Debussy suddenly seems to be on the front line of the
period-instrument movement's steady advance through music history. This
disc from Jos van Immerseel and his Belgian orchestra arrives just a few
months after Simon
Rattle's London performances of La Mer and Prélude à l'Après-Midi d'un
Faune with the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, and John Eliot Gardiner's Proms account of Pelléas et Mélisande with the Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique. For this recording, Anima Eterna Brugge's
woodwind, brass, percussion and harps were French-made instruments of
Debussy's time; they're generally more abrasive and pungent than their
modern counterparts, and they combine with the gut strings to produce a
more open sound than we are used to today.
Van Immerseel's approach can seem a bit too deliberate; there's
something ponderous about Prélude à l'Après-Midi, while in La Mer he
seems determined to emphasise the work's symphonic credentials. In fact,
it's the orchestral Images that gains most from the brighter, rawer
colours of this performance, with the myriad subtleties of Debussy's
scoring more beguiling than ever. Where most conductors make the
three-part Ibéria their centrepiece, with Gigues before it and Rondes de
Printemps as the finale, Van Immerseel begins with Rondes and places
Ibéria last, following the order adopted by Debussy's friend and
assistant André Caplet for performances he conducted after the
composer's death. There's logic to that ordering, for Ibéria is
significantly longer than the other two movements put together, and
makes a substantial finale to the whole sequence; Van Immerseel resists
the temptation to turn it into a real orchestral showpiece, but there's
enough flair and imagination to make his performance compelling. (Andrew Clements / The Guardian)
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