Тёмный

Charles Koechlin: Wind Septet, Op. 165 (1937) 

Preston Atkins
Подписаться 6 тыс.
Просмотров 14 тыс.
50% 1

00:00 - I. Monodie: Tranquille mais sans traîner
02:46 - II. Pastorale: Tranquille et clair
06:52 - III. Intermezzo: Allegretto con moto
08:45 - IV. Fugue: Allegretto dolce
10:35 - V. Sérénité: Calme, trés doux
14:25 - VI. Fugue: Allegro, animé
_____
Ensemble: Berlin Philharmonic Wind Quintet, and
Alto Saxophone: Manfred Preis
Cor Anglais/English Horn: Gerhard Stempnik
Year of Recording: 1992
_____
"In an autobiographical study penned in 1939, Koechlin wrote in the third person, as if his wife, Suzanne, were narrating, "He often told me, as regards famous composers, that the work should not be separated from the artist who creates it. So in order to distinguish the general characteristics of his music, we should study those of the man himself." And this Étude sur Charles Koechlin par lui-même proceeds to do that, at length and in explicit detail, thereby flying in the face of the contemporarily emergent "new criticism" that dominated mid-twentieth century critical writing by insisting upon the need to separate the artwork from the artist. In any case, Koechlin's study, translated as an appendix to Robert Orledge's path-breaking Charles Koechlin -- His Life and Works (1989), and echoed throughout its text, has shaped and colored all subsequent writing about him. Thus, the public image of Koechlin is largely one that he himself projected near the end of his life. It is, therefore, curious that there is not a single work in his voluminous oeuvre even remotely similar to his great contemporary Richard Strauss' self-aggrandizing Ein Heldenleben or the notoriously self-revealing Sinfonia Domestica. The closest Koechlin came to musical autobiography -- not very -- is in the Septet for winds, begun in Paris in June 1937 and completed in August during his fourth and last tour of the United States -- the fourth movement, a fugue, being written on the train between Chicago and Los Angeles as "the comfort of the American carriages allowed me to work peacefully." The Septet was originally titled Caprice sur le retour de mon fils Yves, the finale, another fugue, being based on a "theme sung by my son at the age of four." Yves, Koechlin's youngest son, at 15, had run away from home -- Suzanne Koechlin fetched him back from Menton and the news of his return reached the composer in America. As Orledge remarked, "His joy and rediscovered internal peace are evident in the Septet," whose fifth movement is titled "Sérénité." Characteristically, Koechlin begins with a Monodie for clarinet, joined by flute and bassoon for a second movement Pastorale. The remaining movements use the septet -- the Intermezzo is an airy tissue with a wistful rounding off, the Fugue, like a children's round, percolating with happiness. "Sérénité" is a quiet daydream, and the final Fugue again has the buoyancy of children at play. The premiere was given over Radio INR, Brussels on March 17, 1943, with Paul Collaer conducting." (Adrian Corleonis)
_____
© COPYRIGHT Disclaimer, Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976. Allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.

Опубликовано:

 

