Martin Kahane's notes 
                pay Auric the tribute of giving us no 
                biographical background on Auric except 
                his involvement in these two ballet 
                scores. It is as if we already know 
                that he was born in Lodève, Hérault 
                in France. A pupil of D'Indy he was 
                at first strongly influenced by Satie. 
                As his individuality grew so he became 
                recognised alongside Durey and Honegger 
                as part of Les Six. We know Auric now 
                because of his film music of which there 
                are collections on both Chandos and 
                Marco Polo. In fact in addition there 
                are fourteen ballets written between 
                1923 and 1952 as well as some chamber 
                music, songs, piano solos and a clutch 
                of orchestral works. 
              
 
              
Across the fifteen 
                movements of the music for the Phèdre 
                ballet Auric proves himself an adherent 
                of a stern and gaunt tonality at times 
                like Barber's Medea ballet music. 
                There is much that is thunderously emphatic 
                with the message hammered home with 
                tragic intensity as for example in the 
                Danse Funèbre which is 
                more march than dance. The boiling euphoric 
                tension of this music passingly recalls 
                that of Igor Markevitch although Auric 
                always manages to find a more yielding 
                humane accent. His music is also softened 
                by his evident admiration for Ravel's 
                methods. There is also a Bliss-like 
                abandon about some of the more lively 
                writing as in Danse de joie. 
                The tragic element gripes and shudders 
                especially in the Despair and Fury 
                of Theseus and the Death of Phèdre 
                but even in that last scene Auric 
                writes much that is tender, gentle and 
                imbued with consolation. 
              
 
              
Le Peintre et son 
                Modèle is another ballet 
                written one year before Phèdre. 
                This is much shorter and has only seven 
                scenes. Understandably the score is 
                in much the same language as Phèdre 
                except that the jagged tragic element 
                is not as evident. Other moods are in 
                play here including the waltz, an absurdist 
                agenda (like something from Prokofiev’s 
                Love of Three Oranges) and a 
                glittering and starry enchantment in 
                the last movement; contentedly magical 
                writing. 
              
 
              
Revelatory experiences 
                here with Auric presented in a new light. 
                Lovely music bound to please those already 
                enthralled by Markevitch, Stravinsky 
                and Bliss. 
              
Rob Barnett