Boulez reviews
Daniel Barenboim: Hommage à Boulez
That many more music-lovers now know Pierre Boulez (1925-2016) as a groundbreaking composer as well as conductor and one-time polemicist is thanks to his collaborator of 50-some years, Daniel Barenboim: following the latter’s performance of Dérive 2 at 2012’s BBC Proms – conducting members of the likewise trailblazing West-Eastern Divan Orchestra – Boulez reportedly joked that more people heard it that evening than at all previous performances combined.
Michael Barenboim performs violin sonatas by JS Bach, Bartók and Boulez
It may just be a wooden box with four strings, but what a world of sounds the violin can create! This cleverly arranged CD is bookended with Boulez’s Anthèmes I and II, showing the possibilities of the instrument on its own, and with electronics. Apart from the extensive range of technique that Michael Barenboim effortlessly realises, the confidence and maturity of the musical language is stunning, and often harmonically and texturally beautiful.
Boulez conducts The Rite of Spring
Boulez’s Rite packs a mighty punch with superb orchestral playing. Petrushka is equally insightful, with brilliantly translucent textures and incisive rhythms.
Erik Levi
Boulez Mémoriale; Dérives
Pierre Boulez: Live at the Louvre
The Firebird was first produced 100 years ago, so new recordings are hardly a surprise. Nonetheless, a brace of Firebirds on DVD from one conductor, Pierre Boulez, suggests poor planning somewhere.
The first comes from the opening concert of the 2008 Salzburg, and the second from a free concert in the pyramid at the Louvre in December the same year.
Pierre Boulez in Rehearsal
This looks to me as if the cameras began rehearsing for a performance (there are some elaborate crane and travelling shots), and then the producers realised that they could get added value by using the rehearsal footage, and getting Boulez to fill in the background after the event. So the DVD can’t quite make up its mind whether it’s performance, rehearsal or illustrated talk.
Stockhausen, Berio, Boulez, Messiaen, Debussy, Varse, Kagel, Nono, Henze & PousseurStravinsky, Schoenberg, Webern & Berg
Poulenc, Messiaen, Sancan, Jolivet, Dutilleux & Boulez
Boulez: Pli Selon Pli; Le visage nuptial
Boulez’s rollercoaster rides of nerve-jangling sonic juxtapositions and exotic timbres will either take you to a higher plane of existence or merely infuriate. Either way, these are intoxicating performances. Julian Haylock
Kurt‡g, Schoeller, Boulez
Stravinsky, Dallapiccola, Satie (Orch. DŽsormire), Boulez & Bart—k
Boulez: Rituel in memoriam Maderna; Notations I, II, III, IV, VII; Figures-Doubles-Prismes
If ever completed, Notations will consist of 12 orchestral studies, expansions of the set of piano miniatures Boulez composed as a student in 1945. Each that has appeared so far – five over the last quarter of a century – is a miracle of expressive concision and textural sleights of hand. David Robertson, who worked with Boulez at the Ensemble InterContemporain, conducts those five, including what is only the second recording of Notation VII, premiered four years ago.
Boulez: Répons; Dialogue de l'ombre double
Boulez: Notations; Structures pour deux pianos - livre II; ... explosante-fixe…
Boulez: Pli selon pli; Livre pour cordes
Pli selon pli must be regarded as one of Boulez’s most impressive and absorbing compositions. A vocal cycle based upon poems by Stéphane Mallarmé, it is conceived on the grandest scale and utilises an orchestral ensemble of considerable proportions. Yet apart from the turbulent musical discourse that infuses the final movement, Tombeau, the overriding impression remains one of intimacy, especially in the three Improvisations, where the delicate sonorities of tuned percussion, guitar, mandolin and harp punctuate the predominantly lyrical vocal line.
Beethoven, Webern, Schoenberg, Ligeti, Boulez
Boulez: Piano Sonata No. 1; Piano Sonata No. 2; Piano Sonata No. 3
Boulez, Donatoni, Carter, Grisey
Boulez, Berio, Gšritz, Lesage, Stravinsky
Bart—k, Berg, Boulez, Cage, Carter, Glass, Ives, Kurt‡g, Schnittke, Varse, Zimmermann, etc
Messiaen, Stockhausen, Evangelisti, Aldo Clementi & Boulez
Boulez, Jolivet, Dutilleux, Varèse
It is tempting to think of this marvellous programme as masterpieces of the modern flute repertoire. They are certainly masterpieces, and each has entered the flute repertoire, but they can scarcely be given the epithet ‘modern’ when all were composed by the middle of the last century. Philippe Bernold and Alexandre Tharaud have assembled a recital of flute pieces by the French composers who had the greatest impact on postwar musical thought.
Boulez: sur Incises; Messagesquisse; Anthèmes 2
What links the three works here is the way in which they were conceived: all of them grew out of existing compositions, in an approach that has become a familiar Boulez technique over the last two decades. He takes a small and apparently insignificant miniature as the kernel of something more elaborate and substantial, in a process of expansion that theoretically has no end point.