This is a very special CD as it contains the world premiere recording of 
      Dutilleux’s 2003 song cycle, 
Correspondances. I first heard the 
      work when it was broadcast on National Public Radio in November 2003 in 
      its US premiere with the Berlin Philharmonic and Sir Simon Rattle at New 
      York’s Carnegie Hall. The soprano soloist on that occasion was Valdine Anderson 
      who filled in for an indisposed Dawn Upshaw, for whom the piece was composed. 
      I then had the fortune to hear Upshaw sing the work live in April 2006 on 
      a return appearance to the National Symphony in Washington by Mstislav Rostropovich, 
      who had championed Dutilleux’s music while he was the orchestra’s music 
      director. Ever since, I have hoped a recording would appear and long last 
      it has, albeit with a different soloist. As it happens, Barbara Hannigan 
      is also one of my favorite sopranos, though I know her work primarily from 
      her performances of Ligeti. According to the notes, Dutilleux was very impressed 
      with Hannigan and wanted her to record the songs. He made some revisions 
      in the score and provided a new ending especially for her. The most obvious 
      difference, as far as I can tell, is the order of the movements. The cycle 
      takes its title from a Baudelaire poem describing synaesthesia, the “correspondences” 
      among the senses, but it also refers to letters that are texts of two of 
      the songs, one from Alexander Solzhenitsyn to his friends Mstislav Rostropovich 
      and his wife Galina Vishnevskaya, the other from Vincent van Gogh to his 
      brother, Theo.
       
      Originally, the work began with the movement from a text by the French-based 
      Indian Prithwindra Mukherjee on the mystery of the cosmos titled 
Danse 
      cosmique. Dutilleux also included two short poems both titled “Gong” 
      by Rainer Maria Rilke. In the first version they were placed together before 
      the last song, the letter between the van Gogh brothers. In his revision, 
      Dutilleux now begins the cycle with 
Gong (1) and leaves 
Gong 
      (2) in its former position. This makes for a more dramatic structure with 
      each of these songs beginning loudly and indeed gong-like. The 
Danse 
      cosmique now follows 
Gong (1), after which there is a brief 
      orchestral interlude before the Solzhenitsyn letter. While this interlude 
      lasts less than a minute, it perfectly captures Dutilleux’s unique sound 
      and color with its use of accordion and tuba. Each of the songs is a gem 
      and together they form a well-balanced cycle. The composer uses quotation 
      convincingly in two of the songs. In the Solzhenitsyn letter in which the 
      writer expresses his thanks to the Rostropovichs for their support in his 
      opposition to the Soviet government, Dutilleux quotes the Holy Fool’s famous 
      lament from Musorgsky’s 
Boris Godunov near the end of the song 
      when Solzhenitsyn writes, “only one can derive strength from the knowledge 
      that in our time we Russians are fated to a common doom, and one can only 
      hope that the Lord will not punish us to the end.” It is very moving and 
      Barbara Hannigan’s singing is heartbreaking. The other quotation comes from 
      Dutilleux himself, in the van Gogh letter of the last song, where he quotes 
      from 
Timbres, espace, mouvement, his homage to van Gogh’s painting, 
      
The Starry Night. Hannigan seems the perfect soloist throughout 
      the cycle, with a voice that can be soft and warm and then build to something 
      very dramatic. Hers is a vibrant instrument that is perfectly pitched. The 
      van Gogh letter is as good a place to experience her range as any, beginning 
      softly with warm Ravelian tones and then ending on a high, sustained dramatic 
      note. Salonen and the orchestra are in every way her equals. This is magnificent 
      music-making. After he wrote 
Correspondances, Dutilleux composed 
      another such cycle for Reneé Fleming, 
Le temps l’horloge, but no 
      purely orchestral works. The two that accompany 
Correspondances 
      on the disc under review, though, are among his greatest compositions.
       
