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André Cluytens(26th Mar. 1902 ~ 3rd Jun. 1967)
[ The underrated maestro ]
3André Cluytens [ from the 20th century conducts
release, by IMG Artists ]
French artists tend to be not regarded(in Korea). Surely Pierre Monteux and Charles Munch were maestros, but their records are not very popular now. Such was French pianists, who are rarely commented by critics except Alfred Cortot and Samson François. Unfortunately, André Cluytens1) is in the same cases. Recent release by IMG management '20th century conductor series' was titled as 'The underrated maestro' - I guess it is international, not only in Korea.
André Cluytens was born not in France but in Antwerp,
Belgium. His grandfa was also conductor. Father was conductor of
Royal Opera of Antwerp, mother opera singer. It was natural that
he should be taught to be a musician thoroughly. He entered Royal
Flemish conservatory on 1914, graduating as Summa Cum Laude
on 1922. His first chair was korrepetiteur of Royal opera to
1927, débuting by Pearl Fisher(Bizet) there. He
soon succeeded father, and was invited by Toulouse Capitol Opera,
which was the first career in France. Lyon Opera(1935), Bordeaux
Opera(1938), Paris Opera(1942), Opera Comique(1947~53), Paris
conservatory(1949~67), France National Radio(ORTF)(1950~ ).
Fianlly he naturalized to France, but accepted musical director
of Belgium National Orchestra. France gave him Région d'honeur.
His peak time started on 1949, when he succeeded
Munch at Paris Conservatory Orchestra. Different from Monteux and
Munch, he never held position in America and not frequently
appeared at England. However, he conducted almost all the famous
orchestras in Europe, including Philharmonia, Vienna & Berlin
Philharmonic, even Bayreuth and La Scala. He escorted Vienna
Philharmonic as a guest conductor in American tour, touring Japan
and Russia with Paris Conservatory Orchestra and ORTF. However,
in 1967 he died from stomach cancer, when he was mature as an
artist. I think his last recording is Berlioz 'L'enfance du
Christ'(1966, EMI). A historical fact added, Paris Conservatory
Orchestra finished its long history(140 years) shortly after his
death.2)
His
style can be abbreviated as clarity, soft touch of carpet, and
moderate colorfulness. In Beethoven his clarity is impressive,
not ambiguous. His rounded expression was crystallized at Pastorale,
very pure and clean performance.
In general, German artists do not like French works
but French artists plays German works much relatively, which
proves that it is difficult to be maestro by only French
repertoires, so do Russians. Monteux often played Viennese
classics, and Munch's interpretation of Beethoven and Brahms was
famous3). Cluytens's favorite were Beethoven and Wagner. He
recorded Beethoven's complete symphonies with Berlin Philharmonic
in 1958~60(stereo), which is on catalogue from now on. This set
is memorable by two records - the Philharmonic's first
complete Beethoven set at studio, and the only one by guest
conductor4). Wieland Wagner invited him to Bayreuth from 1955
to 1958, highly evaluating his interpretation. His Wagner
experience was already 1940s at Paris Opera, by 'Flying
Dutchman', etc.
Contrarily,
his French musics are deserved to be called the French
style. In special, 'L'Arlésienne' and 'Carmen suite' is not too much
colorful, but very fresh, elegant, and with proper dignity.
Bizet's symphony is monaural but somewhat speedy and fresher than
Martinon, and especially Ravel complete set with OSCC is
wonderful by its colorful tone - I have illusion to see the
Swissian watchmaker whenever listening to this set. Moreover,
OSCC, at the top, has very good masterly technique of the wind
sections that is absolutely necessary for the French
impressionists.
His
recordings of German repertoire are pretty much, but French works
are more familiar in general. Testament's recent issues include
his monaural recordings in 1950s6),
which were very rare items like Roussel's Symphonies(stereo) as
CD outside Japan. In these repertoires considerable sums are
re-recorded by stereo. I heard the former is more or less faster
than the latter, same to the conventional cases.
However, the most popular recording is the
stereo version of Fauré's Requiem, of which beautiful
interpretation is unanimously praised. EMI regraded this from
FULL to MED only recently by Great Recordings series release. His
Ravel is at the first level surely. Daphnis et Chloe(complete,
stereo) should be gotten by Testament coupled with Franck's
Psyché suite(monaural), but the rests are available by EMI 'Noir
et rouge' 2for1 series. Of course, the performances are too
valueable for this budget grade. (Japanese issues are 4 CDs by
Med grades including Daphnis!7))
The two concertos with Samson Francois are famous also.
