I had been greatly 
                impressed by Charles Owen’s sensitive 
                playing of the piano music of Janáček 
                (SOMM CD 028 - not reviewed) 
                and so I looked forward with great anticipation 
                to hearing this Poulenc compilation. 
                I was not disappointed. 
              
 
              
Under the sensitive 
                fingers of Charles Owen this music becomes 
                magic. Owen empathises completely with 
                Poulenc’s idiom, particularly that mood 
                of delicate dreamy nostalgia that touches 
                the heart, brings a lump to the throat 
                as though we are taken back to the long-forgotten, 
                ‘The Land of Lost Content’, the golden, 
                safe secure days of childhood innocence. 
                I am thinking particularly of Charles 
                Owen’s beautiful, limpid readings of 
                the lovely neo-classical miniatures 
                that are Trois Novelettes Nos. 
                1 and 3 (with the amusing No. 
                2 sandwiched between). In similar mood 
                there is the seventh C major improvisation 
                of the set of Fifteen improvisations; 
                plus the haunting ‘Hommage à 
                Edith Piaf’ that concludes those improvisations. 
                Another highlight is the sad beauty 
                of Mélancholie dedicated 
                to Raymond Destouches (a descendant 
                of the baroque French operatic composer) 
                another moving composition, delicate 
                yet passionate too and deeply felt by 
                Owen. 
              
 
              
Balancing the dreamy, 
                and sometimes abruptly interrupting, 
                are episodes of perky insouciance ... 
                think of the fairground/theatre organ 
                music juxtaposed with solemn cathedral-atmosphere 
                material in Poulenc’s Organ Concerto. 
                Such abrupt changes of mood are frequently 
                used to round out the witty, telling 
                little character studies that comprise 
                the variations of Les Soirées 
                de Nazelles, musical portraits inspired, 
                according to Poulenc, by his neighbours 
                at Noisay. The music varies from the 
                coy and delicate to the stern and pompous, 
                from the fussy to the flippant from 
                the dreamy romance to heart-rending 
                sadness. 
              
 
              
The Suite Napoli 
                is sunny enough but the music of the 
                first movement ‘Barcarolle’, seems to 
                have strayed very little from the Boulevards 
                of Paris. The ‘Nocturne’, middle movement 
                is restless: rippling arpeggio ostinati 
                and dreamy figures interrupted by harsher 
                material. The final ‘Caprice Italien’ 
                is Poulenc at his most capricious, busy, 
                merry, cheeky then melancholy and, of 
                course, nostalgic. 
              
 
              
Fifteen Improvisations 
                were originally published in four separate 
                groups. Not intended to be heard as 
                a single entity they do, nevertheless, 
                together form a very satisfactory listening 
                experience. All the familiar Poulenc 
                fingerprints are here. Of the fifteen, 
                three have subtitles: ‘Ėloge des 
                gammes’ (in praise of scales) is affectionately 
                Chopinesque in its refinement, then 
                there is the clever, lyrical but slightly 
                sardonic ‘Hommage ą Schubert’ 
                and, finally, the longest of the set, 
                the Edith Piaf homage referred to earlier. 
              
 
              
A magical album. Charles 
                Owen empathises closely with Poulenc’s 
                elusive idiom catching its delicacy 
                and insouciance brilliantly. An album 
                to cherish and one that will undoubtedly 
                figure highly in my recital discs of 
                2005. 
              
Ian Lace