      Dutilleux’s cello concerto, 
Tout un monde lointain… and 
The 
      Shadows of Time, comprise the remainder of the disc. Taken as a whole, 
      the programme, consisting of compositions from 1970-2003, can serve as an 
      ideal calling-card for this composer, especially in such fine performances 
      as these. The concerto, like 
Correspondances, takes its title from 
      Baudelaire and attempts to evoke the poet’s “whole distant world” in its 
      five movements. Rostropovich commissioned the concerto and recorded it a 
      few years later with Serge Baudo and the Orchestre de Paris. That recording 
      has always been the obvious benchmark, but it has not kept other cellists 
      from taking it up, such as Lynn Harrell who made a fine recording with Charles 
      Dutoit in the 1990s. Rostropovich’s larger-than-life personality still dominates, 
      but Anssi Karttunen here has nothing to fear in the comparison. He may not 
      be as dramatic as the Russian, but he gives an eloquent account. His playing 
      high in the register is particularly beautiful and he captures all the detail. 
      Salonen’s accompaniment could not be better with very clear percussion and 
      an ideal balance with the cello. Salonen may just be the best collaborator 
      of all of them, bringing out every one of the subtleties of the scoring 
      and not short-changing the work’s dramatic elements. The orchestra performs 
      superbly as they do in the other works.
       
      The disc concludes with what is for me the best introduction - along with 
      the composer’s Second Symphony - to Dutilleux’s music. 
The Shadows of 
      Time is one of those works that once heard stay in the memory forever. 
      His latest purely orchestral work is the nocturne for violin and orchestra, 
      
Sur le même accord from 2002
. He has not been the most 
      prolific of composers! Quality counts for much more than quantity, and I 
      can think of a good number of composers for whom it would surely have been 
      better had they not written so much and concentrated on polishing their 
      best works, as Dutilleux has done. Virtually all of his published compositions 
      are masterworks and none more than 
The Shadows of Time. The Boston 
      Symphony commissioned the piece and it was first performed and recorded 
      by Seiji Ozawa. Like the Cello Concerto, it is in five continuous movements 
      and with an interlude between the third and fourth sections. In its twenty 
      plus minutes it encapsulates the twentieth century with its turbulence, 
      but contains lighter moments as well. What makes it particularly unusual 
      is the inclusion of three children’s voices in the third movement, ‘Memory 
      of Shadows’, written in tribute to Anne Frank. The words, “Why us? Why the 
      star” are sung in French by the three children in what is a very haunting 
      passage. The orchestration, as in much of Dutilleux, is colorful and rather 
      dense with brilliant writing for brass and percussion. The work begins and 
      ends with the clock-like ticking of the temple block representing the relentless 
      passing of time. Ozawa’s recording, much like Rostropovich’s of the concerto, 
      is the benchmark. As one might assume, the Boston Symphony plays magnificently 
      with especially powerful brass and percussion. Salonen’s account here is 
      not as dramatic in that way — though it is surely powerful enough — but 
      emphasizes the poetic side with the strings warmly expressive. There are 
      subtleties in the score here that were otherwise not apparent. Salonen’s 
      choice of three boys with well-matched voices, Basile Buffin, Alexandre 
      Selvestrel and Armand Sztykgold, is particularly inspired. They make a stronger 
      impression than their counterparts on the Ozawa recording. Overall, both 
      recordings belong in any collection of Dutilleux or twentieth-century orchestral 
      music in general.
       
      Deutsche Grammophon’s presentation, however, is rather baffling. Although 
      the cellist’s name is listed on the booklet cover, along with Barbara Hannigan’s, 
      Salonen’s and the orchestra, there is no mention of either the concerto 
      or the other orchestral work. Granted the main attraction of this disc is 
      the world premiere recording of 
Correspondances, but they could 
      have found room to list the other works as well, as they do on the back 
      of the jewel case. Also, while the notes by Anthony Burton on the works 
      are clearly more than adequate, there is nothing whatsoever about the performers. 
      There is a nice black and white photo of Dutilleux with Salonen and Hannigan 
      and a separate one of Anssi Karttunen. I’m sure there are many who have 
      not heard of the Finnish cellist, though more than twenty works have been 
      written for him by such composers as Tan Dun, Magnus Lindberg, Esa-Pekka 
      Salonen and Kaija Saariaho. Like Hannigan he has had an international career 
      and specializes in contemporary music. The Canadian soprano in recent years 
      has received due recognition as the vocal phenomenon she is, and not only 
      in the works of Ligeti.
       
      The shortcomings of the disc’s presentation are only a small annoyance. 
      The music, after all, is what counts. It is rather early to say, but I am 
      confident this CD will be at or near the top of my list of recordings of 
      the year.
       
      
Leslie Wright
       
      A very special disc of Dutilleux’s 
Correspondances and other masterworks.
    
       
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