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Claude
DEBUSSY (1862-1918) La Chute de la Maison Usher (completed Juan Allende
Blin, 1976)a [22:53] André CAPLET (1878-1925) Conte Fantastique (1908)b [16:57] Florent SCHMITT (1870-1958) Etude pour le Palais hanté [12:12]
Christine
Barbaux (soprano); François le Roux
(baritone); Pierre-Yves le Maigat (bass-baritone); Jean-Phillipe
Lafont (baritone) (Debussy); Frédérique Cambreling (harp) (Caplet)
Monte-Carlo Philharmonic Orchestra/Georges Prêtre.
rec. Monte-Carlo, Salle Garnier, June 1983. AAD EMI CLASSICS 47921 [60:02]
Considering
this disc makes me feel rather depressed. That it is, officially,
no longer in EMI’s catalogue is no surprise (released as
CDC7479212). That ArkivCD bothered with it is something of
a godsend. I can
imagine
this programme being pitched to EMI’s current A&R team: ‘Well,
it’s three largely unknown works, scored for large orchestras.
We need a solo vocal quartet comprised of soprano, two baritones
and a bass-baritone. Two of the composers are unheard of,
but there is a piece by Debussy. But it’s not one of his
best. And he didn’t finish it. Did I mention that they were
all inspired by Edgar Allan Poe, the death-obsessed, ghoulish
and frankly disreputable terminal alcoholic American author … who
was, in all likelihood, insane?’.
If,
by some miracle, the proposal wasn’t met with the same incredulity
appropriate for ‘Ashton Kutcher plays Hamlet’, you
can imagine the response.
‘OK,
but can we have the frail cataleptic Madeleine being played
by Angela Georghiu, the quite possibly mad but rather over-sensitive
Roderick by Thomas Hampson, and Bryn Terfel in there somewhere?
And how about this; we transpose the role of ‘The Friend’ so
that it lies comfortably in Alagna’s range and market it
as a love story. We can save capital by using a publicity
photo of ‘RAngela’ as young lovers, taken well over a decade
ago just to emphasise the ‘young lovers’ bit. Oh, you’ve
already secured the rights to use a strikingly abstract piece
of contemporary art instead? Well, we can’t have that…’.
Fortunately
matters were rather different twenty-five years ago. This
album has never really had much exposure; but at least someone
at EMI France had the courage to make it. It was, I believe,
reissued in the L’Esprit Français series in the early
1990s. Anyone who has tried to get hold of discs from that
particular reissue series (as I managed to, finally, with
Victoria de los Angeles’ unsurpassed Chausson Poème de
l’amour et de la mer) will know just how swiftly they
disappeared from the catalogue. I should also add that the
reissue was shorn of the rather deluxe booklet of the original;
we get extensive notes by Harry Halbreich in French and English,
a complete (or not, as I’ll explain shortly) libretto for La
Chute de la Maison Usher and copious photographs of composers,
author and performers. Unfortunately, back in the mid-1980s,
EMI were still using booklet layouts designed for LP; simply
reducing the size of the booklet was never going to be satisfactory
- as anyone who has tried to make sense of the musical examples
printed in the booklet for Karajan’s EMI Rosenkavalier will
be fully aware. Doubly unfortunate, then, that ArkivCD’s
otherwise admirable commitment to restoring such gems to
the catalogue does not extend to quality reproductions of
the insert notes. Whilst never illegible, they do require
equal doses of patience and squinting.
Now
to the music and the performances. Debussy never completed
his operatic adaptation of Poe’s The Fall of the House
of Usher, one of two Poe projects that occupied the composer
for the last fifteen years of his life. It wasn’t until 1977
that Juan Allende Blin’s reconstruction was heard. Blin managed
to resurrect both the beginning and the end of Debussy’s
work; as a result we have a little over twenty minutes worth
of music from what would appear to have been a one-hour piece.
Meagre pickings perhaps, but certainly worth hearing. Debussy
was probably the ideal composer to adapt Poe’s tortured narratives;
there is something in the Gallic temperament that seems to
respond particularly well to the decadence and general sense
of despair that characterises the author’s quasi-hallucinogenic
prose. We are all now familiar with the image of the romantic
Parisian bohemians frequenting brothels and drinking Absinthe
and so it should probably come as no surprise that Poe’s
works were so well received in France - courtesy of translations
by Baudelaire and Mallarmé.
