
Marianne Crebassa: Seguedilles
£15.15
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Label: Erato
Cat No: 9029667689
Format: CD
Number of Discs: 1
Genre: Vocal/Choral
Release Date: 22nd October 2021
Contents
Works
CarmenCombat del somni (Dream Battle)
La Perichole
Artists
Marianne Crebassa (mezzo-soprano)Stanislas de Barbeyrac (tenor)
Alphonse Cemin (piano)
Thibaut Garcia (guitar)
Victoire Bunel (mezzo-soprano)
Celine Laborie (soprano)
Adriana Gonzales (soprano)
Choeur du Capitole de Toulouse
Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse
Conductor
Ben GlassbergWorks
CarmenCombat del somni (Dream Battle)
La Perichole
Artists
Marianne Crebassa (mezzo-soprano)Stanislas de Barbeyrac (tenor)
Alphonse Cemin (piano)
Thibaut Garcia (guitar)
Victoire Bunel (mezzo-soprano)
Celine Laborie (soprano)
Adriana Gonzales (soprano)
Choeur du Capitole de Toulouse
Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse
Conductor
Ben GlassbergAbout
It features hits such as the “Habanera” from Bizet’s Carmen and Falla’s “Vivan los que rien” from La vida breve, as well as portraits of five strong female characters, “temperaments de feu”: Carmen, Dulcinée, Concepcion, Périchole, and Salud.
Recorded with the Choeur & Orchestre National du Capitole de Toulouse conducted by Ben Glassberg, and featuring Stanislas de Barbeyrac (tenor), Adriana Gonzales (soprano), Victoire Bunel (mezzo-soprano), Céline Laborie (soprano), Alphonse Cemin (piano), and Thibaut Garcia (guitar).
“Marianne Crebassa is splendidly charismatic.” – The New York Times
Sound/Video
Paused
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1Bizet - Carmen, WD 31, Act I - 'Carmen! sur tes pas nous nous pressons tous!' (Carmen, Chorus)
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2Bizet - Carmen, WD 31, Act I - 'L'amour est un oiseau rebelle' (Carmen, Chorus)
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3de Falla - La vida breve, Act I - 'Vivan los que rien' (Salud, Paco, Chorus)
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4Massenet - Don Quichotte, Act I - 'Dulcinée!' - 'Alza! Quand la femme a vingt ans' (Dulcinée, Chorus)
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5Guridi - 6 canciones castellanas - No. 1, Allá Arriba, En aquella montaña
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6Guridi - 6 canciones castellanas - No. 4, No quiero tus avellanas
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7Guridi - 6 canciones castellanas - No. 5, Cómo quieres que adivine
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8Guridi - 6 canciones castellanas - No. 6, Mañanita de San Juan
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9Massenet - Nuit d'Espagne (Arr. Bianco for Guitar and Voice)
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10Bizet - Carmen, WD 31, Act I - 'Près des remparts de Séville' (Carmen, Don José)
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11Saint-Saëns - El desdichado
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12Mompou - Combat del somni - No. 1, Damunt de tu
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13Mompou - Combat del somni - No. 2, Aquesta Nit
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14Mompou - Combat del somni - No. 3, Jo et pressentia com la mar
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15Mompou - Combat del somni - No. 4, Fes-me la vida transparent
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16Mompou - Combat del somni - No. 5, Ara no sé si et veig, encar
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17Ravel - Chants populaires, M. A 17 - No. 1, Chanson espagnole
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18de Falla - 3 Mélodies - No. 3, Seguidille
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19Offenbach - La Périchole, Act I - 'Le conquérant dit à la jeune indienne' (La Périchole, Piquillo)
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20Offenbach - La Périchole, Act I - 'Vous a-t-on dit souvent' (Piquillo, La Périchole)
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21Ravel - L'heure espagnole, M. 52 - Oh! la pitoyable aventure!'
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22Bizet - Carmen, WD 31, Act II - 'Les tringles des sistres tintaient avec un éclat métallique' (Carmen, Frasquita, Mercédès)
Europadisc Review
For her latest solo album, Crebassa explores the Hispanic connections of her maternal grandparents with a selection of songs and operatic scenes from French and Spanish composers, supported by pianist Alphonse Cemin as well as the Orchestre national du Capitole de Toulouse under Ben Glassberg. The disc is framed and punctuated by three excerpts from Bizet’s Carmen (what else?): the ever-popular Habanera ‘L’amour est un oiseau rebelle’ with its introductory chorus, the Séguedille and duet ‘Près des remparts de Séville’, and the Act 2 gypsy song ‘Les tringles des sistres’, all of them sung in an appropriately smoky, teasing and intense tone which suggests the layers of allure and passion that make up this endlessly fascinating operatic character. Crebassa’s focussed sound combined with fluttering vibrato recalls singers of an earlier golden era, and these excerpts really whet the appetite for more.
Just as impressive are Salud’s powerfully moving ‘Vivan los que ríen!’ from de Falla’s La vida breve, and the lighter-toned showiness of Dulcinée’s ‘Quand la femme a vingt ans’ from Massenet’s Don Quichotte. All these excerpts offer the chance to admire Crebassa’s impressive range and vocal dexterity, as well as her gloriously rich and powerful lower register, which suits this music to an absolute tee. Further operatic excerpts include the Act 1 Duo and Séguedille from Offenbach’s light-hearted jewel, La Périchole (again with stylish partnership from tenor Stanislas de Barbeyrac), and Concepción’s exasperated ‘Oh! la pitoyable aventure!’ from Ravel’s comédie musicale, L'Heure espagnole, drawing on the full range of Crebassa’s vocal talents with brilliantly atmospheric support from Glassberg and the Toulouse orchestra.
It is the songs woven between these operatic items, however, that form the heart of this splendidly spirited and moving disc. There’s obvious enjoyment on Crebassa’s part in the ‘Chanson espagnole’ from Ravel’s four Chants populaires, and in the heady excitement of de Falla’s ‘Séguedille’, complete with its cries of ‘Alza! olà!’. Saint-Saëns’s grander version of the Iberian mood in the form of his bolero El desdichado, with orchestral accompaniment and Crebassa duetting hand-in-glove with soprano Adriana González, is a welcome inclusion, as is Massenet’s Nuit d’Espagne, arranged for voice and guitar (Thibaut Garcia in a stylish cameo) by Gabriel Bianco. The disc’s real substance, though, comes with four of Jesús Guridi’s marvellously evocative Six Castilian Folksongs, meltingly sung by Crebassa and greatly enhanced by the delicacy of Cemin’s pliant pianism; and with Mompou’s orchestral song-cycle Combat del somni (‘Dream battle’), whose five songs with their searing emotions, heartfelt vocal lines and magical orchestration, constitute a final late flowering of post-Pelléas Impressionism that’s impossible to resist. Mompou took his time composing this cycle, and the results in Crebassa’s performance are intensely powerful, with Glassberg expertly balancing the exquisite orchestral backdrop.
It’s risky placing such a potent cycle in the centre of a disc like this, but by easing out of it emotionally with Ravel’s ‘Chanson espagnole’ these performers manage it with aplomb. The whole disc is a kaleidoscope of musical and emotional colour, vividly illustrating what Crebassa herself calls the ‘marriage of France and Spain, two interlinked cultures’, revelling in the dance and song of the Iberian Peninsula, but also delving deeper into its psyche with remarkable results. This is yet another witness to Crebassa’s extraordinary artistry, and her many admirers should snap it up without hesitation.

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