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Track(s) taken from SIGCD272

La Grenouillère, FP96

First line:
Au bord de l’île on voit
composer
October 1938
author of text
1904

Dame Ann Murray (mezzo-soprano), Malcolm Martineau (piano)
Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
CD-Quality:
Studio Master:
Recording details: September 2010
St Michael's Church, Summertown, Oxford, United Kingdom
Produced by John H West
Engineered by Andrew Mellor
Release date: November 2011
Total duration: 2 minutes 10 seconds
 

Other recordings available for download

Sarah-Jane Brandon (soprano), Graham Johnson (piano)
Alice Coote (mezzo-soprano), Graham Johnson (piano)

Reviews

'This is very much the mixture as before in the first of Signum's projected cycle of the complete Poulenc songs. The team of British singers accompanied by Malcolm Martineau is the same as before, the sopranos tending to outshine the male singers, though Felicity Lott in one or two of her contributions—as for example the Lafanne poems—is not in quite such fresh voice as before, even if the difference is marginal and her artistry and feeling for the French language remain as impressive as ever' (Gramophone)

'This is the third volume in the impressive coverage of all Poulenc's songs masterminded by the superb pianist Malcolm Martineau … the present set any slight piano dominance comes from the sheer character of Martineau's playing. This is immediately effective in the opening group of four Airs chantes, sung with engaging character and immediacy by Sarah Fox. In 'Colloque', which follows, Loma Anderson is joined by Thomas Oliemans, which brings most beautiful singing in a nostalgic love duet' (Gramophone)
Both Renoir and Monet painted the Grenouillère—a resort on the Seine in the western suburbs of Paris, popular in the late 1860s, where working-class Parisians (the women ‘à grosses poitrines / Et bêtes comme chou’) could swim in a spa, boat on the river, and eat and drink in a floating café—‘Sundays of ease and contentment’ as Poulenc put it in JdmM. In 1904 Apollinaire visited the painters Derain and Vlaminck who lived in the area; he passed by the Grenouillère, and saluted, in passing, a once-celebrated watering-hole frequented by the Impressionists and literati more than thirty years earlier. More than thirty years after the poem was written, Poulenc, now at his height as a song composer, captures the poem’s atmosphere with relaxed insouciance—four imperturbable crotchets per bar somehow convey movement within stasis: the gentle undulations of the Seine cradle the bumping and bobbing of empty boats (as depicted—shaded by trees—in the foreground of Monet’s Les baigneurs de la Grenouillère in London’s National Gallery). The vocal line unfurls, molto legato, gently resigned to the transitory nature of life, a sadness momentarily enlivened by musings about the Renoiresque clientele (bare arms, décolleté plongeant, Maupassant) in the late heyday of the second Empire. This is all quintessential Parisian nostalgia. Poulenc admitted borrowing the musical language of Musorgsky (the ‘Nursery’ cycle) for the bars beginning ‘Petits bateaux vous me faites bien de la peine’ but this detracts not in the least from two pages of perfection, an out-and-out masterpiece, and a supremely simple one.

from notes by Graham Johnson © 2013

Other albums featuring this work

L'heure exquise
Studio Master: CDA67962Studio Master FLAC & ALAC downloads available
Poulenc: The Complete Songs
CDA68021/44CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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