Le temps l'horloge (Time and the Clock) is a song cycle for soprano and orchestra, by the French composer Henri Dutilleux.
Le temps l'horloge | |
---|---|
Song cycle by Henri Dutilleux | |
English | Time and the Clock |
Language | French |
Based on | poems by Jean Tardieu and Robert Desnos, later Baudelaire |
Composed | 2006 | –2007
Movements | three, later five |
Scoring |
|
Premiere | |
Date | 6 September 2007 |
Location | Saito Kinen Festival Matsumoto |
Conductor | Seiji Ozawa |
Performers |
He wrote the original three-movement version between 2006 and 2007 based on two poems by Jean Tardieu ("Le temps l'horloge" and "Le masque"), and one by Robert Desnos ("Le dernier poème"'). He later added a fourth purely instrumental movement, "Interlude", inspired by another Tardieu poem ("Le futur antérieur"), and a fifth based on Charles Baudelaire's prose poem, "Enivrez-vous".
The work was composed for American soprano Renée Fleming, whom Dutilleux called "a great artist". The composer said, "I constantly thought of her voice's character, of her power of lyrical expression" while writing the piece.[1]
Performance history
editLe temps l'horloge was jointly commissioned by the Saito Kinen Festival Matsumoto (Seiji Ozawa, Director), the Boston Symphony Orchestra (James Levine, Music Director), and the Orchestre National de France (Kurt Masur, Music Director).[2]
Seiji Ozawa led Fleming and the Saito Kinen Orchestra in the world premiere on 6 September 2007, at the Saito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto City, Japan.[2] Fleming gave the American premiere with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, conducted by James Levine, on 29 November 2007, and the same performers gave the New York premiere on 3 December 2007, in the Stern Auditorium at Carnegie Hall.[3]
The première of the complete five-movement work took place on 7 May 2009 at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, Paris. The performers included Renée Fleming (soprano), the Orchestre National de Radio France and Seiji Ozawa (conductor).[4] She and the Boston Symphony presented the US première of this version under François-Xavier Roth on 14 January 2016.
Instrumentation
editLe temps l'horloge is scored for piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, bass clarinet, two bassoons, contrabassoon, three horns, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, timpani, crotales, high and medium suspended cymbals, two tam-tams, wood block, bass drum, vibraphone, marimba, harp, celesta, harpsichord, accordion and strings.
Recording
edit- Renée Fleming, Seiji Ozawa and the Orchestra National de France – Poèmes – Decca CD – 2012.
References
edit- ^ Weininger 2007.
- ^ a b May 2007.
- ^ Driscoll 2008.
- ^ Machart 2009.
- Anon. (9 May 2009). "Le Temps l'horloge, dernier chef-d'oeuvre de Dutilleux". Le Monde (in French). p. 1.
- Driscoll, F. Paul (February 2008). "Renée Fleming, James Levine & the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Carnegie Hall's Stern Auditorium, 12/3/07". Opera News. 72 (8).
- Machart, Renaud (9 May 2009). "Le Temps l'horloge de Dutilleux, enfin complet: Au Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Renée Fleming et Seiji Ozawa créent l'intégrale du cycle composé pour la soprano". Le Monde (in French). p. 20.
- May, Thomas (2007). "Henri Dutilleux: Le Temps l'Horloge". Boston: Boston Symphony Orchestra.
- Potter, Caroline (1997). Henri Dutilleux: His Life and Works. Aldershot (UK), and Brookfield, Vermont (US): Ashgate Publishing Company. ISBN 1-85928-330-6.
- Potter, Caroline (2001). "Dutilleux, Henri". In Sadie, Stanley; Tyrrell, John (eds.). The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Vol. 7 (second ed.). London: Macmillan Publishers. pp. 770–72.
- Weininger, David (23 November 2007). "BSO-Composer Relationship Proves Fruitful]". The Boston Globe.
External links
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