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Forgotten Records |
Claude DEBUSSY (1862-1918)
Nocturnes [24:17] (1), La Mer [22:07] (2), Petite Suite (orch. Henri
Büsser) [13:33] (3)
Chœur de l’Opéra de Paris (1), Orchestre des Cento Soli (1, 2),
Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion Française (3)/Louis Fourestier
(1, 2), Henri Büsser (3)
rec. 1955 (1, 2), 17 October 1952 (3)
FORGOTTEN RECORDS FR479 [60:00]
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Forgotten records and, even more than that, forgotten conductors.
Of the two, the name of Henri Büsser (1872-1973) has remained
alive, if not for his conducting, at least for his orchestrations
of Debussy’s “Printemps” and “Petite Suite”, which he directs
here. Born in Toulouse, Büsser studied in Paris with Franck
and Guiraud. He also received advice, and a recommendation for
his first job as organist, from Gounod. He won the Prix de Rome
in 1893. At Debussy’s request he took over the podium for the
fourth and several subsequent performances of “Pelléas et Melisande”.
Some sources suggest that Debussy was critical of his conducting.
Nevertheless the two became friends. Debussy helped Büsser in
the composition of the latter’s opera “Colomba” (1902-10 but
not performed until after Debussy’s death). In 1907 he entrusted
him with the orchestration of his own “Petite Suite”, originally
written for piano duet in the early 1890s. Büsser taught at
the Paris Conservatoire from 1921 to 1948.
Büsser may seem to belong to recent history – no doubt some
French readers of no more than middle age can recall the celebrations
of his hundredth birthday in 1972. So it’s important to bear
in mind that he was only ten years younger than Debussy and
three years older than Ravel. He outlived not only the impressionists
but most of the post-impressionists – Roussel, Poulenc – as
well. Nevertheless, by training and background – a pupil of
Franck, protégé of Gounod and friend of Massenet as well as
Debussy – he really belongs to the generation before Debussy.
If Debussy was doubtful over some aspects of his conducting
such as a radical work of “Pelléas”, this probably reflects
a general difficulty Debussy had in finding interpreters able
to cope with his more revolutionary tendencies. It need not
surprise us that, of Büsser’s not very numerous recordings,
the most celebrated is his fairly complete version of Gounod’s
“Faust” (1930).
All this is important since it means we have here, in very decent
1952 sound, a testimony to how Debussy’s music was originally
interpreted by musicians not yet attuned to his refined, impressionist
textures or to the allusiveness of his musical language. The
suite is played rather as a cousin to Bizet’s “L’Arlésienne”
music, in strong primary colours, well-sprung rhythms and an
unashamedly strong contribution from the percussion. In truth,
since this is early Debussy, there may not be a lot of point
in trying to coax an impressionistic wash from the score, so
we may take this version under Debussy’s chosen arranger as
pretty well definitive. It is a pity we can’t hear what on earth
Büsser might have made of a piece like “Jeux” – I take it Forgotten
Records would have given us more if it existed.
Possibly the performances here under Louis Fourestier (1892-1876)
are not so different from the ones Büsser might have given.
Fourestier, too, though twenty years younger, had his roots
in the more conservative generation. Born in Montpellier, he
studied in Paris with D’Indy and Guilmant. He won the Prix de
Rome in 1925 and first appeared as a conductor in 1927. He conducted
at the Paris Opera from 1938 to 1965 and taught conducting at
the Paris Conservatoire from 1945 to 1963. Louis Frémaux was
one of his pupils. He conducted a few productions at the Metropolitan
Opera shortly after the war but his career was essentially home-based.
Fourestier recorded some shorter pieces for EMI-Pathé in the
1950s but our knowledge of his work derives mostly from three
LPs he set down for Le Club Français du Disque, embracing some
of the major masterpieces of the French orchestral repertoire
– the present Debussy Coupling, Berlioz’ Symphonie Fantastique
and Franck’s Symphony and Symphonic Variations (with Jean Micault).
