Nicolas BACRI
	(b.1961-)
	CD1:-
	Toccata Sinfonica Piano Trio No. 1 (1991)
	Cello Sonata (1992)
	Suite No. 3 for solo cello Vita et Mors (1993)
	Deux preludes Op. 24 (1988)
	Trois preludes Op. 28 (1989)
	Trois preludes Op. 46
	(1995)
	CD2:-
	Piano Trio No. 2 Les Contrastes (1995)
	Violin Sonata (1994)
	Sonata breve for solo violin (1994)
	Duo for violin and cello (1987-92)
	Trois petites rapsodies for solo violin
	(1986).
	 Florence Millet (piano); Katie
	Lansdale (violin); Scott Kluksdahl (cello).
 Florence Millet (piano); Katie
	Lansdale (violin); Scott Kluksdahl (cello).
	Rec Indre, France, 1995/96
	world premiere recordings
	 TRITON TRI2001/2 [CD1
	64.17; CD2 62.30]
 TRITON TRI2001/2 [CD1
	64.17; CD2 62.30]
	
	
	 
	
	
	Nicolas Bacri studied at the Conservatoire Nationale with Ballif,
	Nigg, Constant and Philippot. He has won numerous prizes for his compositions
	and has enjoyed commissions from Radio-France, the French Ministry of Culture
	and many other artistic bodies. He is a composer who has attracted attention
	world-wide (some of his choral works have been broadcast by the BBC). His
	clarinet concerto was played by the Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by Martyn
	Brabbins at the Royal Festival Hall in May 2000. 
	
	Piano trio No. 1 for example sport long melodic lines but this is
	set in a world of anguish touched with the sort of Jewish themes I associate
	with the music of Shostakovich and Babi Yar. This is music of a fever; music
	of fear and pursuit. The booklet notes refer to melodic intensity and I would
	certainly not disagree. This is music of commanding creativity. The Cello
	Sonata, which is as long as the trio, is a hesitant work rising in Bach-like
	discovery out of fragmentation towards unity, violent doggedness and protest
	against injustice. The unity of the last five minutes is expressed in the
	long elegiac lines of the cello against the plangent stride of the piano.
	The cello as cantorial rhapsodic singer dominates the Third Suite.
	Did I detect a Hungarian accent in this music? Surely Britten's own three
	solo cello suites are also a reference point here although the emotional
	material is richer in the case of Bacri. The Suite is the most accessible
	of the works. In it Bacri finds the song within. In the Preludes (opp
	24, 28) we are back to refraction and extrusion: music of dark hints, of
	disquiet and of rumour. But in Op. 46 the mists clear and a more lyrical
	approach asserts itself paralleling the solo cello suite.
	
	The Second Trio, Les Contrastes ,  is well named
	- the mood contrasts are strong. Unity is to be found in the language of
	tenderly strained tonality. I thought of Benjamin Frankel's Elégie
	Juive as well as the Shostakovich piano trio. The music seems to evolve
	out of a sense of torment and the macabre. But in the fifth of the five movements
	respite and peace are most movingly captured. The Violin Sonata is
	of a similar caste but in it there is evidence that Bacri has found and can
	convey an almost-Delian cradling contentment among the dazzling sparks and
	furious gadflies. It is in eleven small panels which, when heard, give the
	impression of continuity. The Sonata for solo violin is only 7 or
	so minutes in length by comparison with the quarter hour scale of the Trio
	and Sonata for violin and piano. Virtuosity is almost de rigueur in such
	works in order to sustain interest and certainly there is technical challenge
	here. However the piece feels unrounded and simply ends unresolved. Only
	slightly longer and for the same solo instrument are the Trois petites
	rapsodies - all drawing on expressionism touched with fantasy and
	Bachian gestures. The Duo for violin and cello is by far the toughest
	music on the disc and its profusion of yearning atonality is of a piece with
	the other Bacri works of the mid and late 1980s. The creepily rocking middle
	movement is followed by a furiously admonitory finale which fades into dreamy
	restfulness.
	
