Natalie Dessay - Clair De Lune (2012)

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Natalie Dessay - Clair De Lune (2012)

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1. Nuit d'étoiles
2. Pantomime
3. Claire de lune
4. Pierrot
5. Apparition
6. En sourdine
7. Fête galante
8. Romance (L'Ame évaporée)
9. Les Cloches
10. Rondel chinois
11. Flots, palmes, sables
12. La Romance d'Ariel
13. Regret
14. Le matelot qui tombe à l'eau
15. Coquetterie posthume
16. L'Archet
17. Romance
18. Les Elfes
19. La Damoiselle élue

Natalie Dessay - Soprano 
Karine Deshayes - Mezzo-Soprano
Le Jeune Choeur de Paris
Henri Chalet - Chorus Master
Catherine Michel - Harp
Philippe Cassard – Piano

 

Natalie Dessay has an instinctive understanding of Debussy's idiom and a combination of passion and delicacy that makes her an ideal interpreter of the composer's distinctive vocal style. In this recording, made in 2011, Dessay's voice doesn't always convey the supple ease floating above the staff that characterized her work around the turn of the century. She sounds terrific when she can cut loose with exuberance and plenty of volume, as in Flôts, palmes, sables. It's her in her approach to the upper register at a quiet dynamic level that she comes across as less secure. Those moments are few, though, and overall Dessay's singing is beguilingly sensuous and her insights illuminating.

One of the chief attractions of the albums is the inclusion of the premiere recordings of four songs unpublished songs Debussy wrote when he was 20, that had only recently come to light. They fit seamlessly into the composer's song output and are likely to become standards on Debussy song recitals. The most distinctive is the ballad, Les elfes, the composer's longest song and one of his most dramatic, which makes extreme coloratura demands and has a wonderfully eccentric piano part.

The album also includes La Damoiselle élue, a cantata using a translation of a poem by Dante Gabriel Rosetti, for soprano, mezzo-soprano, women's choir, and piano.

Pianist Philippe Cassard is a fully equal collaborator in the endeavor and brings an acute sensitivity and intelligence to the accompaniment. Mezzo-soprano Karine Deshayes and Le jeune chœur de Paris deliver lovely performances in the pastel-hued cantata. Virgin Classics' sound has a warm, natural ambience, excellent balance, and is clean and clear. ---Stephen Eddins, Rovi

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Last Updated (Thursday, 24 October 2013 18:28)