His Berlioz list has 3 different Symphonie
Fantastique, L'enfent du Christ, and La
Damnation de Faust(extracts). Symphonie Fantastique,
the stereo Philharmonia version is fairly famous(as of 2004,
deleted from catalog), but Japan live 1964(released by Altus and
EMI - 20th century conductor series) burns everything
overwhelmingly, which alludes he was a conductor different at
live.
Debussy recordings include 'Jeux',
Suite 'Printemps', and 'Dance sacre et profane'
with Annie Challan. Prélude a la midi d'un faune is not
recorded in studio, but a Moscow live is available(Japanese
release). Bizet is highly recommended. Symphony No.1 with
ORTF(monaural) is very good, but not famous partly because of its
bad availablity. Especially, Suite Arlésienne and
Carmen must
be one of the best recordings of his. Franck's Symphonic poems
are recorded with Belgium National Orchestra, also notable(but
EMI release was deleted from international catalog).
3 'Sheherazade'
and Pictures at an Exhibition ; Toshiba-EMI version
His
Russian repertoires are also good, next to French. Shostakovich's
Symphony No.11 and Piano concerto Nos.1 & 2(composer's solo)
were recorded under presence of Shostakovich
himself. Mussorgsky's Pictures
at an Exhibition, Boris Godounov, Borodin, and Rimsky-Korsakov's
works are also included. Of course, though harsh driving force of
the traditional Russian schools lacks in his performances, I
guess his affinity to these realm stems from Debussy and Ravel,
who were deeply influenced on by Russian composers. Most of these
recordings are available by EMI or Testament, and some by
Toshiba-EMI - Pictures at an Exhibition and
Sheherazade(monarual).
In his German works, Beethoven is surely the
first. I commented the symphonies, but perhaps the most famous
one is the violin concerto with David Oistrakh produced by Walter
Legge. He supported warm and strong-outlined solo steadfast, and
I like this performance above all because the two player is far
from partial exaggeration or too much unnatural extravaganza.
Wagner's recordings are several Bayreuth lives(from Melodram) and
Preludes/Overtures with Paris National Opera(now released by
Testament). Orchestral excepts are enough better than only named
one, with sufficient power. Liszt's Les Préludes and
Schubert's Unfinished Symphony were recorded with BPO. The latter
is delicate and beautiful(now available by Testament). Schumann
Symphonies are Nos.3, & 4, which are all monaural. The
former's orchestra is BPO(1957), and the other with ORTF(1950).
It's not easy to get, only available by Toshiba-EMI. I luckily
have it, of which performance have no scruple, and with
confidence.
When
young, he had long experience in opera houses. Therefore, he made
many complete opera recordings5). After
he contracted Pathé-Marconi in 1946, he proceeded recordings with the
two orchestras - ORTF and OSCC of which he directed. At the opera
repertoire, mainly with Paris National Opera and Opera Comics in
monaural era, and with OSCC and VPO in stereo era.
Almost all
of the opera recordings at studio are in French repertoires. The
series with Paris Opera Comic Orchestra is interesting - Les
pêcheurs de perles, Carmen, Les Contes
d'Hoffmann, Faust(Gounod), Les mamelles de
Tiresias, and L'heure Espagnole. I guess Carmen
is the first recording of the premier version with dialogue. The
works by Bizet and Offenbach were casted as the regular members
of the Opera Comic, and the rests as famous singers active in
France. Les Contes d'Hoffmann and Faust were
recorded again by stereo, which are universally recommended
considering the sound quality. Faust has been acclaimed
by the powerful casts - Los Angeles,
Gedda, and Christoph. The casts of Les Contes d'Hoffmann
is even better than Faust, but score version is somewhat
problematic by present view. Pelléas et Mélisande
released by Testament is firmly classic. Lalo's Le roi d'Ys
is not released by CD outside Japan.
Russian operas are Boris Godounov(title
role is Boris Christoph, with OSCC), La Rossignol(with
ORTF) and Persephone(with OSCC) of Stravinsky.
German opera repertoire - Humperdink's Hänsel and Gretel
is studio recording and well-known, with VPO, Irmgard Seefried
and Anneliese Rothenberger
He was really a modest figure. I saw a film of 'Pictures at an exhibition' conducted by him(ORTF), in which he was very natural and not dictative to orchestra. It is said that the orchestra members, solists, and singers all liked him - it is not frequent case because the conductor has to control all of them8). I think it would be not too absurd that he was the man who was able to smile naturally like the photo at the top of this page, and who was praised by Gerard Souzay "hélas mort prématurément(sadly died so prematurely)" and that his good personality was well instilled into his recordings.
(c) 2002~ , Youngrok LEE ; Link free, but please get my approval before you reuse, copy, or quote this materials.
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Created ; 10th
Feb. 2004
(Korean text created
; 28th Apr. 2002)
Last update ; 26th
Sep. 2004