Poe’s The
Fall of the House of Usher is perhaps one of his most
famous works; Roger Corman hit the jackpot with his low-budget
but strangely sumptuous cinematic adaptation of the early
1960s. It was inherently an attempt to provide American
audiences with an American alternative to the lucrative
Hammer sequence of gothic horrors. It kickstarted a whole
sequence of Poe ‘adaptations’ (films ‘inspired by’ Poe’s
work) that culminated with the marvellous The Masque
of the Red Death in 1964. The latter was, ironically,
filmed in England and photographed by a young Nicholas
Roeg, who later went on to direct the epitome of disturbing,
quasi-hallucinogenic terror: Don’t Look Now. Usher,
with its eerie atmosphere and small cast was an ideal project
to build on the success of Debussy’s Pelléas. What
we have on this recording is enough to suggest that, had
it been completed, Debussy’s Usher would have been
a minor masterpiece. It certainly belongs to the subcategory
of ‘harmonically adventurous’ that can be applied to many
of his later works. Blin has scored it for a large orchestra
(quadruple wind) but rarely deploys the full forces at
his disposal. There is a chamber-like intimacy to the results
that entirely suits the narrative. This may not be the
most memorable Debussy you are likely to hear, but from
the opening cor anglais solo you are gripped by the composer’s
masterly control of atmosphere.
In
this performance, Prêtre conducts with great efficiency and
his native French-speaking vocal quartet is both mellifluous
and insightful. Unfortunately for all involved, this still
remains just a torso of what could have been a compelling
drama; whilst there are copious incidental pleasures to be
had it still does not really add up to a satisfying whole.
No,
that is where the couplings are important. I can describe
André Caplet’s Conte Fantastique (after Poe’s The
Masque of the Red Death) briefly; well-crafted, exciting
and at times sounding remarkably like Bernard Herrmann’s
score for Hitchcock’s Psycho - both are similarly
scored - it makes for seventeen eventful minutes. Cambreling
tackles the solo harp part well, but the strings of the Monte
Carlo orchestra struggle with some of the higher-lying passages.
The
last work on the disc is by a somewhat wide margin the most
entertaining. Florent Schmitt’s approach to Poe’s poem ‘The
Haunted Palace’ will come as no surprise to anyone who is
at all familiar with the composer’s work. It is about as
ripe as a late-romantic tone poem can get, and it proves
that such an approach was ideal for conveying the neuroses
of the drug and drink-addled author. The original text, handily
reproduced in the booklet, is perhaps Poe’s greatest work,
an absolutely chilling and stunningly crated poem, certainly
on a par with ‘The Raven’. It also has one of the most iconic
last stanzas in literature:
And travellers,
now, within that valley,
Through the red-litten windows see
Vast forms, that move fantastically
To a discordant melody.
While, like a ghastly rapid river,
Through the pale door
A hideous throng rush out for ever.
And laugh- but smile no more.
Schmitt
certainly conveys the impression of ‘vast forms’ moving fantastically
and the whole phantasmagoric display bucks and heaves in
the most vulgar and decadent way imaginable. I loved it.
All
in all, a very worthwhile purchase. I do, however, feel that
EMI themselves should re-issue this disc. It is not simply
a case of the booklet being none-too-well reproduced, but
that the recording itself needs to be remastered. The chamber-like
textures of the Debussy come off best, with admirable clarity,
but the Caplet sounds a little monochrome. Worse still is
the Schmitt, which sounds rather opaque and certainly does
not allow justice to be done to this underrated and overlooked
composer.
Still,
we must be thankful that ArkivCD are making rarities such
as this available. For those with an enquiring mind, this
is pretty much an essential purchase. I doubt very much that
EMI will reissue it anytime soon, and I do worry about the
longevity of Arkiv’s ‘made to order’ scheme. My advice? Take
advantage of the sterling-dollar exchange rate and buy it
now. And the cover art (a 1978 number by Jean-Pierre Zenobel)
is reassuringly striking and abstract.
Owen Walton
Footnote Regarding Schmitt's "The Haunted
Palace", it would be helpful to readers/listeners to know that
the poem actually appears within the text of the short story,
The Fall of the House of Usher and is central to its theme.
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