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Philippe Jordan - Ravel: Daphnis & Chloé, La Valse (2015) Hi-Res

Philippe Jordan - Ravel: Daphnis & Chloé, La Valse (2015) Hi-Res

BAND/ARTIST: Philippe Jordan

  • Title: Ravel: Daphnis & Chloé, La Valse
  • Year Of Release: 2015
  • Label: Erato
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC 24bit-96kHz / FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:08:19
  • Total Size: 1.2 Gb / 263 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

Daphnis et Chloé, M. 57 (Maurice Ravel)
1. Tableau I: I. Introduction 02:56
2. Tableau I: II. Danse religieuse 04:45
3. Tableau I: III. Danse des jeunes filles 03:28
4. Tableau I: IV. Danse grotesque de Dorcon 01:47
5. Tableau I: V. Danse légére et gracieuse de Daphnis 04:01
6. Tableau I: VI. Danse de Lyceion 02:21
7. Tableau I: VII. Bruits d'armes. Enlèvement de Chloé 01:44
8. Tableau I : VIII. Nocturne. Danse lente et mystérieuse des Nymphes. Apparition de Pan 05:11
9. Tableau II: IX. Interlude 02:48
10. Tableau II: X. Au camp de pirates: Danse guerrière. Bryaxis ordonne d'amener la captive 04:44
11. Tableau II: XI. Danse suppliante de Chloé 02:58
12. Tableau II: XII. Bryaxis veut l'entraîner 02:44
13. Tableau III: XIII. Lever du jour (choeur) 05:01
14. Tableau III: XIV. Pantomime (Les amours de Pan et Syrinx) 06:30
15. Tableau III: XV. Danse générale (Bacchanale) 04:54
La Valse, M. 72 (Maurice Ravel)
16. La Valse, M. 72 12:27

Performers:
Orchestre et Choeur de l'Opéra National de Paris
Philippe Jordan, conductor

This new recording of Daphnis et Chloé, Ravel’s most sumptuous score, marks a number of firsts as it evokes the heady days of Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes in Paris in the early years of the 20th century.

It grew from performances of the Classically-inspired ballet at Paris’ Opéra Bastille in Spring 2014: Philippe Jordan, Music Director of the Paris Opéra was conducting a complete ballet for the first time and the choreographer, Benjamin Millepied – known to a wide audience for his work on the Oscar-winning film Black Swan, starring his wife, Natalie Portman – was undertaking his first major project for the Opéra before assuming his new role as its Director of Dance in Autumn 2014. Completing the creative triumvirate – and bringing further echoes of Ravel’s original Ballets Russes collaboration with choreographer Michel Fokine, conductor Pierre Monteux and scenographer Léon Bakst – was the painter and designer Daniel Buren, a master at deploying blocks of colour, whose candy-striped columns at Paris’ historic Palais Royal have become one of the French capital’s tourist sights. Though Buren has experience as a designer for theatre and for the Opéra-Comique, this was his first foray into ballet.

Ravel’s spectacular musical depiction of a Mediterranean sunrise, a highlight of Daphnis et Chloé, has become one of classical music’s ‘greatest hits’. It opens the second suite of music that the composer extracted from the ballet, a compact sequence of deliciously sensuous music that is a popular feature of both concerts and recordings. The complete ballet score – which, lasting nearly an hour, is Ravel’s longest work – is less frequently heard. Its lavish forces, which include an exotic selection of percussion (with the wind machine notably prominent) and a wordless offstage chorus, perhaps constitute a reason for the relative rarity of its appearance in the world’s ballet theatres.

The recording was made under studio conditions at the Opéra Bastille, several months after the run of live performances in May and June 2014. In an interview with the magazine Paris Match, Philippe Jordan described the impact of collaborating with dancers: “When I work on a symphony, it’s different. Here, the sense of phrasing, the physicality that dancers bring, make it something else.” He also pointed out that he has a certain heritage when it comes to ballet: “My mother was a dancer, and my father [the conductor Armin Jordan] worked a lot with ballet companies in the early stages of his career. Something must have been passed down to me!”

Completing the CD is another work by Ravel that was originally conceived for Diaghilev’s Ballets Russe: the intoxicating and haunting ‘choreographic poem’ La Valse. Famously, Diaghilev rejected the score after it was first played to him in a two-piano reduction; the performers were Ravel himself and the legendary Marcelle Meyer. The impresario described it as a masterpiece, but added: “It is not a ballet. It is a portrait of a ballet.” This judgment caused a rift between Diaghilev and Ravel, and the composer La Valse was eventually premiered as a concert work in 1920. Though it starts seductively, and its swirling rhythms and sinuous melodies are irresistible – rivalling anything Richard Strauss wrote in Der Rosenkavalier – a sense of panic gradually invades the music and its final climax is cataclysmic. As the contemporary British composer George Benjamin has said of the work: "Whether or not it was intended as a metaphor for the predicament of European civilisation in the aftermath of the Great War, its one-movement design plots the birth, decay and destruction of a musical genre: the waltz." Despite Diaghilev’s reservations, La Valse was later choreographed by such luminaries as George Balanchine and Frederick Ashton.




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