Katalógové číslo:
BIS-CD1357
Autori:
Darius Milhaud, Florent Schmitt, Henri Tomasi, Jacques Ibert, Maurice Ravel, Paule Maurice
Interpreti:
Claude Delangle, Lan Shui, Singapore Symphony Orchestra
Ibert, Jacques : Concertino da camera for Alto Saxophone
1 I. Allegro con moto
2 II. Larghetto, poi animato molto
Tomasi, Henri Fredien: Concerto for Saxophone
3 I. Andante - Allegro
4 II. Giration: Allegro
5 Ravel, Maurice: Pavane pour une infante défunte
Maurice, Paule: Tableaux de Provence
6 I. Farandoulo di Chatouno
7 II. Cansoun per ma mio
8 III. La Boumanio
9 IV. Dis Alyscamps, l'amo souspire
10 V. Lou Cabridan
11 Schmitt, Florent: Légende, Op. 66
Milhaud, Darius: Scaramouche, suite for saxophone & piano (or orchestra), Op. 165c
12 I. Vif
13 II. Modere
14 III. Brazileira
Conceived under the sign of the sun, this is a series of works for saxophone and orchestra by French composers with a special affinity for the Mediterranean, its atmosphere and culture(s). From Florent Schmitt’s Légende, with its Orientalistic inspiration, over the Provencal scenes of Paule Maurice to Ravel’s pavane for a dead Spanish princess (arranged by Tami Nodaira), the programme covers the entire length of the Mediterranean basin. Indeed, with the samba rhythms of Milhaud’s Scaramouche it even crosses the Atlantic, in accordance with that composer’s vision of an imaginary, ideal Provence, ‘stretching from Constantinople to Rio de Janeiro’. Painting these varied landscapes is Claude Delangle, who earned the following accolade in American Record Guide for a previous BIS release: ‘Claude Delangle is a performer of wonderfully liquid tone and enviable technique. Through subtle nuances and carefully sculpted phrases, he creates a canvas of colours that conjures images of the great French impressionist painters.’ Claude Delangle’s eight BIS titles include solo works by Japanese and Russian avant-garde composers as well as pioneering research into the earliest music written for the saxophone and an anthology of contemporary responses to the tango. On the disc À la française he and pianist Odile Delangle explored French chamber works for the saxophone, including a duo version of the present Tableaux de Provence which was hailed by reviewers in BBC Music Magazine and International Record Review as ’beautifully evocative’ and ‘a particular revelation … a genuinely major work’.