Jules
Massenet (1842-1912)
Suite
from Esclarmonde
Suite
No. 1, Op. 13
Suite
from Cendrillon
Romain
Rolland once clairned !hat the spirit of Massenet sleeps at the heart of every
Frenchman. The most successful opera composer of his generation in France,
Massenet wrote music that has sometimes inspired cynicism and hostility through
its particularly sensuous beauty, a quality that has to some seerned facile and
superficial. The criticism itself may now appear in the same terms. Massenet
coupled technical command with a gift for graceful melody and exercised a
strong influence over his successors, perceptible in the work of Debussy and of
Ravel, as of Puccini. The very charm and grace of his music was to earn him the
nick-name bestowed on him by his enernies, "la fille de Wagner".
Jules
Massenet was born in 1842, the son of a foundry-owner whose prosperity relied
on the production of scythes. A decline in business led the family to move in
1847 from Saint-Etienne to Paris, where Madame Massenet supplernented the
family income by giving piano lessons, her youngest son among her pupils. At
the age of eleven Massenet entered the Conservatoire, where, in 1863, he won
the Prix de Rome, his residence in Rome bringing some respite from the period
when, as a student, he had found it necessary to support himself by serving as
a percussionist at the Opéra and as a café pianist.
Success
came to Massenet through the support of his teacher at the Conservatoire,
Arnbroise Thomas, and of his enterprising publisher Georges Hartmann. In 1872
he won his first operatic triumph with the Victor Hugo adaptation Don César de
Bazan, followed, in 1873, by the sacred drama Marie-Magdeleine, a choice of
heroine that was characteristic in an age that made much of the repentance of a
fallen woman. Manon, in 1884, established his position without question,
although the next opera, Le Cid, staged at the opéra in 1885, failed to please.
The coincidence of a new libretto, based on a medieval romance, and a meeting
with the young American soprano Sybil Sanderson, lay behind the opera
romanesque Esclarmonde, in which the title rôle was designed to exploit the
remarkable range and quality of the young prima donna. The work was staged at
the Opéra-Comique in 1890 and impressed a Parisian audience increased by the
Exhibition of 1889. Based on the romance Partenopeus de Blois the opera tells
the story of the princess Esclarmonde, daughter of the Emperor and magician
Phorcas, and her secret love for Roland. The hero, while away fighting the
Saracens, breaks the oath of secrecy that he had sworn to his beloved, the
penalty for such treachery being death. From this fate he saves himself in a
tournament in the Ardennes forest and is rewarded with the hand of Esclarmonde.
The spectacular opera includes a scene in which Roland is transported to a
magic island to be greeted by Dream-Spirits and a scene of hunting in the
forest.
Massenet
wrote eight orchestral suites, in addition to the suites arranged from operas,
ballets and incidental music for the theatre. The second of these - the first
was his Italian Pompeia Suite - was written in 1865, during the composer's
residence at the Villa Medici in Rome after his triumph in the Prix de Rome. It
was performed in Paris under the distinguished conductor Pasdeloup, but failed
to impress either the public or the critics. One of the latter, Albert Wolff,
remarked that the Suite suffered by appearing in the same programme as music by
Mozart and Mendelssohn and went on to describe how the suffering score had to
be taken to a near-by chemist to be given first aid, before the invalid was
taken home by its composer. The sarcasm of the review provoked a reaction from
Théodore Dubois, future director of the Conservatoire, and a rejoinder from
Massenet himself, whoobserved that fools and intelligent men had one thing in
common, they were both liable to make mistakes. Whether Albert Wolff was
mistaken is a matter that an audience may now judge again for itself. The Suite
is in four sections, a demonstration of the early technical competence of the
composer, whose very facility and gift for melody has all too often led to his
dismissal by those who seek in music a greater astringency of idiom.
Massenet's
fairy opera Cendrillon, based on Perrault, was first mounted at the Opéra-Comique
in Paris in 1899. It follows in general the well known story of Cinderella and
her bizarre family, although there is an additional episode in which her father
Pandolfe returns with his youngest daughter to the country farm where they had
lived before his second marriage. There, in a mysterious dream, Cendrillon
meets her Prince Charmant, a vision that precedes the traditional dénouement,
when the glass-slipper is found to fit her foot. The spectacular opera has much
activity for the fairies at the command of the Fairy Godmother and evokes in
the court dances the world of Cendrillon. Something of the magic of the opera
is recalled in the concert suite drawn from an opera that makes equally heavy
demands on singers and on the scenic and financial resources of any opera
house, but is hampered by a weak libretto.
Kenneth
Jean
Associate
Conductor of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra and Music Director of the Florida
Symphony Orchestra, Kenneth Jean is a young conductor making his presence known
both nationally and internationally. Born in New York City, he grew up in Hong
Kong and returned to the United States in 1967 to live in San Francisco. After
violin studies at San Francisco State University, he entered the Juilliard
School at the age of 19 and was accepted into the conducting class of Jean
Morel. The following year he made his Carnegie Hall début with the Youth
Symphony Orchestra of New York and was immediately engaged as the orchestra's
Music Director. From 1979 until 1985 Kenneth Jean served as Resident Conductor
of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Previously, he was Conducting Assistant of
the Cleveland Orchestra for two seasons. He has recorded works by Mendelssohn,
Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Falla, Albeniz and Ravel for Naxos, and Chinese contemporary
works for HK.