All these were made with the Orchestre des Cento Soli, a mysterious
band which appeared regularly on Club Français discs, under
an array of conductors including Argenta, Paray and Wand. Only
recently I queried the existence of another orchestra known
almost exclusively through recordings – the Innsbruck Symphony
Orchestra– only to discover that it was real after all. So I
will be cautious. However, Paris in those years was a great
place for non-existent orchestras that made records. Neither
the “Orchestre de la Société Philharmonique de Paris” which
set down the Franck Symphony under Désormière in 1951, nor the
“Paris Philharmonic Orchestra” which repeatedly appeared in
the studios under Leibowitz, have been satisfactorily identified.
I suspect that, whatever they were, the Orchestre des Cento
Soli was more of the same. A commentator on another of their
records has noted that the orchestra does not sound especially
like a French orchestra of the 1950s. It is true that the wind
chords at the opening of “Nuages” have tangy reeds but not the
warbling vibrato we associate with French orchestral playing
of the day. However, the presence of the Paris Opera Chorus
seems to scotch any idea that the record was not made in Paris
or France at all. Maybe Fourestier just told them not to overdo
the vibrato. After all, the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra playing
Prokofiev under Boult sounds almost interchangeable with the
London Philharmonic playing the same composer under the same
conductor, so French wind players could clearly set aside their
vibrato if asked.
Though a little more recent than the Petite Suite, which was
originally on HMV/Pathé, the Club Français recordings are actually
more congested and with limited dynamic range. There is distortion
on the voices in “Sirènes”. I found it helped to play “Nuages”
with the volume slightly lower than usual, and then to put it
slightly higher than usual for “Fêtes”. Whatever you do, you’ll
be surprised when the sirens begin to sing, not in the misty
distance but right up close, in front of the orchestra. And
they sing, moreover, with a gusty fervour worthy of a Franckian
oratorio.
I think, though, that Fourestier was not in any case one for
half-lit atmospheres. When the second movement of “La Mer” actually
finishes with something like a piano the secret is out – there
hasn’t been a lot of quiet playing until then anyway, it’s not
just the recording. The recording also doesn’t investigate orchestral
detail too closely in the fuller textures, and maybe we shouldn’t
either. With brisk tempi and a generalized rhythmic swing there’s
a suspicion we are getting just the outlines. And yet there’s
a wholeheartedness to it all. The “Nuages” are more romantic
than evanescent, everybody seems to be having a good time in
“Fêtes” and the closeness of the sirens only exaggerates an
interpretation that has a passionate surge in any case. It’s
remarkable how like Franck this music can sound if you play
it that way.
In “La mer” I wondered if Fourestier might not have been happier
playing sea music by Bridge or even Britten. It’s a surprisingly
angry, active North Sea right from the beginning. The divided
cello theme exudes salty spray. The effect of the sunrise at
the end of the first movement is somewhat weakened by the fact
that the music has so often been equally loud already. The waves
foam and surge rather than play and the big theme in the finale
that sounds like Franck no matter who is conducting is given
a full head of steam. It is an exciting but one-sided view.
So what sort of a recommendation does this add up to? If I say
I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone who hasn’t got at least twenty
other versions, you may think I’m not recommending it at all.
If you’re of the fraternity that can’t understand why anyone
should buy twenty performances of the same work, and then go
out and get a twenty-first, then this is not for you. Unless,
maybe, you get bored with the ultra-refinement of many Debussy
performances and fancy hearing him played in the style of Richard
Strauss.
If, on the other hand, you are fascinated by what are – “La
mer” especially – towering masterpieces of the early twentieth
century and are prepared to hear all the versions you can get
provided each one adds something to your experience, then I
think this one has a place. It may let us reflect that the ultra-refined
pointillist texture we hear extracted from this music by Karajan,
Boulez and Celibidache in their various ways was something Debussy
himself never heard. Did he hope such performances might be
achieved one day? Possibly yes, and this would explain his alleged
dissatisfaction with Büsser’s “Pelléas”. The best he could hope
to hear in his own day was something like Fourestier. Plenty
of enthusiasm from a conductor versed in an older type of music
and who interpreted Debussy as a sort of modernized Franck.
But in seeking ultra-refinement, have we lost something? Performances
like these may let us reflect on where Debussy interpretation
began and where it has arrived. And in any case, if you’re a
Debussy fan you will need to hear the “Petite Suite” played
under the man Debussy chose to orchestrate it.
Christopher Howell
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