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DEBUSSY, C.: Orchestral Works, Vol. 1 (Markl) - La mer / Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un faune / Jeux

Composer(s):Debussy, Claude
Artist(s) Markl, Jun, Conductor • Lyon National Orchestra
Period(s) 20th Century
Genre Classical Music
Category BalletOrchestral
Catalogue 8.570759
Label Naxos
Quality   320kbps
Album Price
 
CD
USD 9.99
 

 
MP3
USD 6.99
 

 


Debussy was one of the most important and influential composers of the early twentieth century. This recording features two of Debussy’s most harmonically innovative and imaginatively orchestrated works. Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune (Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun) evokes a pagan world, as the faun of the title takes his ease in the afternoon shade on a summer day. The three symphonic sketches that constitute La mer (The Sea), inspired partly by Katsushika Hokusai’s famous colour woodcut The Great Wave Off Kanagawa, offer subtly nuanced evocations of the sea from dawn to midday, of the waves and of the dialogue of wind and sea.


   




Review By Classic FM,

Jun Märkl’s intuitive expertise brings out the essence of the French master’s music.

Debussy intended Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune to be evocative of ‘the successive scenes in which the longings and desires of a faun pass in the heat of the afternoon’, and Jun Märkl creates a deeply sensual, headily intoxicating soundscape to match. His supple handling of phrasing, rhythm, texture and dynamics coalesces into ecstatic sequences of tantalising poetic suggestion, while the ultra-sensitive playing of the Lyon Orchestra is captured by engineering wizard Tim Handley as though it were being experienced through a shimmering heat-haze.

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Review By ,Ritmo,October 2008


8.570759_ritmo_102008_sp.pdf


Review By Hansen,American Record Guide,September 2008

Naxos subtitles their release "Orchestral Works 1", so it is the opening salvo in another Compleat Cycle. Markl and his players acquit themselves admirably, and as one-stop shopping for some of Debussy's most engaging orchestral works (even if Children's Corner was actually orchestrated by Andre Caplet), it's hard to beat. Why do so many conductors insist on recording Afternoon of a Faun? The piece is pure, static atmosphere; this performance is as good as any I've heard. Markl makes Children's Corner a little too sober and studious. It's not without charm; but more playfulness, high spirits, and whimsy would be welcome. The Lyon ensemble turns in some world-class playing. The slightly cool recorded sound is spacious without losing

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Review By Bob Briggs,MusicWeb International,August 2008

Märkl’s up against very stiff competition – Ansermet, Barbirolli, Boulez and Martinon to name but a few – but he’s his own man and gives us his own view of the music.

The Prélude is very well done. The solo flute is suitably sensuous, and is ably complemented by the solo oboe. Also, I have never heard the two solo violins, at the end, sound quite as winsome as they do here. The big tune in the middle is allowed to expand as it should and the delicate final pages, with slightly too reticent antique cymbals, is well controlled.

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Review By David Hurwtiz,ClassicsToday.com,June 2008

The Afternoon of a Faun has to be the worst performance to appear in many, many years. Märkl indulges a penchant for flabby, rhythmless rubato at dragging tempos that sucks the life right out of the piece. Balances both here and elsewhere favor woodwinds who can ill-afford the scrutiny. La Mer truly is “atrocious”: monotonous, dynamically constricted, and featuring mediocre contributions from the strings and brass. In particular, “Play of the Waves” is so disjointed and unbalanced that it sounds more like an amateur orchestra’s first reading than a professional, finished interpretation. Listen to the glockenspiel concerto that Märkl makes of its opening, and Märkl’s subsequent inability to decide where the melody is and focus on

Jeux simply plods, and anyone who knows the piano original of Children’s Corner (or has actually played it) will readily notice that Märkl has the balance between melody and accompaniment reversed in Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum; that the Serenade of the Doll lumbers along more like the preceding Jimbo; and that this Golliwog’s Cakewalk kicks with concrete boots. You can’t listen to this disc without feeling that Jun Märkl hasn’t the slightest clue how to conduct this music. To call this a disappointment would be a major understatement. I shudder to think that it’s only Volume 1.

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Review By David Denton, Naxos,May 2008

Naxos’s new cycle of Debussy’s orchestral works is making an auspicious start with the young German-born conductor, Jun Markl, direction the Orchestre National de Lyon.

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