The struggle to find 
                a title for a varied recital of this 
                type is often futile. Either that or 
                (as here) it prompts even more futile 
                critical comment taking issue with the 
                final choice. We should fix attention 
                on the music. But before we do so be 
                warned or reassured: not all these songs 
                are terribly Wagnerian ... apart perhaps 
                from those six by Wagner. 
              
 
              
Emile Mathieu stands 
                downstream from Chausson with heavy 
                infusions of Schumann and a little Debussy 
                as well. His four songs are big, two 
                of them in excess of six minutes. They 
                are high romantic essays and merit revival. 
                Mathieu cut quite a dash in Belgium 
                but his production of music was stemmed 
                when he took up the post of director 
                of the Royal Conservatoire, Ghent. His 
                cantatas Hoyoux (1879) and Freyhir 
                (1883) can be heard on Cyprès 
                Musique en Wallonie CYP5683. 
              
 
              
Liègeois Sylvain 
                Dupuis taught at his home town conservatory 
                and was very active in the performing 
                sphere. There are symphonies, cantatas, 
                chamber music and mélodies. In 
                these songs we find some Wagnerian elements 
                but let's not overdo the comparison. 
                The heavy Germanic aspect is leavened 
                by a ready lyric talent which stands 
                between the perfumed Debussian voice 
                and the livelier songs of Fauré. 
                Some of them even look forward to Poulenc, 
                as in Matin (tr. 9). 
              
 
              
Patrick Delcour has 
                a voice that shows signs of wear. There 
                is a shake and other signs of tiredness. 
                However, allowances made, he gives a 
                good and very intelligently shaped account 
                of these largely unknown songs. He receives 
                sturdy rather than sensitive support 
                from Diane Andersen who tends towards 
                a very narrow dynamic range. The too 
                close recording does not help except 
                in bringing the listener almost intimidatingly 
                close to both artists. 
              
 
              
Intriguing to hear 
                the six Wagner songs written in 1840 
                after the composer left Riga for Paris 
                and just before starting work on The 
                Flying Dutchman. These receive their 
                premiere recording. Two of the songs 
                needed editorial and completion work 
                by the Liège composer Berthe 
                di Vito-Delvaux. Unsurprisingly there 
                are plentiful pre-echoes of Tristan 
                und Isolde and Tannhauser. 
                Leonine triumph and pent-up excitement 
                are well portrayed in the urgent Attente 
                (tr. 14). Less predictably these 
                sometimes fragrant songs reveal how 
                much the French mélodie fleuve 
                was indebted to Wagner. 
              
 
              
I have already sung 
                the praises of Adolphe Biarent in my 
                reviews of the two Cyprès recordings 
                of his wonderfully Rimskian orchestral 
                music (see elsewhere on this site review 
                review). 
                Here we have five of his songs. They 
                range from the mesmerising Lied to the 
                swooning exoticism of Désir 
                de mort (a typically Wagnerian theme), 
                to the audaciously wayward harmonies 
                of Chanson. La Lune Blanche 
                is a major discovery with its silvery 
                light and subtly weaving vocal line. 
                The final song Des ballades au hameau 
                is Wagner-stentorian, dignified 
                yet with auguries of doom woven in - 
                and yes the Dies Irae does make 
                an appearance. 
              
 
              
As expected Etcetera 
                have done their usual splendid job on 
                the booklet. I have my doubts about 
                the recording image, vivid though it 
                is, but the documentation is excellent. 
              
 
              
An unhackneyed and 
                imaginative collection which I recommend 
                to students of the French romantic vocal 
                tradition. There are some fascinating 
                discoveries here and while I have some 
                reservations about the performances 
                they are by no real obstacle to enjoyment. 
              
 
                Rob Barnett