Pierre Boulez conducts Berlioz
Some of Boulez's finest Berlioz performances are gathered together in this very welcome compendium. Symphonie fantastique is given a terrifyingly formidable performance.
Pierre Boulez first mounted the concert podium in the late 1950s in order to do justice do his own challenging works, but before long he had garnered the reputation of a peerless interpreter of 20th-century music tout court. Then in 1967 the modernist Boulez took the musical by surprise by turning to that arch-Romantic Hector Berlioz, conducting the London Symphony Orchestra in the Symphonie fantastique and Lélio, the little-known work he intended as its sequel. The result was every bit as stimulating as one might have expected from this great musical provocateur. “For Boulez,” opined Gramophone’s original reviewer, “the [Fantastique] is a sinister mental experience, not merely the drug-crazed torment of the program but something colder and still more frightening.” More recently, a New York Times critic wrote: “This is a performance true to the composer’s Gothic imagination in its sumptuousness and menace but also icily precise in negotiating tricky rhythmic maneuvers, and oddly modern … Besides having a ferocity all its own, [it] comes in a whole treasure box of other incisive Berlioz recordings by Mr. Boulez in his early maturity. Yvonne Minton is splendid in La Mort de Cléopâtre, flinging out regal defiance, and Jean-Louis Barrault is the perfect restless narrator for the work Berlioz wrote to continue the dream of the Fantastique, the concert autobiography Lélio.” The new 4-album reissue also includes Yvonne Minton’s “dramatically incisive … passionate response [to Les Nuits d’été] showing her at her most movingly eloquent and [Stuart] Burrows also at his finest … Strongly recommended … highly stimulating” (Penguin Guide).
REVIEW:
Some of Boulez's finest Berlioz performances are gathered together in this very welcome compendium. Not the least of the pleasures is the association of the Symphonic Fantastique with its pendant Lelio: they are not a required coupling, of course, but there is a special pleasure in hearing the unforgettable tones of Jean-Louis Barrault (he who once memorably played Berlioz on film) as he revives after the drug-induced nightmare. Barrault speaks so beautifully that the ramshackle concoction of some very mixed inspirations becomes a rich Berliozian experience. The symphony is given a formidable performance, terrifyingly formidable in the measured tread of the "March to the Scaffold", somewhat too much so where the waltz should charm, even if ironically, and making a morose landscape of the "Scene aux champs". But it is a sustained and valid performance which does not seek to make the work into a vehicle for personal virtuosity (as in different ways so many conductors have done), and conjures up Berlioz's dark romantic vision.
As can be seen, the Nuits d'ete songs are shared. Berlioz first wrote them for mezzo-soprano or tenor and piano, then rewriting them to some extent and transposing the first three for the orchestral vision, probably because he then had particular singers in mind or each song. Boulez keeps to the orchestral version of the key sequence (which not all do) and divides them equally between male and female voices. So Stuart Burrows sings a fresh. lively "Villanelle", and this is followed by Yvonne Minton's richly phrased "Spectre de la rose" and "Sur les lagunes" (in which she takes, successfully, the option of a low F). Burrows returns for "Absence", which he sings admirably, though without stifling regrets that this of all songs might have suited Minton and the mezzo-soprano timbre (many will remember Janet Baker here). He also sings "Au cimetiere", leaving Minton to finish the cycle off with her warm performance of "L'ile inconnue". There can be no question or an authentic version when Berlioz left so many options open; this is a compromise, and even if one may have other preferences, it works well. Yvonne Minton goes on to show not only a fine voice but fine musicianship as she sustains Boulez in holding La mort de Cleopatre together so well. Berliozians will recognize one or two familiar ideas in this remarkable piece. notably one that was to serve again in Benvenuto Cellini, whose overture is given a sharp, vigorous performance here.
-- Gramophone [3/1995]
Product Description:
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Release Date: March 13, 2020
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UPC: 190759327722
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Catalog Number: 19075932772
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Label: Sony Masterworks
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Number of Discs: 4
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Period: Romantic
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Composer: Hector Berlioz
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Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Orchestra/Ensemble: London Symphony Orchestra, New York Philharmonic Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Chorus
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Performer: Yvonne Minton, Stuart Burrows, John Mitchinson, John-Shirley Quirk, Jean-Louis Barrault
Works:
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Symphonie Fantastique
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: London Symphony Orchestra
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Lélio, ou Le Retour a la vie
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: London Symphony Orchestra, London Symphony Chorus
Performer: John Mitchinson (tenor), John Shirley-Quirk (baritone), Jean-Louis Barrault (speaker)
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Benvenuto Cellini Overture
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: New York Philharmonic
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Les Troyens: Chasse royale et Orage
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: New York Philharmonic
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Béatrice et Bénédict (excerpts)
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: New York Philharmonic
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Le carnaval romain Overture, Op. 9
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: New York Philharmonic
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Les Nuits d'été, Op. 7
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: BBC Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Stuart Burrows (tenor), Yvonne Minton (mezzo-soprano)
Conductor: Pierre Boulez
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Scène lyrique, H36
Composer: Hector Berlioz
Ensemble: BBC Symphony Orchestra
Performer: Yvonne Minton (mezzo-soprano)
Conductor: Pierre Boulez