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Krivine: Debussy – La Mer, Images (24/96 FLAC)

Krivine: Debussy - La Mer, Images (24/96 FLAC)
Krivine: Debussy – La Mer, Images (24/96 FLAC)

Composer: Claude Debussy
Orchestra: Orchestre national de France
Conductor: Emmanuel Krivine
Audio CD
Number of Discs: 1
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: Erato
Size: 1.07 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes

01. La Mer, L 111a: I De l’aube a midi sur la mer
02. La Mer, L. 111a: II. Jeux de vagues
03. La Mer, L. 111a: III. Dialogue du vent et de la mer
04. Images, L. 118a: I. Gigues
05. Images, L. 118a: II. Iberia – Par les rues et par les chemins
06. Images, L. 118a: II. Iberia – Les parfums de la nuit
07. Images, L 118a: II Iberia – Le matin d’un jour de fete
08. Images, L. 118a: III. Rondes de printemps
09. La Mer, L. 111a: III. Dialogue du vent et de la mer (With fanfare)

Debussy began composing La Mer in 1904, in Burgundy, but as he wrote to fellow composer André Messager, his memories of the sea were “worth more than a reality whose charm generally weighs too heavily on the imagination”. He continued to work on the score, however, while staying in Jersey, and then in Dieppe. For Debussy, even less than for the Beethoven of the “Pastoral” Symphony, writing about nature does not mean naïvelyimitating it by portraying the elements or the meteorological phenomena that animate them; descriptive music suits neither the flexibility of his music nor his creative temperament. Instead, he invents, he responds to nature through his art, setting up something else in contrast to it.

By contrast, “Dialogue du vent et de la mer” (which Debussy originally entitled “Le vent fait danser la mer”) is more dramatic, more affirmative, and therefore less sparkling. Shimmering haze is replaced by powerful impulse. The music sweeps along with a sense of violent ecstasy, reflecting the composer’s lifelong love of the sea. La Mer was premiered on 15 October 1905 at the Concerts Lamoureux, conducted by Camille Chevillard. Debussy did later decide to change one short section of its finale, however: there was originally a fanfare in bars 237–244 which he decided was inappropriate, cutting it when he revised the score in 1909 for a new edition. This recording, based on the final version, also includes an excerpt of “Dialogue du vent et de la mer” that does feature the fanfare.

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