Ballet music from
Bacchus, Herodiade, Thais, and Le Cid. Patrick Gallois, Barcelona Symphony
Orchestra. Naxos 8.573123.
You can’t say you don’t get your money’s worth with this
disc. It doesn’t contain just two or three ballet suites from Massenet operas
but four. The material totals about seventy-eight minutes of music, close to
the limit of a standard CD.
It’s interesting, too, that some composers can write a ton
of music and years later people remember them for only a handful of things, if
they remember them at all. That is the case with French composer Jules Massenet
(1842-1912), who wrote a slew of operas popular in his day, most of them soon
going out of style. Today, we still hear the occasional performance of Werther, Thais, or Manon, and
that’s about it. Except for the ballet suites from several of his operas, which
we have on the present disc. These purely orchestral works continue to
fascinate listeners, as demonstrated here by Maestro Patrick Gallois and the
Barcelona Symphony Orchestra.
First up on the program is a suite of ten ballet items
from Bacchus, which the composer
premiered in Paris in 1909. The music contains romance and adventure in
abundance, and Maestro Gallois very competently conjures up all the right
ingredients. He is especially persuasive in the love interludes, the sometimes
solemn, sometimes playful Initiation
scenes, and the final Bacchanale, the
latter particularly energetic.
Next is a suite of five ballet selections from Herodiade, which opened in 1881, telling
the story of King Herod, his brother's widow, Salome, and John the Baptist.
What we get in the suite are exotic dances by girls from Egypt, Babylon, Gaul,
and Phoenicia, followed by a melodramatic finale. Gallois keeps it flowing
charmingly, even though the music is rather lightweight in nature. Gallois
plays up the lush Romanticism of the score and gives us a thrilling conclusion.
After that is a suite of ten ballet numbers from Thais, first performed in 1884, numbers
that Massenet added later. The most-famous tune in the opera, of course, is the
Act II intermezzo, the Meditation,
which, unfortunately, is not a part of the ballet music. The actual ballet
selections are some fairly somber pieces, although it offers more variety than
the Herodiade ballet selections,
Gallois pointing up both the lyricism and the agitation of the score in equal
measure. There is remarkable zip and bounce to the conductor's style, making
the music as comfortable in listening to it as it is probably to watch on stage.
The final selection is a suite of seven ballet selections
from the opera Le Cid, which Massenet
premiered in 1885. He based the story on the legendary “El Cid Campeador”
(Rodrigo D#az de
Bivar), c.1040–99, the Spanish soldier and hero of the wars against the Moors.
The ballet has become the most popular part of the music. If I think this
ballet suite is the best thing on the disc, it's probably because I've always
thought it was some the most underrated music in the classical field. Massenet
captures the spirit of Spain as well as the spirit of the score's heroics, and
Gallois communicates it as well as anybody. Well, almost anybody. I still
prefer Louis Fremaux's performance with the City of Birmingham Symphony
Orchestra (EMI or Klavier), but that's a truly audiophile recording and neither here nor there. Gallois has the
measure of the music and gives us a nicely drawn, deliciously flavorful portrait
of the story. You'll find all the color, all the picturesque beauty, and most
of the exuberance these ballet numbers have to offer, and Gallois does it with
subtlety, elegance, and grace. It's a heady combination.
Producer, engineer, and editor Sean Lewis made the
recording at L’Auditori, Pau Casals Hall, Barcelona, Spain in October 2012. So,
how did Mr. Lewis do as practically a one-man show? Pretty well, actually. Too
often in the past Naxos engineers have provided perfectly acceptable if
perfectly bland audio reproduction, usually big and warm and soft. But Lewis
gives us a natural, well-defined sound, with plenty of orchestral depth,
moderate bass and dynamics, and sparkling highs. It's a welcome change from
Naxos's more-ordinary sounding discs and makes for a pleasantly realistic audio
experience.
JJP
To listen to a brief excerpt from this album, click here:
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