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Saturday, December 15, 2018

Florent Schmitt - Psaume XLVII; etc. (Thierry Fischer)


Information

Composer: Florent Schmitt
  • (01) Psaume XLVII, Op. 38
  • (05) Suite sans esprit de suite, Op. 89
  • (10) La tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50

Christine Buffle, soprano
BBC National Chorus and Orchestra of Wales
Thierry Fischer, conductor

Date: 2007
Label: Hyperion
https://www.hyperion-records.co.uk/dc.asp?dc=D_CDA67599

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Review

Hyperion’s panoramic aural perspective, warmly detailed in quieter moments and tumultuously filled at the frequently frenzied, makes a best sonic case for these overloaded blockbusters, the glistening, profound orchestral capture rendering Florent Schmitt’s fin de siècle contrivance of luridly empurpled passages with varieties of violet and mauve, so to speak, as seen through smog in a Los Angeles sunset. That is, these winningly brioso accounts belong in any Schmitt collection, while the engaging swagger of the Suite sans esprit de suite is a net discographic gain. But it must also be said that as one goes back, and sound gathers hiss and graininess, performances become tauter, more telling, more surely idiomatic. For instance, Marek Janowski’s 1990 tilt at Salomé and the Psalm with Sharon Sweet and the Radio France Chorus and Orchestra (Apex 62764, Fanfare 30: 3), while similar in approach, is brisker and more bracing. Jean Martinon’s goose-stepping quick march in his 1972 go at Psalm XLVII , with the ORTF orchestra (nla EMI 749748), is bracingly brutal in a manner that leaves Fischer seeming to wallow; while Fischer’s sagging through the Psalm ’s sensuous midsection taxes Christine Buffle’s attempt to spirit up and sustain a putatively orientalizing rapture in her long solo (difficult, in any case, given Schmitt’s vapid, unmemorable melodizing) where Andrea Guiot, for Martinon, despite her recessed placement, manages this chore with aplomb at a marginally more pressing pace.

In La tragédie de Salomé , Fischer realizes Schmitt’s many garish effects with glowing assurance, only to be upstaged by the nonpareil Paul Paray in his 1958 go with the Detroit Symphony (Mercury 434 336) in which expressiveness of detail within a hair-grasping sweep leaves Fischer’s forces seeming to stagger and mumble. And if the composer’s own 1930 direction of the Straram Concerts Orchestra (EMI/Arkiv 54840) isn’t quite the last word in helter-skelter cataclysm—Fischer’s timings are most within a few seconds of Schmitt’s—it nevertheless evinces a plasticity and detailed animation one is unlikely to hear from contemporary bands. But comparisons are always invidious, and to state them at all is to overstate. The current issue is generally splendid, graced with sympathetic, richly informed notes by Calum MacDonald, and enthusiastically recommended.

-- Adrian Corleonis, FANFARE

More reviews:
ClassicsToday  ARTISTIC QUALITY: 10 / SOUND QUALITY: 10
http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2007/Aug07/Schmitt_Salome_CDA67599.htm
http://www.classicalsource.com/db_control/db_cd_review.php?id=4627
http://www.classical.net/music/recs/reviews/h/hyp67599a.php
https://www.allmusic.com/album/florent-schmitt-psaume-xlvii-la-trag%C3%A9die-de-salom%C3%A9-suite-sans-esprit-de-suite-mw0001570942
https://www.audaud.com/florent-schmitt-psalm-xlvii-suite-sans-esprit-de-suite-the-tragedy-of-salome-christine-buffle-soprano-psalmbbc-national-orchestra-and-chorus-of-wales-thierry-fischer-chandos/
https://www.amazon.com/Schmitt-Psaume-XLVII-tragedie-Salome/dp/B000PMGSB8

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Florent Schmitt (28 September 1870 – 17 August 1958) was a French composer. He was part of the group known as Les Apaches. At the age of 19 he entered the Paris Conservatoire, where he studied with Gabriel Fauré, Jules Massenet, Théodore Dubois, and Albert Lavignac. Schmitt wrote 138 works with opus numbers, in most of the major forms of music, except for opera. His most famous pieces are La tragédie de Salome and Psaume XLVII (Psalm 47). His own style, recognizably impressionistic, owed to the example of Debussy, and also had distinct traces of Wagner and Richard Strauss.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florent_Schmitt

***

Thierry Fischer (born 28 September 1957) is a Swiss orchestra conductor and flutist. He studied flute with Aurèle Nicolet and began his musical career as Principal Flute in Hamburg and at the Zurich Opera. His conducting career began in his 30s, conducting his first concerts with the Chamber Orchestra of Europe. Fischer was principal conductor of the Ulster Orchestra (2001-2006) and the BBC National Orchestra of Wales (2006-2012). Outside of Europe, he has served as chief conductor of the Nagoya Philharmonic Orchestra (2008-2011) and music director of the Utah Symphony (since 2009).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thierry_Fischer
http://www.thierryfischer.com/

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