After Lucifer (2014) and Pour sortir au jour (2016), the French composer
Guillaume Connesson returns to Deutsche Grammophon with "Lost Horizon",
a new double-album directed by Stéphane Denève at the head of the
Brussels Philharmonic. Already awarded the Victoire de la Musique
Classique in the Composer category in 2015, Guillaume Connesson received
last February his second award as Composer of the Year 2019 for "Les
Horizons perdus", Concerto for Violin created in September 2018 that we
find within this double album. These two CDs show two facets of the
composer's art and offer two trips. One outside, with the fantastic and
festive "Cities of Lovecraft" and the saxophone Concerto A Kind of Trane
performed by Timothy McAllister. A work that recalls the memory of the
jazzman John Coltrane, real incarnation of the solo instrument as he
imagines it. The other is a journey inside oneself illustrated by the
Violin Concerto Les Horizons Perdus. Performed by Renaud Capuçon, this
score refers to James Hilton's novel "Lost Horizon" (1933), adapted for
film by Frank Capra. "The Tomb of Regrets" is a slow movement in which
Guillaume Connesson was tempted by a very linear, almost choral writing
to explore intimate feelings, those of time passing, buried regrets and
impossible returns . Created in a short period between 2015 (A Kind of
Trane) and 2018 (Les Horizons Perdus), these four scores show the many
facets of a composer who draws his inspiration from the sources of
scholarly art as much as popular, without borders or taboos.
Comentarios
Publicar un comentario