![]() Violinist Nicolas Dautricourt, photo by Guy Vivien |
Federico Garcia Lorca, Six Strings: The guitar makes dreams weep. The sobs of lost souls escape through its round mouth. And like the tarantula, it weaves a large star to trap the sighs floating in its black wooden cistern. |
At the end of the recital was the Debussy violin sonata, the 1917 work that was the last the composer finished (captured in a lovely recording recently by Dora Schwarzberg and Martha Argerich). As in the Poulenc sonata, this piece revealed the dazzling technique and control of dynamics on display from pianist Dominique Plancade, matching Dautricourt's fluid interpretation with murmuring arpeggiation at the embassy's Bösendorfer. The highpoint of the concert was at the end of the first half, however, with a revelatory reading of Olivier Messiaen's Theme and Variations for violin and piano from 1932. The theme is a fairly traditional miniature, with a simple accompaniment, leading to a set of driven variations, with the melody transformed by being splashed with bitonal chords and singing through clouds of shrieking birds, finally to emerge into a hall of bell-like, treble-dominated tonal chords.
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Opera Lafayette returns to La Maison Française for a concert called A Rococo Noël, with the Four Nations Ensemble and Julie Boulianne (December 2, 7:30 pm).
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