The short introduction makes some use,
with definite irony, of the elements of the French style of opening, whilst the
witty Presto unveils at its heart a dreamy passage. The 'very sweet and
melancholic' Andante is followed by a Rondo, 'which I hope is
brilliant and joyful'.
During the summer of 1956, in response to
a commission from the Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge Foundation, Francis Poulenc
suggested as a chamber work, 'a Sonata for Flute and Piano dedicated to
the memory of Mrs Coolidge. Much more at home with wind instruments than
strings, I admit I am tempted by this combination.' (Letter to Harold Spivacke,
Summer 1956.) After the Milan performance of the Dialogues des carmelites, enjoying
the sublime weather and solitude of Cannes, Poulenc took up his 1952 sketches
again to create this Sonata for Flute. 'I have the impression of going
back a long way as far as the technique is concerned, of course,' he wrote to
Pierre Bernac. And to his first biographer, Henry Hell, he stressed. 'The form
that I chose for this work is quite close to that of Debussy's sonatas, that's
to say, very free. ..There is an Allegretto melancolico, a cantilena and
I still have to do a Presto giocoso. The writing is simple but subtle
and the harmony recalls Soeur Constance.' It was completed just a month before
its first performance given by the composer and Jean-Pierre Rampal at the
Strasbourg Festival.
The short Villanelle, composed in
1934 and dedicated to Mrs Dyer, was written for a collection of works for pipe
and piano and embraces the popular, spontaneous style of its Neapolitan
origins. This siciliano may also be played as a pipe solo. For this
production a recorder was used.
Translation: Wil Gowans
Alexandre Tharaud
At seventeen years of age, Alexandre
Tharaud was already making a name for himself at the Paris Conservatoire. His
remarkable performances in various international competitions, including Citrà
di Senigallia in Italy and Munich-first and second prize respectively-marked
the debut of an international career. He has made numerous tours of Asia and
North America as well as France, where he has been heard at the Chopin
Festivals in Montpellier and La Roque d' Antheron. At the invitation of Georges
Pretre, he played Poulenc's Piano Concerto with the Orchestre National
de France on the centenary of Poulenc's birthday.
Philippe Bernold
The winner of the 1987 Jean-Pierre Rampal
international flute competition, Philippe Bernold is, today considered one of
the jewels among French flautists. He very soon set off on a remarkable career
alongside such prestigious musicians as Mstislav Rostropovitch and Jean-Pierre
Rampal. In Lyon, John Eliot Gardiner, the then conductor of the Orchestre de
l'Opera National, gave him the principal flute desk. Philippe Bernold is also a
much sought-after teacher and now teaches flute at the Conservatoire in Lyon.
Olivier Doise
Olivier Doise first set out on his
brilliant way as the unanimously elected winner of first prize for oboe in M.
Bourgue's class at the Paris Conservatoire. He was subsequently appointed
principal oboe of the Orchestre de l'Opera de Paris. Olivier Doise has a no
less outstanding career as a chamber musician, both abroad and in France; he is
also a member of the Paris-Bastille Wind Octet.
Ronald Van Spaendonck
Born in Namur in 1970, Ronald Van
Spaendonck is considered one of the most promising clarinettists of his
generation, From 1987 he accumulated national awards and became Laureat
Juventus in 1991, In the field of chamber music, he has appeared with the
violinist Gidon Kremer at the Paris Theatre de Ville and he regularly plays
with the Takacs and Skampa String Quartets.
Laurent Lefèvre
At first a member of the Quintette
Debussy, having gained the highest distinctions for bassoon at the Paris
Conservatoire and in prestigious international competitions, Laurent Lefèvre
became principal bassoon of the Orchestre de l'Opera de Paris. More recently he
has been nominated professor at the Lyon Conservatoire. At the same time he
appears in concerts around the world with the Paris-Bastille Wind Octet.
Herve Joulain
Principal horn of the Orchestre
Philharmoniquede Radio France at the age of twenty, Herve Joulain had the very
early good fortune to play under great conductors including Leonard Bernstein,
Marek Janowski and Lorin Maazel, Ten years later came his brilliant promotion
to a similar position in the Orchestre National de France. His career has also
led him to appear in chamber music with musicians of distinction such as Paul
Tortelier, Michel Dalberto and Patrick Gallois.