César Franck - Variations symphoniques (1885) {Peter Katin}

César-Auguste-Jean-Guillaume-Hubert Franck (10 December 1822 – 8 November 1890) was a composer, pianist, organist, and music teacher who worked in Paris during his adult life. He was born in Liège, in modern-day Belgium (though at the time of his birth it was part of the United Kingdom of the Netherlands). He gave his first concerts there in 1834 and studied privately in Paris from 1835, where his teachers included Anton Reicha.

Please support my channel:
https://ko-fi.com/bartjebartmans

Variations symphoniques (1885)
Dedication: à Monsieur Louis Diémer

Peter Katin, piano and London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Eugene Goossens
rec. May 26-28, 1959
Everest 9060

Description by Adrian Corleonis [-]
One of the glitterati of the French music scene, Louis Diémer (1843-1919) had taken the piano part in Franck's Victor Hugo-inspired Les Djinns, for piano and orchestra, on March 15, 1885; he earned for the composer a rare plaudit from the press: "interesting work... for the direct originality of its thought and the admirable polish of its style." The Ménestral's critic continued: "As I listened to the fine logic of these developments and the arresting effects of the blending of the piano with the orchestra, I was struck by the thought of how sad it is that the name of this eminent musician is so rarely seen on programs, too little honored at a time when he is one of the masters of our epoch, and will indubitably remain one."

This proved prophetic. Franck was delighted and credited his success to Diémer's brilliant playing -- sec, léger, and articulated with lightning precision -- which he promised to reward with "a little something." Good to his word, Franck dedicated his orchestration of the Variations symphoniques to Diémer. He began work in the summer of 1885, and completed it on December 12. In his ultimate, old master phase, Franck transformed everything he touched. The orchestral highlighting of pianistic virtuosity -- heard in such works of his youth as the Variations brillantes sur l'air du Pré aux clercs (1834) or the Variations brillantes sur le ronde favorite de Gustave III (1834-35) -- or the Lisztian heroics of the soloist locked in combat with the orchestra are left behind in the Variations symphoniques in favor of the deft dovetailing of piano and orchestra. This use of the piano as a concertante instrument would be taken up by Vincent d'Indy in his Symphonie sur un chant montagnard française (1886) and in turn, be adopted as far afield as Ferruccio Busoni's massive five-movement Piano Concerto (1904).

The strings open with a menacing dotted figure in unison, answered by the piano with a plaintively drooping phrase whose dialogue gives way to a second theme introduced by pizzicato woodwinds and strings. An appasionato development leads shortly to six seamless variations on the second theme through which the piano decorates, comments, alludes, and accompanies, as the mood shifts from triumphant assertion to mystical absorption and languishing, muted sighs. A sudden trill in both hands, two octaves apart, prompts the orchestra to begin the extensive, rhapsodic finale in which the thematic material of the preceding is wrought to an incandescent apotheosis. Without doubt, the irresistible, surefire breeziness of this finish has insured the Variations symphoniques first place in popularity among Franck's works.

Curiously, the première, at the annual orchestral concert of the Société Nationale de Musique, May 1,1886, with Diémer at the piano, passed almost without mention. At the second performance, an all-Franck concert on January 30 of the following year -- again featuring Diémer -- the surefire misfired as the aging conductor, Jules Pasdeloup, miscued the orchestra's entrance.

César Franck - Variations symphoniques (1885) {Peter Katin}


france piano orchestra romanticism

Post a Comment

0 Comments