Flautists know Gaubert’s name. For them he wrote both didactic 
                music and display pieces as well as three sonatas and a Sonatine. 
                It will come as no surprise that he was a virtuoso of the flute 
                standing in succession to his teacher Taffanel. 
              
The works featured 
                    here repudiate the low expectations engendered by the enervation 
                    of many of those flute solos. Here we are in the heartland 
                    of the French late-romantic world.
                  
The Symphony intrepidly 
                    treads the line between Franck and impressionism. The first 
                    movement is poetically restless with the motion of the waves 
                    and the sea-swell. At least once the spinnaker shiver that 
                    we hear in Louis Aubert's wonderful Breton sea portrait, Le 
                    Tombeau de Chateaubriand (1948) can be heard. Then again 
                    we hear shades of Debussy, Rimsky and Borodin. In this sense 
                    there are affinities with the work of the Belgian tone poet, 
                    Adolphe 
                    Biarent.  There are some warmly lambent flute solos - 
                    as in the faun-like voices of the second movement. The scherzo 
                    is cheery, fine-lined and light of foot. The finale underlines 
                    the excellence of balance achieved by engineers Alain Jacquon 
                    and Jeannot Mersch.  The brass writing rings out with a mixture 
                    of the imperious and the tragic. If the massed violins sometimes 
                    sound a mite steely the principals deliver their solos with 
                    sweet tenderness.
                  
I first heard 
                    the three movement Les Chants de la Mer in Gaubert's 
                    own 1930 recording on Alpha 801 issued in 2006. Soustrot is 
                    noticeably slower than the composer but one can the better 
                    relish the delicate hues of this impressionistic writing. 
                    It drifts in delight between the Franck of Psyche, 
                    the Bax of Fand and Mediterranean and, inescapably 
                    Debussy's La Mer. There is a sovereign weight to the 
                    third and last movement as well as mystical communion with 
                    far marine horizons. It is into the tremble and shimmer of 
                    those horizons that the music finally evaporates. The Concerto 
                    in F is in three movements the first two of which are radiant 
                    with warm poetic feeling and transparent textures. The finale 
                    skips smilingly along, Vif et léger in folksy style 
                    and is rather like the scherzo of the Symphony. The work ends 
                    in an exuberance that is both intricate and swept along with 
                    panache.
                  
Harry Halbreich 
                    provides the programme notes - essential reading.
                  
Indispensable 
                    listening for adherents of the melodic-romantic nationalism. 
                    You will now want to hear the other orchestral works: the 
                    Violin Concerto, Pays Basque (1930), the choreographic 
                    epic Alexandre le Grand, Les Fresques (1923) 
                    and Inscriptions pour les portes de la ville (1934) 
                    – the latter also featured in a vintage recording on that 
                    Alpha disc. 
                      
                    Rob Barnett 
                      
                    Detailed tracklisting:
                    
                    Symphonie (1935-36) [35:11] 
                    1 – Lent, calme – Allegretto [12:47] 
                    2 – Adagio [9:02] 
                    3 – Scherzo : très vif et léger [4:35] 
                    4 – Final [8:37] 
                    Les Chants de la mer (1929) [17:25] 
                    5 – Chants et parfums, mer colorée [8:10] 
                    6 – La Ronde sur la falaise (Scherzo) [4:06] 
                    7 – Là-bas, très loin, sur la mer [5:03] 
                    Concert en fa (1932) [17:26] 
                    8 – Lent, majestueux – Allegro moderato [7:18] 
                    9 – Lent, doucement expressif – Tempo di minuetto [6:33] 
                10 – Vif et léger [3:29]