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             René MAILLARD (b.1931)   
              Surviving After Hiroshima - Cantata, for mezzo-soprano, vocal 
              quartet and orchestra, op.24 (2006-7) [23:07]  
              Concerto Grosso, for wind quintet and strings, op.17 (1961/2003) 
              [20:17]  
              Concerto da Camera no.2, for strings, op.16 (1959-60) [27:36]  
                
              Sarah Jouffroy (mezzo)  
              vocal quartet: Eléonore Lemaire (soprano), Marie Pouchelon (mezzo), 
              Teddy Henry (tenor), Virgile Ancely (bass-baritone)  
              RPO wind quintet - Emer McDonough (flute), John Anderson (oboe), 
              Michael Whight (clarinet), Daniel Jemison (bassoon), Christopher 
              Parkes (French horn)  
              Royal Philharmonic Orchestra/Dionysios Dervis-Bournias  
              rec. Cadogan Hall, London, 2-3 March 2009. DDD  
                
              NAXOS 8.572623 [71:00]   
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                French composer René Maillard's career has an unusual trajectory, 
                  to say the least. After writing numerous works in his twenties, 
                  he went into compositional semi-retirement and spent the Sixties, 
                  Seventies, Eighties and Nineties working initially for EMI France 
                  but soon for an American pharmaceutical company. It was not 
                  until his retirement proper, to the Côte d'Azur at the 
                  turn of the millennium, that Maillard returned to composition. 
                  Thus the extraordinary hiatus of 42 years between his original 
                  version of the Concerto Grosso op.17 and his Second Viola Sonata 
                  op.18 of 2003; whereas, by contrast, by August 2010 he had reached 
                  op.29, and revised at least four earlier works.  
                   
                  Maillard's 2005 Duo Sonata for two violins op.22a appeared on 
                  a Triton disc (TRI 331145, 2006) warmly received by French critics 
                  at the time, but otherwise this is the first appearance of Maillard's 
                  music on CD - surely not his last.  
                   
                  The cantata Surviving After Hiroshima is an ambitious 
                  work, telling the true story of a young girl surviving the atom 
                  bomb in 1945 against the odds. The booklet notes describe the 
                  cantata as "a song of hope, a hymn to life: surviving against 
                  hatred and war in a world of mankind reunited at last [sic]." 
                  The dramaturgy is reminiscent of a toned-down Carl Orff: apt, 
                  given the subject matter, to be reminded in places of his De 
                  Temporum Fine Comoedia. Sarah Jouffroy and the SATB quartet, 
                  all native French speakers, give convincing performances, coming 
                  together nicely for a relatively uplifting finale to what is 
                  otherwise a swirling, darkly dramatic, but wholly accessible, 
                  work of considerable depth and power. The booklet has Monique 
                  Charles' full text in French with a translation into English 
                  and, in possibly a first for Naxos, in Japanese.  
                   
                  The three movement Concerto Grosso for wind quintet and strings 
                  is Baroque by name and to a degree in form, but the similarity 
                  soon ends: the work has more of a neo-Classical feel to it, 
                  recalling Stravinsky in spirit if not in style. This is a low-key, 
                  somewhat cogitative work, but attractive all the same, and its 
                  audience-friendliness belies both its 21st century revision 
                  date and its original composition year - in the Boulezian heyday 
                  of the Darmstadt School.  
                   
                  The Concerto da Camera no. 2 was written just before the Concerto 
                  Grosso, and is similar in structure, style and effect, though 
                  the strings-only scoring lends the work both extra gravitas 
                  and richness, and there are seven more minutes of music. A divertimento 
                  of sorts, this again is a fairly buttoned-up work, and although 
                  the melody is as inhibited as the general mood, Maillard was 
                  clearly writing for audiences rather than intellectual cliques 
                  - yet there is no sense of condescension. An ad-lib trumpet 
                  pops up right at the end like a Mariachi band coming in through 
                  the wrong door, injecting some levity just as the work ends. 
                   
                   
                  Sound quality is well balanced, but these recordings suffer 
                  a little from a certain flatness, most noticeable in the strings 
                  and therefore mostly affecting the two instrumental works. Avid 
                  noise-reduction technology is most likely at fault, although 
                  it can scarcely be said to spoil the music. On the other hand, 
                  the Royal Philharmonic sound slightly lacklustre, perhaps not 
                  entirely sure of guitarist-turned-conductor Dionysios Dervis-Bournias's 
                  direction.  
                   
                  Byzantion  
                  Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk 
                   
                 
                
                  
                  
                  
                  
                  
                
                 
                   
                 
                  
                  
                  
                   
                 
             
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