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Saturday, January 26, 2019

Pierre-Octave Ferroud - Orchestral Works (Emmanuel Krivine)


Information

Composer: Pierre-Octave Ferroud
  • (01) Symphony in A
  • (04) Types
  • (07) Foules
  • (08) Sérénade

Elisabeth Laroche, piano (4-6)
Orchestre National de Lyon
Emmanuel Krivine, conductor

Date: 1998
Label: Naïve Classique


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Review

One suspects that an hour with Pierre-Octave Ferroud would have been time spent in the company of a man bristling with energy, a razor-sharp wit, a dazzling turn of phrase, and rather less of the chic of some of his contemporary countrymen (he was born in 1900, the year after Poulenc, but died in a car accident aged 36). There would certainly have been an insatiable curiosity for everything new – Ferroud was the founder of organizations promoting new music in Lyon and Paris – and this music is nothing if not ‘on-the-ball’. Bartok is called to mind in the playful (and delightful) portrait sketches of Types, but then the dazzling turns of phrase will just as quickly take you through Ravel, Berg and many more (something of Prokofiev and the style mecanique in the lavishly scored Foules). Indeed, it almost seems as if it were Ferroud’s intention to combine and favourably present as many as possible of the diverse elements of music in the air. And this sleight of hand (for example, it takes a little while to register that the charming first movement of the Serenade is atonal) brings its own rewards, as do the general humour, vitality and lucidity of the music.

As to the Symphony, the latest work here, written in 1930, you can almost hear the starting-pistol that sets in motion the sprint of a Hindemithian fugato. And the importance of folk melody and dance in the outer movements probably reveals Ferroud as a populist, even traditionalist at heart (their working revealing an unexpected kinship with Moeran). But then, in an instant, the music changes to draw again from the Parisian melting-pot (including trombone solos a la Villa-Lobos). The slow movement is very impressive: a shadowy, spectral Andante, with some arresting instrumental choices and unusual harmonic frictions. Indeed, there is a very distinctive harmonic style at work here (the closest parallel I can think of is Roussel). Who knows where it might have led?

This is certainly music that demands virtuoso ensemble of its players and it receives as much of it here as one could rightfully expect, along with an airy and well-detailed balance, which probably owes as much to the general quality of execution and Ferroud’s abilities as an orchestrator as it does to the skill of the engineers.

-- John Steane, Gramophone

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Pierre-Octave Ferroud (6 January 1900 – 17 August 1936) was a French composer of classical music. He studied with Guy Ropartz and was for a time an associate and "disciple" of Florent Schmitt. In 1932, Ferroud, together with three other composers, founded Triton, a contemporary music society. As a composer, Ferroud's Symphony in A was praised by Sergei Prokofiev. Ferroud also wrote a biographical work about his mentor Florent Schmitt, and was a regular contributor of musical reviews and essays to the journal Paris-Soir. He died in 1936, when he was decapitated in a road accident in Debrecen, in Hungary.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre-Octave_Ferroud

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Emmanuel Krivine (born 7 May 1947 in Grenoble) is a French conductor. Krivine studied at the Premier Prix at the Paris Conservatoire and the Queen Elisabeth School in Brussels. He was music director of the Orchestre National de Lyon (1987-2000), the Luxembourg Philharmonic Orchestra (2006-2015), and also served as music director of the Orchestre Français des Jeunes for 11 years. In June 2016, the Orchestre National de France announced the appointment of Krivine as its next music director. He has conducted recordings for the Deutsche Grammophon, Warner Classics, Timpani, and Naive labels.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emmanuel_Krivine

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