
The Complete Songs of Duparc / Connolly, Spence, Thomas, Rendall, Martineau
Malcolm Martineau follows up his acclaimed complete song collections of Poulenc and Faure with an album celebrating the solo songs of Henri Duparc, performed by an acclaimed roster of British singers â Dame Sarah Connolly, Huw Montague Rendall, Nicky Spence & William Thomas. An iconic figure in the world of French music â his songs described as being âimperfect...but works of geniusâ by Ravel and âperfectâ by Debussy â Duparc only composed a handful of works during the first half of his life: following a nervous disorder in 1885 at age 37 he lived for a further 48 years, orchestrating and tinkering with his songs, but publishing nothing new.
Scottish pianist Malcolm Martineau is recognized at the highest international level as one of the UKâs leading accompanists, performing worldwide alongside the worldâs greatest singers and with a discography of over 100 albums, including a number of award-winning recordings.
REVIEW
With four singers in the line-up, there is plenty of vocal variety. The lionâs share of the songs is allotted to Sarah Connolly who still has her voice in fine fettle. She perhaps displays a wider vibrato than in past, but the tone is beautiful and her expressiveness is undiminished, and her high notes ring out gloriously. She is allotted seven songs, while her three male colleagues have three each. But we shouldnât forget the fifth participant, Malcolm Martineau at the piano. His role is just as important as the singersâ, since these songs are no mere melodies with accompaniments but rather dramatic or narrative scenes, where the piano sets the scene and propels the action forward. In that respect Duparc is Wagnerian in his approach. Obviously we focus on the singer, but the piano part mustnât be suppressed. Malcolm Martineau shows that he is a born director and keeps the proceedings on a tight rein.
-- MusicWeb International
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Description
Malcolm Martineau follows up his acclaimed complete song collections of Poulenc and Faure with an album celebrating the solo songs of Henri Duparc, performed by an acclaimed roster of British singers â Dame Sarah Connolly, Huw Montague Rendall, Nicky Spence & William Thomas. An iconic figure in the world of French music â his songs described as being âimperfect...but works of geniusâ by Ravel and âperfectâ by Debussy â Duparc only composed a handful of works during the first half of his life: following a nervous disorder in 1885 at age 37 he lived for a further 48 years, orchestrating and tinkering with his songs, but publishing nothing new.
Scottish pianist Malcolm Martineau is recognized at the highest international level as one of the UKâs leading accompanists, performing worldwide alongside the worldâs greatest singers and with a discography of over 100 albums, including a number of award-winning recordings.
REVIEW
With four singers in the line-up, there is plenty of vocal variety. The lionâs share of the songs is allotted to Sarah Connolly who still has her voice in fine fettle. She perhaps displays a wider vibrato than in past, but the tone is beautiful and her expressiveness is undiminished, and her high notes ring out gloriously. She is allotted seven songs, while her three male colleagues have three each. But we shouldnât forget the fifth participant, Malcolm Martineau at the piano. His role is just as important as the singersâ, since these songs are no mere melodies with accompaniments but rather dramatic or narrative scenes, where the piano sets the scene and propels the action forward. In that respect Duparc is Wagnerian in his approach. Obviously we focus on the singer, but the piano part mustnât be suppressed. Malcolm Martineau shows that he is a born director and keeps the proceedings on a tight rein.
-- MusicWeb International




