Jean Françaix’s 
Concerto for two pianos and 
    orchestra was first performed by the composer together with his daughter 
    Claude. A quote from Françaix on the subject of the quantity of notes in this 
    joyous piece is included in the booklet for this release and is quite illustrative: 
    “There are many notes [but] I counted the drops of rain carefully. I 
    heeded the law of the genre, which gives the opposing pianists the opportunity 
    to present their techniques; all the more so, when the technique of the father 
    is wrestling with that of his daughter, which, however, does not prevent them 
    from getting on excellently, both on the pianos and in life.”
    
    Many of us could wish for more of this kind of harmony, and with the sisterly 
    synergy of Mona and Rica Bard there is some connection to the intent of the 
    original performance. Françaix would have known Poulenc’s 
Double 
    Concerto, and if you already know and love that piece then you will relish 
    this typically French feast of sparkling wit and lyricism. There aren’t 
    many recordings of Jean Françaix’s 
Concerto around, the Wergo 
    label having one with the Sinfonieorchester des Südwestfunks Baden-Baden conducted 
    by Pierre Stoll on WER6087-2 or as part of a 3 CD set (
review). 
    This is an engagingly lively performance but has a few ‘live’ 
    imperfections such as scrappy strings in the trickier fast passages. This 
    newer recording with the Bard sisters on the Capriccio label is superb, with 
    gorgeous atmosphere in the slow movement or section, as the music runs continuously. 
    Everything is technically under control in the swift outer movements, which 
    doesn’t mean we are lacking in effusive abandon. The German orchestra 
    doesn’t have quite that pungent edge you might expect from a French 
    orchestra from the last century, but everything is rhythmically very sharp 
    and great fun indeed.
    
    Poulenc’s 
Les Animaux modèles was written as France became 
    subject to occupation early in WWII. There is an eight part ballet version, 
    and the six part concert suite performed here. The music could hardly be more 
    French, Poulenc’s patriotism being expressed to offer hope for a better 
    future, but without bombast. There is much regretful tenderness and there 
    are darker moments, but amongst the poignancy there is a good deal of cinematic 
    glamour for 
Le Lion amoreux, sprightly caricature of 
A middle-aged 
    man and his two mistresses and 
Two Roosters who have been clearly 
    listening to Saint-Saëns. This is another very good performance, and there 
    is a little more competition out there, with a nice complete version on Avie 
    AV2135 with the Filarmonica '900 conducted by Jan Latham-Koenig. This 
    is more closely recorded than the Capriccio version and has a bit more gutsy 
    impact, and if you want the real French ‘sound’ then there is 
    an older recording of the suite conducted by Georges Prêtre on EMI, which 
    is now Warner Classics. This is hard to beat for sheer emotional wallop, but 
    there are now also versions of this work for piano solo such as that played 
    by Jean-Pierre Armengaud on Naxos (
review), 
    reviving the way this music would have been heard in the ballet studios.
    
    Poulenc’s 
Concerto for two pianos and orchestra in D minor 
    is one of his masterpieces, and if you don’t already know it you are 
    in for a treat. There is a melodramatic aura to the first movement which comes 
    out nicely in this performance, and the contrast between the spiky character 
    of this and the magical quiet section which suddenly kicks in at 2:24 is a 
    moment of genuine surprise, as is the Balinese gamelan material toward the 
    end of the movement. The central 
Larghetto sees Poulenc in a conversation 
    with Mozart, a combination which creates a musical object of jewel-like beauty. 
    The 
Finale is a real show-stopper, played with élan and perfectly 
    judged gear-changes by these performers.
    
    One of my favourite CDs of past years is that with Poulenc’s complete 
    music for two pianos on BIS-CD-593 with Love Derwinger and Roland Pöntinen, 
    and it is their performance of this work which has long been my default choice 
    for sheer verve and beauty of expression. Their timings are always a touch 
    shorter, the greater sense of forward drive in the first movement preventing 
    holes appearing in the ‘pizzicato’ pointed notes in the first 
    minute, and the dramatic gusto of the playing still blows me away every time. 
    There is a little detail at 2:50 in the first movement of the Capriccio recording 
    in which there is a trumpet 
flatterzunge note which almost inevitably 
    goes a little out of tune. The players on the BIS recording resolve this with 
    a little ‘cheat’, playing fast repeated notes but keeping pitch. 
    There are other fine recordings around of course, and the BIS version doesn’t 
    have all the answers. Take that lovely moment after 2:00 in the slow movement, 
    played softly by the Bard sisters and their orchestra in a far more Mozartean 
    idiom than with Osmo Vänskä, who adds a suspenseful accented edge to the string 
    notes. Who is right and who do you prefer? This can often depend on which 
    version you first acquire and take to your heart, and I freely admit the subjective 
    nature of my bias, but do get hold of BIS-CD-593 if you can as the 
Sonatas 
    and other works are also tremendous.
    
    With its attractive programme and the excellent musicianship of these performers 
    this Capriccio disc is a real treat and very easy to recommend. With a delightful 
    touch and plenty of drama and excitement this is by no means an offering of 
    just fluffy and feminine Frenchness. The recording is not too close, but still 
    captures plenty of detail. Well-chosen and fabulously executed, what’s 
    not to love?
    
    
Dominy Clements