Yes, thoroughly ‘agréable’ 
                listening. April Clayton is an accomplished 
                instrumentalist. She encounters no problems 
                in negotiating the trickier passages 
                in this mostly French programme and, 
                even more important, displays a sure-footed 
                stylishness entirely appropriate to 
                the music. She is helped by two adroit 
                pianists and the whole benefits from 
                a recorded quality which is clear without 
                being at all dry. 
              
 
              
Philip Lasser is 
                a new name to me. He teaches at the 
                Juilliard and studied in Paris and at 
                Harvard and Columbia Universities. He 
                is, I presume, an American. But this 
                Sonata was, according to the booklet 
                notes, first written in Paris in 1986, 
                "in a sunny studio apartment on 
                the Left Bank" and premièred 
                at the Floral Parc in Vincennes. The 
                work went through various vicissitudes 
                – including the loss of the original 
                score – before reaching the state in 
                which it is here recorded. The Sonata 
                is thoroughly French in idiom and conception; 
                Lasser tells us that he admires Poulenc, 
                but we might have guessed that for ourselves, 
                especially on the evidence of the third 
                of its three movements. The central 
                largo sets up some beautiful interplay 
                between flute and piano, dream-like 
                and yet clearly and firmly structured. 
                On this evidence, Lasser’s is a name 
                worth looking out for in future. 
              
 
              
Dutilleux’s 
                Sonatine was a test-piece written for 
                the Paris Conservatoire and is more 
                reminiscent of, say, Ravel or even Roussel, 
                than of the music of the fully mature 
                Dutilleux. It transcends its purposes 
                as a test-piece and is a subtly argued 
                construction in a single movement. Clayton 
                and Song do justice to its subtleties, 
                though I have heard versions which make 
                slightly more of the contrasts in dynamics. 
              
 
              
In the four movements 
                of Jean Françaix’s Sonata, 
                written in the last year of the composer’s 
                life, the emphasis is on charm and wit 
                – was it ever very different with Françaix? 
                – but the resulting music is not lightweight, 
                for all its resolute avoidance of the 
                solemn. Françaix has a gift for 
                doing the slightly unpredictable thing 
                within a secure, even conventional, 
                framework. The Sonata is played with 
                evident affection and understanding. 
                The final movement makes real technical 
                demands on the flautist and Clayton 
                is up to them. 
              
 
              
Pierre Sancan is 
                best known as a pianist and as an important 
                teacher of the piano, though his compositions 
                seem recently to be receiving more attention; 
                recent recordings include his Piano 
                Concerto with Jean-Philippe Collard 
                as soloist. The Sonatine has 
                already been recorded a number of times 
                - by Patrick Gallois (review 
                ), Emmanuel Palud, Jeffrey Khaner 
                (review) 
                and Andrew Anson (review) 
                . It is bristling with difficulties 
                for both players, though it is much 
                more than a mere display piece. This 
                is subtle and evocative music and it 
                receives a loving performance here.. 
              
 
              
Bozza’s Agrestide 
                is, again technically demanding 
                music; here the virtuosity seems more 
                nearly to be an end in itself, though 
                the more delicate passages are charming. 
                It was the contest piece for the Paris 
                Conservatoire in 1942, just as Dutilleux’s 
                Sonatine was the piece for 1943 and 
                Sancan’s Sonatine that for 1946 – a 
                unifying thread to the programme which 
                is not mentioned in April Clayton’s 
                generally very helpful booklet notes. 
              
 
              
A well-chosen, well-played 
                programme of music descended, as it 
                were, from Ravel and Debussy. Recommended. 
              
Glyn Pursglove