Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 62, 
    Horn Concerto, Op. 74, 
    Clarinet Concerto, Op. 78, 
    Orchestre National de France/Kurt Masur (violin), Jean-Claude Casadesus (horn)
    rec. live, Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris, 25 
    May 2006 (Violin), at the Salle Olivier Messiaen, Maison de la Radio, Radio 
    France, Paris, Festival ‘Présences’, 18 September 2009 
    (Horn) and at Théâtre du Châtelet, Paris, Festival ‘Les 
    Paris de la Musique’, 10 November 2010 (Clarinet)
    world première. live recordings
    
In a previous review of Bechara El-Khoury's orchestral 
      music I wrote “his music can be considered an expression of his humanistic 
      beliefs based on Christian spirituality” (
Naxos 
      8.557043) and I still hold to that comment although these are more abstract 
      works. In addition Gérald Hugon, in his excellent booklet notes comments, 
      as we shall plainly hear, that his “voice is both lyrical and dramatic”.
       
      The 
Violin Concerto No 1 exemplifies El-Khoury’s 
      style perfectly. Formally it is unusual if not unique. The first movement 
      takes up half of the concerto’s length. Its various fragments, which 
      recur throughout, refer to the opening fifth motif of Berg’s Violin 
      Concerto. There are also passages of almost biblical spaciousness and melodies, 
      which remind one of the composer’s Lebanese background. I could also 
      hear Henri Dutilleux somewhere in all of this. There is a sense of struggle 
      between powerful brass sections and colouristic passages and the whole collapses 
      into a five-minute virtuoso violin cadenza. This is tracked separately as 
      the second movement but one could see this work, played without a break, 
      as a two movement concerto of roughly equal halves in which this extended 
      solo acts as an introduction to the violent and excitable finale. Here we 
      have, as clear as day, lyrical music, almost romantic in feel even with 
      a touch of Englishness about it. It also possesses a powerful touch of drama 
      with sweeping brass glissandi and rushing semi-quaver scalic figures. Taken 
      as a whole however there is a distinct French quality to the concerto but 
      also a total individuality. I‘m not sure though how the title quite 
      fits into the musical sound world. Sarah Nemtanu clearly relishes the challenge 
      and the orchestra are on the best of form.
       
      This is a Radio France recording of the first, live performance in Paris 
      with a quiet and appreciative audience; that also applies to the other two 
      concertos.
       
      The 
Horn Concerto subtitled 
The Dark Mountain 
      falls into three movements with an exhilarating cadenza appearing at the 
      end of the first. This could be heard as a sonata-form movement. The first 
      opening idea is immediately agitated and disturbed, with the second theme 
      lyrical, gentle and slower. Each is developed and each returns. This immediately 
      sets up a sense of the inspirational mountain walks the composer enjoyed 
      during his Lebanese childhood. The second movement is a real ‘nature’ 
      study with a spacious and brooding atmosphere and a sense of loneliness. 
      In the third movement a reminder of the horn as a heroic instrument comes 
      to the fore. This also mixes the lyrical and the dramatic but opens with 
      a strong rhythmic tread which re-emerges occasionally. In a recent 
interview 
      the composer admitted that the French horn is his favourite instrument and 
      this certainly comes across in the totally idiomatic way he has approached 
      this work. It can be heard in the basic material and in the sense of wide 
      open spaces. For me this is one of the most gripping horn concertos I have 
      heard. The music develops and grows logically which was deliberately not 
      always the case with the composer’s varied and stimulating set of 
      symphonic poems such as 
Le vin des nuages (
Naxos 
      8.557043). David Guerrier is foot perfect in the considerable demands 
      made by the composer and captures every mood and drama required.
       
      El-Khoury is a fine and careful and honest orchestrator. The sounds that 
      he makes are exactly what he wants, as again he discusses in the interview. 
      This comes across most strongly in the 
Clarinet Concerto. 
      There’s a wonderful passage in the rondo finale when the violin and 
      celesta play a melody together which is quite enchanting ... but I’m 
      jumping ahead. This is the most folk-like of the three works; to quote the 
      composer “a piece that evokes, at one particular moment, the sky of 
      the East”. The first movement, marked 
Cantabile, begins with 
      a clarinet solo, which captures wide-open spaces, but with a touch of melancholy. 
      Its modal inflections and later the melodic use of fourths and fifths, widely 
      spaced chords, a touch in the high register of the soloist capturing the 
      klezmer clarinet, all evoke a feel of ‘the East’. El- Khoury's 
      homeland is almost touchable. Sometimes, curiously, I felt Kodaly not a 
      million miles away.
       
      The middle movement, which really seems to sum up the work’s subtitle 
      
Autumn Pictures, is marked 
Poetico. It not only uses some 
      of the first movement’s melodic material but also is similar in mood 
      and tempo; perhaps too similar to really make a strong mark. It is even 
      more spacious and arguably, as Hugon suggests, minimalist. The finale, and 
      this is a trait we have met in the other works, mixes lyricism in it episodes 
      with almost Bartókian aggression in its strong rhythmic character. 
      The ending seems to be aiming at a powerful and exciting conclusion but 
      El-Khoury has a little trick up his sleeve, which I won't now let 
      on, leaving that as a surprise. Patrick Messina has the ability to capture 
      the long, legato lines in a poetic and highly sensitive manner. He also 
      has the flexibility to make the faster sections and the two cadenzas tidy 
      and clear. The orchestra is beautifully balanced and the Estonian conductor 
      Olari Elts coaxes them into a wonderfully warm and sensitive performance.
       
      This is mostly tonal music but quite distinctly of our time. Quite clearly 
      Bechara El-Khoury continues to develop his personal musical voice regardless 
      of fashion. It’s odd that his music has never really made it to the 
      UK despite the superb promotional efforts of Naxos. Let's hope that 
      one of this composer’s works will get a chance at the BBC Proms one 
      day. His music would, I’m sure, generate a great deal of interest.
       
      
Gary Higginson
      
      Previous review: 
Rob 
      Barnett