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Pelléas et Mélisande
 
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Pelléas et Mélisande

Debussy , Dutoit , Montreal Symphony Orchestra Audio CD
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (April 5, 1991)
  • Number of Discs: 2
  • Label: Polygram Records
  • ASIN: B0000041YA
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #287,734 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

Disc: 1
1. Act One, Scene 1: Je ne pourrai plus sortir de cette foret - Gilles Cachemaille
2. Act One, Scene 1: Pourquoi pleures-tu? - Gilles Cachemaille
3. Act One, Scene 1: Je suis perdu aussi - Gilles Cachemaille
4. Act One, Scene 2: Voici ce qu'il ecrit a son Frere Pelleas - Claudine Carlson
5. Act One, Scene 2: Qu'en dites-vouus? - Claudine Carlson
6. Act One, Scene 2: Interlude - Orch Sym de Montreal/Dutoit
7. Act One, Scene 3: Il fait sombre dans les jardins - Colette Alliot-Lugaz
8. Act One, Scene 3: Hoe! Hisse Hoe! - Choeurs de I'OSM/Edwards
9. Act Two, Scene 1: Vous ne savez pas ou je vous ai menee? - Didier Henry
10. Act Two, Scene 1: C'est au bord d'une fontaine - Didier Henry
See all 20 tracks on this disc
Disc: 2
1. Act Three, Scene 3: Interlude - Orch Sym de Montreal/Dutoit
2. Act Three, Scene 4: Viens, nous allons nous asseoir ici - Gilles Cachemaille
3. Act Three, Scene 4: Qu'ils s'embrassent, petit pere? - Francoise Golfier
4. Act Four, Scene 1: Ou vas-tu? - Didier Henry
5. Act Four, Scene 2: Maintenant que le pere de Pelleas - Pierre Thau
6. Act Four, Scene 2: Pelleas part ce soir - Gilles Cachemaille
7. Act Four, Scene 2: Ne mettez pas ainsi votre main a la gorge - Gilles Cachemaille
8. Act Four, Scene 2: Interlude - Orch Sym de Montreal/Dutoit
9. Act Four, Scene 3: Oh! Cette pierre est lourde - Francoise Golfier
10. Act Four, Scene 4: C'est le dernier soir - Didier Henry
See all 20 tracks on this disc

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars What's Everyone's Issue With This Gem, February 27, 2010
This review is from: Pelléas et Mélisande (Audio CD)
As I own nine recordings of this opera, and clearly have my biases as to interpretation and appropriateness of style, I have always been perplexed by the bad rap this recording elicits from listeners. I will admit to loving the Karajan/EMI, Ansermet/OLSR (Stereo), and Boulez DVD recordings; and will pay due tribute and awe to the wartime mono recording with Desormiere. I've also found the Abbado recording somewhat lacking vocally, and the orchestral playing on Jordan and Baudo recordings to be either uneven or poorly captured in the studio. THe Haitink recording, I found quite similar to the later Boulez reading in terms of subtlety and restrained tension. But this Dutoit recording I feel is a lost gem. Yes, it reads more as an orchestral work than an opera, but the singing is fresh and unaffected, and for a generation who may come to opera not through the stage, but through recording, this reading is one of the finest examples of the work. Each character reads so clearly, and when Dutoit and Montreal were on, they were sublime. Not since the Munch / BSO years has this repertoire read so beautifully, and in this recording, Dutiot and cast carry listeners across the rich landscape of Debussy / Maeterlinck's masterpiece as if in a dream. Though 'stronger' vocalists have taken various of these roles over the decades, I feel this cast comes across as a true ensemble (something lacking in the Abbado and Jordan recordings), which makes the experience all the richer. This recording resides in or out of print, depending on the year, so if you find it, I can only recommend that you not let this experience pass you by.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good "Pelleas" led by Charles Dutoit, December 20, 2011
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This review is from: Pelléas et Mélisande (Audio CD)
Claude Debussy's only opera, "Pelleas et Melisande", is for me a confluence of art noveau, symbolism and pre-Raphaelite style. A few years before beginning work on "Pelleas", Debussy had set a major poem by Dante Rossetti , "The Blessed Damozel," a precursor to "Pelleas." The polymath Rossetti not only wrote the poem but then painted a picture depicting "The Blessed Damozel" in pre-Raphaelite style which you can see at Harvard's Fogg Museum, if you live in Boston. These artistic currents blended together in "Pelleas," which takes place long ago in a magic garden, a neurasthenic princess at the center of a damned romantic triangle.

When premiered in 1903, "Pelleas" immediately attracted a coterie of admirers as well as criticism from the traditionally-minded members of the audience. Debussy's younger colleague, Maurice Ravel, attended every performance in the initial run in 1903. I understand both viewpoints. It is a difficult opera due to the lack of repetition and it few obvious melodic hooks but is full of incredible beauty and just plain magic.

The Dutoit performance under review here is difficult to evaluate. Objectively, it is a consistently good recording, nothing outstanding - the singers, orchestral interpretation and sound engineering are all good -- without any obvious flaws. Despite its consistency, I do not find the interpretation compelling and am simply not enthusiastic about it. While I think "Pelleas" is often an amazing and enthralling work, the Dutoit interpretation leaves me cold and had my mind wandering repeatedly during different listening sessions. As an alternative, I strongly recommend the beautiful Abbado-led release on DG. Note that I listened to the 2011 London re-issue.

Some specific comments: I thought the best cast-member was the Melisande, French soprano Colette Alliot-Lugaz, who is associated with the role. Dider Henry is also fine as Pelleas. The weakest lead is well-known bass Gilles Cachemaille, who I have enjoyed listening to in other roles, but he has too gruff a voice for delicate music such as this, with some pitch problems thrown in. Charles Dutoit is known as an exceptional conductor in this repertory, but I think he underwhelms here. The orchestra playing is polished but lacks life. I also thought the recorded sound was washed out, a bad trait for Debussy's sophisticated orchestration.
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