The Art of Janine Micheau
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Label: Australian Eloquence
Cat No: ELQ4824769
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 22nd June 2018
Contents
Works
Les Illuminations, op.18Le Roi malgre lui
La Damoiselle elue
Sheherazade
Artists
Janine Micheau (soprano)Janine Collard (mezzo-soprano)
Jean Mollien (tenor)
Chorale Elisabeth Brasseur
Orchestre des Concerts Lamoureux
Orchestre de la Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire
Conductors
Paul SacherJean Fournet
Works
Les Illuminations, op.18Le Roi malgre lui
La Damoiselle elue
Sheherazade
Artists
Janine Micheau (soprano)Janine Collard (mezzo-soprano)
Jean Mollien (tenor)
Chorale Elisabeth Brasseur
Orchestre des Concerts Lamoureux
Orchestre de la Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire
Conductors
Paul SacherJean Fournet
About
At the age of just 21, Micheau had been chosen by Ernest Ansermet to sing the role of Mélisande for his performances of Debussy’s opera in Amsterdam; she then became known the world over for her vivacious portrayal of Micaëla, as a carefree foil to many notable Carmens, and immortalised on disc by Sir Thomas Beecham’s recording of 1959 with Victoria de los Ángeles in the title role: ‘I send up a loud Ole,’ exclaimed the original Gramophone critic.
Listening to Micheau’s recording of 1951, partnered with masterful sensitivity to texture and timbre by the Orchestre des Concerts Lamoureux and Paul Sacher, it seems all the more remarkable that more French sopranos have not taken Britten’s early settings of Rimbaud into their repertoire; for many years Micheau’s was the only native recording. She brings an unusually light voice to Ravel’s sensually hedonistic setting of poems by Tristan Klingsor, but also an acute tonal and dynamic variety. Heady vocal languor is again the key-note of Debussy’s cantata - or as he identified it, ‘a little oratorio, in a mystic, slightly pagan vein’.
At the June 1952 Paris sessions for the Debussy, accompanied by the Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire and Jean Fournet, Micheau also recorded three items by Emmanuel Chabrier, his delicious Ode à la musique - similarly featuring a women’s chorus - and two more playful numbers from the second act of his 1886 opera Le Roi malgré lui, a gypsy song and a sextet of servants.
‘These recordings are first-rate versions.’ - High Fidelity, September 1957 (Britten/Ravel)
‘Micheau was of that somewhat unfortunate and perhaps underrated generation of singers whose careers were cut in two by the Second World War ... the Damoiselle élue always seemed to be her best recorded work. Hearing it again, one admires no less the clear definition and the virginal simplicity.’ - Gramophone, April 1985
‘The two scenes from Le Roi malgré lui are full of that irony that never swamps the poetry in Chabrier’s music.’ - Gramophone, February 2005
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