Anna Molnár - Harawi (Chant d'amour et de mort) (Live recording) (2025)
BAND/ARTIST: Anna Molnár, László Borbély
- Title: Harawi (Chant d'amour et de mort) (Live recording)
- Year Of Release: 2025
- Label: Hunnia Records
- Genre: Classical
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 59:37 min
- Total Size: 224 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. I. La ville qui dormait, toi (Live recording)
02. II. Bonjour toi, colombe verte (Live recording)
03. III. Montagnes (Live recording)
04. IV. Doundou tchil (Live recording)
05. V. L'amour de Piroutcha (Live recording)
06. VI. Répétition planétaire (Live recording)
07. VII. Adieu (Live recording)
08. VIII. Syllabes (Live recording)
09. IX. L'escalier redit, gestes du soleil (Live recording)
10. X. Amour oiseau d'étoile (Live recording)
11. XI. Katchikatchi les étoiles (Live recording)
12. XII. Dans le noir (Live recording)
01. I. La ville qui dormait, toi (Live recording)
02. II. Bonjour toi, colombe verte (Live recording)
03. III. Montagnes (Live recording)
04. IV. Doundou tchil (Live recording)
05. V. L'amour de Piroutcha (Live recording)
06. VI. Répétition planétaire (Live recording)
07. VII. Adieu (Live recording)
08. VIII. Syllabes (Live recording)
09. IX. L'escalier redit, gestes du soleil (Live recording)
10. X. Amour oiseau d'étoile (Live recording)
11. XI. Katchikatchi les étoiles (Live recording)
12. XII. Dans le noir (Live recording)
In many ways, Harawi occupies a special place in the oeuvre of Olivier Messiaen. On the one hand, it places extreme demands on the two performers, often not in a purely technical sense, but even more in a spiritual, psychological sense. At the same time, to highlight the work's humanly testing difficulty is to miss the point. The other aspect of the piece's uniqueness is the composer's style, which is a mixture of surrealism and sacredness, and which makes his musical language always unique and instantly recognisable. And although Messiaen always represents a kind of transcendence, his compositional thinking is, in contrast, finitely organised. The aforementioned surreal flavour also stems from the seemingly irreconcilable nature of this totally organised 'chaos' and the sound of sacral rapture. (The composer intends the sixth - Répétition planétaire - movement to give a vision of the chaos of the universe.)
The lyrics of the Harawi ('yarawi', a characteristic genre of Peruvian folk poetry, originally related to tragedy) was written by Messiaen himself. In addition to the above, Messiaen, who boasted literary ancestry, was obviously keen to create a kind of 'Gesamtkunstwerk' (synthesis of the arts) - in which he was 'responsible' for every detail of his work, including not only the music but also the text, which is written in French, but also makes extensive use of Kechuan idioms, which are included for their particular sound. These lyrics can therefore hardly be called song lyrics in the traditional sense, but rather metaphorical dream descriptions, or 'celestial suggestions' if you like, whose meaning lies precisely in their artistic ambiguity. These magical texts project the often 'too noisy loneliness' of the human psyche. They express in a symbolic-surrealistic voice all that cannot be expressed in words. In this respect, one of the most direct sources of inspiration for the work was the oil painting 'Seeing is Believing (L'Ile Invisible)' by the English surrealist painter Sir Roland Penrose. (László Borbély)
Anna Molnár, mezzo-soprano
ászló Borbély piano
The lyrics of the Harawi ('yarawi', a characteristic genre of Peruvian folk poetry, originally related to tragedy) was written by Messiaen himself. In addition to the above, Messiaen, who boasted literary ancestry, was obviously keen to create a kind of 'Gesamtkunstwerk' (synthesis of the arts) - in which he was 'responsible' for every detail of his work, including not only the music but also the text, which is written in French, but also makes extensive use of Kechuan idioms, which are included for their particular sound. These lyrics can therefore hardly be called song lyrics in the traditional sense, but rather metaphorical dream descriptions, or 'celestial suggestions' if you like, whose meaning lies precisely in their artistic ambiguity. These magical texts project the often 'too noisy loneliness' of the human psyche. They express in a symbolic-surrealistic voice all that cannot be expressed in words. In this respect, one of the most direct sources of inspiration for the work was the oil painting 'Seeing is Believing (L'Ile Invisible)' by the English surrealist painter Sir Roland Penrose. (László Borbély)
Anna Molnár, mezzo-soprano
ászló Borbély piano
| Classical | FLAC / APE
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