Gabriel Dupont, who lived to the age of only 36 before succumbing to
tuberculosis in 1914, is one of those late-19th- and early 20th-century
French composers whom history has eclipsed in favour of such leading
lights as Debussy and Ravel, yet in 1901 Dupont beat Ravel into third
place by coming second in the Prix de Rome (André Caplet won first prize
with the cantata Myrrha). Despite success with opera in his day, Dupont’s name has survived largely through his piano cycles Les heures dolentes (1903 05) and La maison dans les dunes (1907 09).
In these miniatures, as Marie-Catherine Girod shows in these
affectionately turned performances of selections from both sets, Dupont
expressed an attractive, limpid wistfulness. His illness, which dogged
him for his last decade, not only removed him from the centres of
musical activity in Paris but also seems to have wrapped him in a mood
of inner reflection – by no means always sad, as can be heard, for
instance, in the scintillating ‘Du soleil au jardin’ and ‘Coquetteries’
from Les heures dolentes, but generally with a sense of regret
that he cannot completely enjoy his surroundings while encumbered with
ill-health. ‘Mélancolie du bonheur’ (‘Melancholy of Happiness’) seems to
be his overriding state of mind. Journée de printemps for violin
and piano is a beguiling diptych of a spring morning and evening; but
not even Girod and the excellent Pražák Quartet can rescue the overlong,
suffocatingly overheated Poème (Geoffrey Norris / Gramophone)
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