This review of
three recently released discs provides
me with a welcome opportunity to
write about the music of Jacqueline
Fontyn, one of the most distinguished
composers of her generation. As
she readily admits, she began composing
from the age of 8 and has never
stopped since. She had her early
musical training with Ignace Bolotine
at a quite early age. She studied
further with the distinguished teacher
and composer Marcel Quinet. She
then worked in Paris with Max Deutsch
who initiated her to twelve-tone
composition. For several years,
more or less up to 1979, she used
twelve-tone technique, albeit freely
and without ever adhering strictly
to it. Over the years, her output
expanded in some considerable measure,
and her present output numbers some
hundred works ranging from fairly
simple, didactic piano pieces such
as Bulles (1980) to
opera (Virus Alert
of 2002). Her output includes a
large number of works for orchestra,
chamber ensemble, symphonic wind
ensemble as well as a lot of chamber
works for all sorts of instrumental
combinations. Jacqueline Fontyn
also taught at the Antwerp Conservatory
and at the Brussels Conservatory
up to her retirement. All through
her busy musical life, she received
a number of awards from all over
the world, such as the Oscar Espla
Prize for her Psalmus Tertius
and the Prix Musical International
Arthur Honegger for her masterly
orchestral work Quatre Sites,
to mention but two. Many of her
works were written to commissions
from various performing artists
as well as from international musical
organisations such as the Koussevitzky
Foundation that commissioned her
piano concerto Rivages Solitaires.
Her violin concerto, now known as
Rêverie et Turbulence,
was composed as the test piece for
the finals of the 1976 Queen Elizabeth
Competition. In 1993 she was made
a Baroness.
Her early works
roughly belong to what I used to
refer to as 20th Century
mainstream and the music was then
still indebted to, say, Prokofiev,
Honegger and Bartók. Later,
she adopted some twelve-tone techniques,
so never strictly so. She then painstakingly
evolved a musical style of her own
characterised by formal and instrumental
mastery. There is also about her
music a subtle poetic insight, even
when adopting modern techniques,
such as controlled aleatory. She
always keeps her material under
control, so that tightly knit musical
structures go hand in hand with
poetic feeling. Her best works unfold
with a deep inner logic, so that
the music never rambles at random,
but rather unfolds towards some
definite goal. The three discs under
review allow for a fair appreciation
of her musical progress over some
fifty years: Capriccio
for piano (1954) is one of her earliest
acknowledged works whereas Diurnes
for piano dates from 2003.
The first volume
of orchestral works was originally
released as Koch-Aulos 3-6472-2.
It includes recordings from radio
archives as well as a recording
of Psalmus Tertius
made and released during the LP
era. Besides the fairly early prize-winning
Psalmus Tertius for
baritone, chorus and orchestra composed
in 1959, Volume 1 includes three
substantial works from her mature
years. These were composed between
1973 and 1979. Ephémères
for mezzo and orchestra is a beautifully
poetic orchestral song-cycle to
words by Robert Guiette in which
the composer explores a wide range
of emotions and moods. Per
Archi is a transcription
for large string orchestra of her
Pour onze archets
composed two years earlier. Although
based on a twelve-tone row the music
of the three movements of the work
exudes remarkable freshness. It
displays considerable invention
but never at the expense of expressivity
and communication - a constant in
Fontyn’s music. Much the same can
be said concerning her concerto
for harp and chamber orchestra Halo,
which I regard as one of her finest
works.
The second volume
of orchestral music rather centres
on fairly recent works composed
between 1988 and 1998 but also includes
the 2004 revised version of the
piano concerto Rivages Solitaires,
originally completed in 1989. Originally
conceived as a diptych, the piece
was drastically revised in 2004
and is now cast in a single movement
in which the music travels through
different musical moods. Vent
d’Est for accordion and
strings, dedicated to her teacher
Ignace Bolotine, is a most welcome
addition to the still rather limited
repertoire for accordion and orchestra.
The three movements explore the
hugely varied expressive range of
the instrument. The music is remarkably
varied, often quite demanding on
the player’s part but – again –
strongly communicative. This applies
with equal force to the other works,
although each one has its own character.
The works’ titles are quite often
chosen for their poetic quality,
for the music is always best considered
in purely abstract musical terms
and is rarely programmatic as such.
In the Green Shade is
another good example. The name derives
from the title of a painting Discourse
in the Green Shade by the Chinese
artist Wen Cheng-Ming (1470 – 1559)
that appealed to the composer when
she saw it in the Asian Art Museum
of San Francisco. "I jotted
it down because I found it poetical,
and because it makes mention of
my favourite colour". So, again,
the music is essentially abstract
with little suggestion at musical
Impressionism - although there are
some colouristic touches in the
scoring - and with few allusions
to the painting’s content. Its single-movement
structure falls into four interlinked
sections played without a break
alternating contrasting moods by
turn energetic and contemplative.
The ending is a brief restatement
of the opening, so that full circle
is almost effortlessly achieved.
Goeie Hoop was commissioned
by Robert Groslot and is dedicated
to the Flanders Philharmonic Youth
Orchestra who performed it while
touring South Africa. The title
refers to the Cape of Good Hope
while the titles of the five movements
of the piece - the third movement
is just a short Intermezzo - are
drawn from Through the Eye of
the Needle, a collection of
poems by the South-African write
Matthews Phosa. The music may be
somewhat more energetic, rhythmically
alert and – again – quite varied
in mood but you need not look out
for a political agenda. Goeie
Hoop is one of Fontyn’s
most colourful and readily attractive
works. The music is up to her best
for she is never one to write down
to her players, even when composing
for amateur or younger players.
I attended a concert performance
of the piece several years ago and
these young players literally played
wholeheartedly throughout. This
can also be heard clearly in this
recording. Unlike the first volume
of orchestral music, these recordings
are here released for the first
time.
The third disc
is entirely devoted to piano works
although its odes include a work
for piano duet and another for two
pianos. It is probably the best
possible introduction to Jacqueline
Fontyn’s musical world. These works
not only span her long and prolific
career but also clearly display
the wide-ranging variety of her
output. This disc includes a set
of short didactic pieces Bulles
as well as often quite demanding
pieces such as Capriccio
- one of the early works that she
still acknowledges. Also present
are Aura, Le
Gong, Ballade
(composed as the test piece for
the semi-finals of the 1964 Queen
Elizabeth Competition) and the impressive
Spirales for two pianos.
These perfectly illustrate the composer’s
stylistic progress over the years.
All these pieces, but two (Diurnes
and Hamadryades),
have been released previously. Those
for piano played by Robert Groslot
were originally issued during the
LP era and were later re-issued
in CD format with the most welcome
addition of Spirales
for two pianos.
As already mentioned
earlier in this review, some of
these performances were recorded
over a fairly long period of time.
All have been neatly transferred
and still sound quite well. All
the recorded performances are played
by musicians who have a long association
with Jacqueline Fontyn. They clearly
believe strongly in the music, which
lends them a clear ring of authenticity.
In short, these
three discs – each in its own way
– provide a fair appraisal of the
composer’s progress over almost
fifty years. At the same time they
clearly emphasise the remarkable
consistency of Fontyn’s music-making.
As such they may be whole-heartedly
recommended to anyone with an interest
in communicative and imaginative
contemporary music that appeals
both to the mind and to the heart.
Hubert Culot