I know I’ve come across – and dismissed – the music of César 
                  Franck-student Vincent d’Indy (1851-1931) before. I faintly 
                  remember an old EMI disc with a symphony and I seem to recall 
                  a Marco Polo disc with chamber works. That - and being unmoved. 
                  But my ears have been opened now, by a new Chandos release that 
                  makes me re-evaluate d’Indy at once and thoroughly. Instead 
                  of being in my mind an also-ran of French music of the turn 
                  of the last century behind Ravel and Debussy, I find him catapulted 
                  to the forefront of French symphonic writing, all courtesy of 
                  Rumon Gamba’s recording of three tone poems with the marvellously 
                  performing Iceland Symphony Orchestra.
                  Volume 1 of d’Indy’s 
                    orchestral works opens with the 1905 Jour d’été á la montagne 
                    (op.61), a musical day-trip in the Ardèches mountains that 
                    makes Debussy’s more famous impressionist works pale in comparison. 
                    That strength of statement may be partly caused by the excitement 
                    of discovery – but only in part. After all, it is wonderful 
                    to hear fresh music of this quality without having to go back 
                    to the two or three all-too-familiar staples.
                  The eerie bird 
                    calls that toll through the - very dark - darkness of the 
                    night barely giving way to dawn (in Aurore) and again 
                    just after dusk (in Soir) are of a veracity that reminds 
                    me, if faintly, of nature described in great moments of Wagner 
                    and Richard Strauss. The hovering opening (in C) has that 
                    aboriginal, out-of-nothingness sense also found in the beginning 
                    of Das Rheingold, or Also Sprach Zarathustra, 
                    or Mahler’s First and Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. But even 
                    in surging daylight, this chromatic beauty of a work remains 
                    enormously impressive; most importantly it never lapses into 
                    being dainty or epicene.
                  Still more obviously 
                    under the influence of Wagner (and Liszt) is the much earlier 
                    La Forêt enchantée (op.8, 1878), created with the impression 
                    of the premiere of Der Ring des Nibelungen still fresh 
                    in his memory. A horseback-romp through an enchanted forest 
                    - a German specialty, that - with a seduced hero and plenty 
                    magic, this piece is slightly more explicit and not as hauntingly 
                    evocative. However it’s just as effective in telling a musically 
                    compelling story.
                  Finally, Souvenirs 
                    (op.62) is a twenty minute tribute to his evidently much beloved 
                    wife (and cousin) Isabelle, who died just after d’Indy returned 
                    from a trip to the United States. It’s a tribute truly and 
                    audibly written with, as Germans would say, blood of the heart 
                    (Herzblut) – powerfully moving. Thus comes Wagner into 
                    play again – working around a constantly developed Leitmotiv 
                    that d’Indy took from an earlier work of his, the op.15 Poème 
                    des montagnes. It caps a terrific disc of superb music, 
                    excellently played and in very fine sound. How it is that 
                    regular Chandos CD’s strike me as better sounding than some 
                    of their SACDs, I don’t know – but no complaints as long as 
                    they sound this good in either one of the formats.
                  
                Jens F. Laurson