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Debussy - Music for the Prix de Rome | Glossa GCD922206

Debussy - Music for the Prix de Rome

£27.25

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Label: Glossa

Cat No: GCD922206

Barcode: 8424562222069

Format: CD

Number of Discs: 2

Release Date: 1st February 2010

International Record Review Outstanding

Contents

Artists

Guylaine Girard (soprano)
Sophie Marilley (mezzo-soprano)
Bernard Richter (tenor)
Alain Buet (baritone)
Marie-Josephe Jude (piano)
Jean-Francois Heisser (piano)
Flemish Radio Choir
Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Herve Niquet

Works

Debussy, Claude

Invocation, L40
L'Enfant prodigue
La Damoiselle elue
Le Gladiateur
Le Printemps, L56
Printemps, suite for piano 4 hands or orchestra, L61
Salut printemps

Artists

Guylaine Girard (soprano)
Sophie Marilley (mezzo-soprano)
Bernard Richter (tenor)
Alain Buet (baritone)
Marie-Josephe Jude (piano)
Jean-Francois Heisser (piano)
Flemish Radio Choir
Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra

Conductor

Herve Niquet

About

Claude Debussy presented himself as a candidate for the Prix de Rome on three separate occasions during the 1880s, the most innovative decade in the history of that competition and a time when success entitled the victors (at the French government’s expense) to spend several years at the Villa Medici in Rome. Names of prize winners from this time include Debussy, Dukas, Leroux and Charpentier.

Presented on this 2-CD set is a group of little known compositions by Debussy, dating from between 1882 and 1888: Le Gladiateur and the first versions of L’Enfant prodigue (of which only the 1906 reorchestration is occasionally performed) and Printemps – a highly individual piece (scored for choir and piano, four hands) later turned into a symphonic suite. A version for piano and voice of La Damoiselle élue and the choruses written for the competitions of 1882, 1883 and 1884 complete this survey of hitherto unknown works by Debussy.

This release represents the first issue in a new collection from Glossa centred on music associated with the Prix de Rome. This is being prepared in collaboration with Hervé Niquet, who here is conducting two of Europe’s foremost ensembles.

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