CD REVIEW
RAVEL:
ORCHESTRAL WORKS
Sinfonia of London / John Wilson
Chandos CHSA 5280
[83:45]
Due to the
wretched pandemic, we have had to
wait some time for a new album
from our friend John Wilson and
his celebrated orchestra. Now
following their Dutilleux disc it
is here, devoted to the music of
a much better-known French
composer, Joseph Maurice Ravel
(1875-1937). It has been said of
him that he wrote very little
music that was second-rate, be it
orchestral, piano, ballet,
chamber, opera, or song. He also
enjoyed the jazz he heard in the
1920s New Orleans and it
influenced some of his later
works.
Maurice Ravel
placed high importance on melody,
telling his pupil Ralph Vaughan
Williams that there is "an
implied melodic outline in all
vital music". He was also a
renowned orchestrator, sometimes
of other composers' output, with
Mussorgsky's Pictures at an
Exhibition being the best
example.
La Valse
(the completion of which was
delayed by Ravel's service as an
ambulance driver during World War
1) starts quietly but builds up
to a sonically brilliant finish
over its 11½ minutes. The
hauntingly elegiac Pavane
Pour une Infante Défunte
(for Small Orchestra), written in
1899, established his reputation
by achieving world success. The
ballet music for Ma Mère
LOye (Mother Goose),
the longest work here (27:58),
began life as some pieces for
piano duet written for two
children. This edition is a
première recording. The very
Spanish Alborada del Gracioso,
and the very Gallic Valses
Nobles et Sentimentales,
later orchestrated for a ballet,
were also originally written for
solo piano.
His best-known
piece kept until last
is the exciting Boléro,
thanks to the ice-skaters, Jayne
Torvill and Christopher Dean, who
used it to accompany their gold
medal winning perfect-six dance
at the 1986 Olympics. We learn
from Hugh Macdonald's booklet
notes that it was originally
entitled 'Fandango'. John has
carefully reinstated details of
the score which had become
carelessly lost so it, too, is a
première recording. The story
goes that Ravel once remarked
about this work that he had
produced only one masterpiece and
that it contained no music!
Seemingly good for
a quotable quote, he once stated,
"The only love affair I have
ever had was with music".
And when Gershwin asked for
lessons in composition, Ravel is
said to have replied: "It is
I who should be asking you how to
make so much money by writing
music".
Given the pedigree
of the conductor and orchestra,
those who are familiar with the
composer will need no reassurance
about adding this latest issue to
their collection. Others can
sample it on the excellent
Chandos website. I notice that
Andrew Haveron, the usual SoL
leader, only plays on Pavane
with Charlie Lovell-Jones filling
the role on all the other works.
I believe this to
be the longest album I have had
the pleasure of reviewing. Let us
hope it will be the benchmark for
more releases throughout the
year.
© Peter
Burt 2022
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