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Debussy - Images (orchestre), transcription pour deux pianos 

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C'est au compositeur André Caplet [1878-1925], ami et collaborateur de Debussy, que l'on doit cette transcription pour deux pianos des Images pour orchestre, composées entre 1907 et 1911. Elle est interprétée ici par Françoise Thinat et Jacques Bernier.
Se succèdent :
1/ [00:00] Gigues;
2/ [07:37] Iberia : a) Par les rues et les chemins;
3/ [14:04] Iberia : b) Les parfums de la nuit;
4/ [22:24] Iberia : c) Le matin d'un jour de fête;
5/ [26:24] Rondes de printemps.

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22 июн 2012

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Комментарии : 17   
@stravinskyfan
@stravinskyfan 3 года назад
Magnifique interprétation.
@Twentythousandlps
@Twentythousandlps Год назад
Apparently Debussy originally conceived these as two-piano pieces before changing his mind. They really sound very effective "en blanc et noir."
@corbonmaths9597
@corbonmaths9597 Год назад
J'avais acheté le compact-disque lorsque j'étais au collège, il était édité par Arion, une belle maison de disque. Il comprenait aussi , par les mêmes interprètes, une transcription de "La Mer", toujours faite par André Caplet.
@matthieusalemi9314
@matthieusalemi9314 4 года назад
J'adore, c'est tout juste incroyable merci beaucoup et continuez comme ça c'est super!!!!
@PeterLunowPL
@PeterLunowPL 5 лет назад
a brilliant transcription and brilliantly played!
@kurtkaufman
@kurtkaufman 9 лет назад
Permet à l'auditeur d'entendre de nombreuses harmonies et des lignes qui sont partiellement occultées dans l'orchestration complexes . Merci! [Enables the listener to hear many complex harmonies and lines that are partially obscured in the orchestration. Thank you!]
@zanereyansh4624
@zanereyansh4624 3 года назад
I guess I am pretty randomly asking but do anyone know a good site to watch newly released tv shows online?
@kalebreign3525
@kalebreign3525 3 года назад
@Zane Reyansh i use FlixZone. You can find it on google =)
@maxgregorycompositions6216
@maxgregorycompositions6216 Год назад
Exactly. It's a trade-off. Colour is lost, but compositional clarity is gained.
@jacqueslahondere4649
@jacqueslahondere4649 5 лет назад
c'est magnifique
@guadalajara4848
@guadalajara4848 10 лет назад
Absolutely fantastic version !
@leonvanderschaaf9378
@leonvanderschaaf9378 2 года назад
12:24
@ryam4632
@ryam4632 2 года назад
It is a great tragedy that Debussy had become, at a certain point of his career, a 20th century composer.
@iDC-Javi
@iDC-Javi 7 месяцев назад
and why is that
@ryam4632
@ryam4632 7 месяцев назад
@iDC-Javi Because it made his music more and more sterile, obsessed with "atmosphere," which is of secondary importance in a piece of music, in lieu of musical substance - the melody. You can see in his early stuff that he was a good melodist. He suppressed it later on.
@iDC-Javi
@iDC-Javi 7 месяцев назад
​@@ryam4632 First of all, I of course appreciate that you took the time to reply to a random comment under your comment. At the same time, I can only shake my head reading your reasoning. And this is really not at all about the matter in itself, you might very well have a point that his earlier pieces had more definable melodies, or even more romantic and warm harmonies in general (La Damoiselle élue), and nothing could be further from my mind than to tell you what music you should like or prefer. But the way you convey your personal taste here as an absolute reality "it made his music more and more sterile" and kind of devalue his later works as "obsessed with 'atmosphere'", only to then again speak like a master composer saying that "[atmosphere] is of secondary importance in a piece of music", and finally portraying Debussy almost as a kind of confused composer that "supressed it later on" to write good melodies, all that makes your comments sound so ignorant and almost arrogant. Maybe you simply don't 'understand' his later music, thus finding it "sterile"? Why the need to try to sound like some legendary music critic here? Apart from that, it confuses me how you apparently have not been able to appreciate the in my opinion magic melodies that appear in his six sonatas, or in Jeux, or in this very video (Les parfums de la nuit), which are all from the 20th century.