	The two discs are housed in an old style double-width box which would have
	been necessitated anyway by a dumpy booklet in French, English and German.
	The booklet is extremely well-structured and thorough. There is a list of
	works, sequenced chronologically from 1980 to 1995.
	
	Mildly adventurous souls will find much to attract and hold the attention
	here and I for one have high hopes to hear M. Bacri's other works - especially
	the symphonies and cello concerto.
	
	Rob Barnett
	
	
	The disc can be ordered via:
	thiebault@disques-triton.com
	
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	MORE ABOUT BACRI
	
	http://www.radio-france.fr/chaines/france-musiques/biographies/fiche.php?numero=73
	
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	IMPRESSIONS OF SOME BACRI WORKS DESERVING COMMERCIAL RECORDING
	
	Folia (1990) - chaconne symphonique pour orchestra - in memoriam
	B. Britten. An 8 minute waking from the ghostly atmosphere we encounter
	in Britten's Grimes Passacaglia to a lament taking something from
	Berg and more from Purcell. The fury of a Malcolm Arnold symphony is also
	to be found here in full pursuit. This is a very different work from Arvo
	Pärt's minimalist Cantus - a Britten memento mori.
	
	The almost half hour Fifth Symphony - Concerto for Orchestra begins
	in a fury of fanfares and the sort of mud-spraying high speed gallops that
	characterise the Napoleonic 'parade' section of Prokofiev's War and
	Peace. The third movement leads us again into the skittering territory
	of the opening fanfares, Malcolm Arnold and even a touch of Sibelius which
	returns in the rocking spectral dance that all but closes the fourth movement.
	The scorching string paeans can surely only have been inspired by the masterful
	example of William Schuman, one of the last century's great composers. The
	tumultuous downward sweeping repeated waves in the finale are reminiscent
	of similarly protesting figures in Allan Pettersson's Ninth Symphony.
	
	The 11 minute Divertimento (2000) for violin, piano and orchestra
	has learnt something from Schnittke in its headlong furiously boisterous
	progress. Soaked deep in some cataclysm and its aftermath this is powerful
	music confounding all expectations raised by the possibly ironic title
	Divertimento. For me it summons up memories of the remarkable middle
	movement of Panufnik's Sinfonia Elegiaca. It sounds more like the
	first movement of a much more ambitious symphonic-concerto trekking through
	a tragic mindscape. I am sure that there is a larger work here waiting to
	emerge.
	
	The 12 minute Sixth Symphony has been played by the Orchestre National
	de France conducted by the BBC's Principal Conductor, Leonard Slatkin. The
	violently buzzing zest of the Divertimento is presaged in this 1998
	work and those slashing fanfares heard in the opening pages of the Fifth
	Symphony are also here.
	
	References to other composers are not to be taken as any slight on M. Bacri's
	invention which is his own and valid in its own right. They are used here
	in order to help the listener get his bearings - a form of auditory
	triangulation.
	
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	BACRI AND THE SYMPHONY
	
	Bacri is not one of those composers who disclaim the symphony. On the contrary
	he has six to his name:-
	
	1. (1984) ded. Elliott Carter - the culmination of his Viennese School interests.
	
	2. Sinfonia Dolorosa (same title as the Harald Saeverud work) (1986-90)
	a half hour span 'in memoriam Allan Pettersson'.
	
	3. Sinfonia da Requiem for mezzo, choir and orchestra (1988-94) dedicated
	'to the glory of Abraham' and running 72 minutes and selecting texts from
	Jewish, Christian and Muslim sources in the Spain of the 7th and
	8th century.
	
	There are three further symphonies beyond these. No. 5 (1996-7); No. 6 (1998).
	
	We can hope that rather like some other fine contemporary symphonies we will
	one day (soon?) get to hear them on CD. My shortlist would also include the
	Mark Harrison Symphony, the massive Ben Dorain by Ronald Stevenson
	and the St Kilda Symphony by Jerrold James Gordon.