6 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 18   
@FranzKaernBiederstedt
@FranzKaernBiederstedt 2 года назад
Koechlin is such a special and unique composer, always very surprising and original.
@supasayajinsongoku4464
@supasayajinsongoku4464 Год назад
Slightly unrelated but whats the most beautiful piece youve heard this month or even this year And then whats the most relentless, driving piece youve heard this month
@FranzKaernBiederstedt
@FranzKaernBiederstedt Год назад
@@supasayajinsongoku4464 Hey and thanks for the interesting and challenging question! It's not that easy to answer, but I'd say one of the most overwhelming and astonishing pieces I heard and discovered recently might have been Frank Bridge's piano sonata. I'm in awe about the depth and personality of that composition. Frank Bridge flew totally under my radar before, now I'm making myself familiar with his strong music. The most relentless and driving piece? Hmmm.... That has to be Alberto Ginasteras Cello Sonata, which I listened to just the day before yesterday. And what about you?
@gljm
@gljm Год назад
Koechlin was a master orchestrator, it is a shame that his 4 vol treatise on orchestration was never translated into English.
@gerardbegni2806
@gerardbegni2806 2 года назад
Note how the composer introduces the seven instruments step by step : first a solo clarinet, then a woodwind trio, than a moderate tutti. The fugue which follows has some contrapuntal typical features, but is not a fugue indeed. It is a "quasi fuga " ! It is interesting also to note athe at each movement g has a color of its own, due to the prominent instruments used.
@supasayajinsongoku4464
@supasayajinsongoku4464 Год назад
Slightly unrelated but whats the most beautiful piece youve heard this month or even this year And then whats the most relentless, driving piece youve heard this month
@PhilippeBrun-qy3st
@PhilippeBrun-qy3st 9 месяцев назад
Merveilleux...
@miguelykaris7869
@miguelykaris7869 9 месяцев назад
Thanks so much❤
@MegaVicar
@MegaVicar Год назад
So light & evocative! I hear traces of his 'Persian Hours', as well as hints of the future Poulenc.
@lucpraslan
@lucpraslan 2 года назад
Wonderful. Thanks for posting 👍🏽👍🏽
@jericolozares8265
@jericolozares8265 2 года назад
this is sublime and otherwordly
@uriahlegutki2257
@uriahlegutki2257 5 месяцев назад
Very Nostalgic
@ysguys4882
@ysguys4882 2 года назад
very nice
@WilfriedBerk
@WilfriedBerk 2 года назад
Errata: Manfred Preis
@handledav
@handledav Год назад
sep
@ilumalucwile2422
@ilumalucwile2422 Год назад
Koechlin seems fated only ever to have a few fans. He doesn't fit in anywhere. Not impressionist, not neo-classical, not post-tonal, yet he also has little to do with the jazz-age gaiety of Les Six.
@supasayajinsongoku4464
@supasayajinsongoku4464 Год назад
Slightly unrelated but whats the most beautiful piece youve heard this month or even this year And then whats the most relentless, driving piece youve heard this month
@paulp9132
@paulp9132 5 месяцев назад
From what I have heard of him, I'd say it's rather that he's partly all of these and then some more, while also managing to keep his own voice through his navigating between different aesthetics, regardless of trends and dogmas. He actually famously worked on several scores at once, which had quite often not much in common at first sight, starting a composition in one kind of aesthetic one day, the next day orchestrating a melody he wrote years before in another style entirely. Depending on the pieces, you'll find atonalism, polytonality, medieval-inspired monodies, Mozartian reminiscence, some Bach influence, touches "impressionnism" (he orchestrated Debussy's "Khamma" for instance), and so on. Concerning the Six, Milhaud has been recorded stating Koechlin's being forgotten was most certainly the greatest injustice of the century - I wonder how much Koechlin's experiments with polytonality impacted Milhaud's music.
Далее
Charles Koechlin: Trio d'anches, Op. 206 (1945)
13:51
Charles Koechlin ‒ Les Heures Persanes Op. 65
55:26
#kikakim
00:18
Просмотров 1,9 млн
The Sections of the Orchestra: Woodwind
7:00
Просмотров 12 тыс.
Charles Koechlin: Oboe Sonata, Op. 58 (1911-1916)
26:30
P. Haas: Wind Quintet, Op. 10 (Stuttgart Wind Quintet)
13:14
How Glenn Gould Broke Classical Music
34:08
Просмотров 338 тыс.
Alfredo Casella: Serenata, Op. 46 (1927)
25:34
Просмотров 12 тыс.
Kleine Kammermusik, for wind quintet - Paul Hindemith
12:40
Henri Tomasi: Divertimento Corsica (1951)
11:51
Просмотров 10 тыс.
#kikakim
00:18
Просмотров 1,9 млн