Admired for his ability to
manipulate tone color, Claude Debussy’s opera Pelleas et Melisande is
regarded as a special masterpiece, even if it is a solitary one. Debussy
was not known for opera. While Pelleas et Melisande was his only
successful opera during his lifetime, it was not the only opera he
composed. He made plans for future operatic projects, and he dedicated
himself to two projects based on texts by Edgar Allen Poe. As the final
years of his life were plagued by poor health, Debussy worked on “La
Chute de la maison Usher” (The Fall of the House of Usher) until just
before his death. The composer was distraught at the thought of leaving
the work unfinished. He also was working on “Le Diable dans le Beffroi”
(The Devil in the
Belfry), but this work only survived in sketch form. English
musicologist Robert Orledge, who is renowned for his expertise in early
twentieth century French music, reconstructed both of these works with
immense sensitivity to Debussy’s style, filling in all of the missing
passages. While Debussy was alive, he promised the New York Metropolitan
Opera the premiere of both of the operas, believing he would survive
through their completion. This production featuring the Gottinger
Symphonie Orchester is the world premiere of the works, in the way that
Debussy would have had the Metropolitan Opera perform them. (Arkiv Music)
Hewitt's remake for Hyperion deploys her personal Fazioli concert
grand. The instrument's hair-trigger response to note attacks and
release yields complex hues that contrast with the rounder, relatively
uniform sonorities of the beautiful Steinway featured on Hewitt's 1999
recording (4/00). More importantly, the pianist's enviable polyphonic
acumen and dance-orientated conception continue to operate at full
capacity, albeit on a deeper and subtler level, as comparative listening
reveals.
As they say, the devil is in the details. For example,
Hewitt tosses off Var 5's challenging cross-handed leaps more playfully,
tempers Var 6's erstwhile fluctuations with greater expressive economy
and allows Var 7's dialogue to flourish. Note, too, her nimbler dispatch
of the Fughetta and the canon at the fourth (Var 12). By contrast, Var 19's heightened polyphony and slower tempo impart extra gravitas to the
music's quasi-minuet character. Hewitt's octave doublings in Var 29 are
grander and heftier, with closer attention to the cascading
passagework's bass-lines.
Perhaps differences between Hewitt I
and Hewitt II emerge most tellingly in the slower variations, including
those three in the minor mode. Var 15 remains brisk and steady as before
but the canonic voices now take on sharper focus as Hewitt follows
through each line to its final destination.
The tender, yielding
Var 21 of 1999 contrasts with a new-found urgency. In the celebrated
'Black Pearl', Var 25. Hewitt embarks on an intricate and thoughtful
journey; earlier he pursued a less inflected more direct path. However,
the way that Hewitt ravishingly fuses elasticity of line and eloquent
proportion in the aria-like Var 13 is worth the price of admission, at
any cost. It is piano playing for the ages. (Gramophone)