Showing posts with label Musee d'Orsay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Musee d'Orsay. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Sublime Winterreise by Edwin Crossley-Mercer

This was one of the best recitals I've listened to in years.

Edwin Crossley-Mercer was lucky to be given the opportunity to present his first recital in Paris at the auditorium of the Musée d'Orsay. If you looked for the most appropriate place in Paris to organize a  recital of Winterreise by Schubert, it would be there. It's cosy and big enough at the same time and the acoustics is  impeccable. Last year, in that same venue, I listened to two superb Liederabends -- one was with Petra Lang, and the other with Ian Bostridge. Both were fantastic and I knew Edwin could be excellent too if he managed to stay calm and focused throughout the entire Winterreise, which is tough: it's long, it's easy to let one's mind wander away in e.g. Fruehlingstraum, or in Tauschung...

Edwin Crossley-Mercer happy after his memorable recital

Only at the very beginning you could read from his hands that he was tense, but as soon as Semjon Skigin started playing, all those little signs disappeared and he opened with a gloriously sung Gutte Nacht -- that nevertheless felt a tad too controlled. By the time he arrived to Erstarrung he was completely in his groove, totally at ease, and the recital gained on spontaneity -- everything was delicately emphasized and vocally sculpted. At one point you could've felt the crowd immersing in the thick silence and a 'winterreisish' atmosphere he imposed by his singing. Of course, he sang all 24 songs in one go, fully focused on every verse he'd pronounce [impeccably!]. Add to that the freshness and flexibility of his voice and you get a picture: definitely a memorable Winterreise.

Friday, February 26, 2010

Deux ailes de l'âme

 Portrait of Berlioz by Gustave Courbet, Musée d'Orsay, Paris
Laquelle des deux puissances peut élever l'homme aux plus sublimes hauteurs, l'amour ou la musique ? ...  C'est un grand problème.  Pourtant il me semble qu'on devrait dire ceci : l'amour ne peut pas donner une idée  de la musique, la musique peut en donner une de l'amour...
Pourquoi séparer l'un de l'autre? Ce sont les deux ailes de l'âme.
Hector Berlioz, Mémoires, 1865

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Paris Paris

Everybody knows how I passionately love Paris. By that I mean that I also love criticizing its bad sides, which are many [like in any other big city], but I always find a little corner, a little street, a little bit of history related to any given building or a façade, always something to remind me how blessed I am to be able to thoroughly enjoy this charm and beauty around me...

Last week I managed to visit Musée d'Orsay, one of my favorite places that I'm coming back to as if it was a shrine. It's an old Railway Station, very cleverly restructured  to host the most amazing permanent collection you could ever dream of. The collection is steadily updated and each visit is a new surprise (even if there were no updates I'd go anyway, to admire everything and especially my absolute favorite - Cézanne). This time I noticed a new painting by Pierre Bonnard called "Nu Bleu" [Naked Blue],


but that's not what I wanted to post about. Musée d'Orsay is currently hosting two exhibitions which will close in a week, so if you get a chance to visit Musée d'Orsay, with the same ticket you can visit these two gems too.