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Sunday, October 9, 2022

Olivier Messiaen - Orchestral Works (Kent Nagano)


Information

Composer: Olivier Messiaen
  • CD1: La transfiguration de notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ, I/48, Premier septénaire
  • CD2: La transfiguration de notre Seigneur Jésus-Christ, I/48, Deuxième septénaire
  • CD3: Poemes pour Mi, I/17b & Chronochromie, I/43

Jenny Daviet, soprano
Pierre-Laurent Aimard, piano

Bavarian Radio Symphony Chorus & Orchestra
Kent Nagano, conductor

Date: 2021
Label: BR Klassik

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Review

Considered as a pocket history of Messiaen’s large-scale writing, this set could hardly be improved upon. We hear the composer’s fastidious training with Dukas in Poèmes pour Mi (1936 37), his boldest engagement with the post-war modernist innovations of form and timbre led by his pupils Boulez and Stockhausen in Chronochromie (1959 60) and then the hieratic splendour of La Transfiguration (1965 69), which unifies all the elements of his creative world with a wholeness of vision hardly even surpassed by his opera on the life of St Francis.

All five commercial recordings of La Transfiguration live up to the ambitions of the piece, but Nagano’s might be the finest yet. Pierre-Laurent Aimard leads the argument in Messiaen’s take on ‘How lovely are thy dwelling places’, the fifth movement in the first of the work’s pair of septénaires, without making a crude contrast between the piano part and the glowing grandeur of the choral writing and the supple legato of the commentaries from solo flute and cello. Aside from Aimard, all the solo instrumental parts are beautifully taken by members of the orchestra.

The liveness of these recordings manifests itself not in coughing or applause but in the impetus of gestures and timing of pauses, bringing continuity to what can otherwise become disparate or isolated episodes, both in the more rebarbative stretches of Chronochromie and in the ritual unfolding of La Transfiguration. I also appreciate the realistic concert-hall perspective of Jenny Daviet’s soprano in Poèmes pour Mi, balanced so that her soprano entwines in Pelléas-like rapture with the orchestral texture rather than (as in Renée Fleming’s Decca recording – 6/12) sailing above it.

Both the unison chanted melismas of La Transfiguration and the fearsome complexities of Chronochromie rely for their effect on absolute rhythmic precision, and here Nagano’s direction is second to none, not even Boulez in Cleveland for Chronochromie. What may convert sceptics to the cause, however, is the ‘BRSO sound’ familiar from Kubelík’s Mahler and Jansons’s Brahms, say, but less often encountered in modernist repertoire, which smooths off rough edges without diminishing the massive scale and sense of wonder evoked by Messiaen to depict the gates of Heaven in the fifth movement of the second septénaire. Nagano’s embedded connection with this music is reinforced in the booklet by a personal memoir; insightful in itself but scant compensation for a full account of the music. Sung texts are printed in miniature. Otherwise, the set is not to be missed.

-- Peter Quantrill, Gramophone

More reviews:
MusicWeb International  RECORDING OF THE MONTH

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Olivier Messiaen (December 10, 1908 – April 27, 1992) was a French composer, organist, and ornithologist, one of the major composers of the 20th century. His music is rhythmically complex; harmonically and melodically he employs a system he called modes of limited transposition, which he abstracted from the systems of material generated by his early compositions and improvisations. He wrote music for chamber ensembles and orchestra, vocal music, as well as for solo organ and piano, and also experimented with the use of novel electronic instruments developed in Europe during his lifetime.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olivier_Messiaen

***

Kent Nagano (born November 22, 1951 in Berkeley, California) is an American conductor and opera administrator. He studied at the University of California, the San Francisco State University, and the École Normale de Musique de Paris. Nagano was music director of the Opéra National de Lyon (1988-98), principal conductor of the Hallé Orchestra (1992-99), and principal conductor and artistic director of the Deutsches Symphonie-Orchester Berlin (2000-06). He is currently music director of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra since 2006, and general music director of the Hamburg State Opera since 2015.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_Nagano
http://kentnagano.com/

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FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

4 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dear Ronald, it seems that the links for this very promising recording are dead. Could you kindly revive them? Best wishes

    ReplyDelete
  3. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    Guide for Linkvertise: 'Free Access with Ads' --> 'Get [Album name]' --> 'I'm interested' --> 'Explore Website / Learn more' --> close the newly open tab/window, then wait for a few seconds --> 'Get [Album name]'

    https://link-center.net/610926/messiaen-nagano
    or
    https://uii.io/lKNrc4Uye
    or
    https://exe.io/iuZ2H2Qu

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks a lot for the new links, Ronald!

    ReplyDelete