Poulenc: Serenade

This page lists all recordings of Serenade, by Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) on CD & download (MP3 & FLAC).

Prices shown exclude VAT. (UK tax is not payable for deliveries to United States.)
See Terms & Conditions for p&p rates.

Debussy & Poulenc - Cello Sonatas

Debussy & Poulenc - Cello Sonatas


Debussy:

Cello Sonata

La plus que lente

Scherzo for Cello and Piano in C

Intermezzo for cello & piano, L. 27

Poulenc:

Cello Sonata, Op. 143

Bagatelle in D minor

Serenade

Suite française (d'après Claude Gervaise), FP80


Debussy and Poulenc made a lasting impact on the musical identity of their country through both their references to the past and their innovations.This programme illustrates their vision of a certain esprit français: moving constantly between irony and emotion, extremely refined, yet at the same time offering an amplified echo of 'light' music - in short, the 'exquisite bad music' the creator of Les Mamelles de Tirésias prided himself on writing. Jean-Guihen Queyras and Alexandre Tharaud, upcoming interpreters of the young generation in France, have already made several recordings together and frequently programme these works in concert.Their recording of Schubert's Arpeggione Sonata was a Gramophone Editor's Choice.

"I got to know the Poulenc sonata, thanks to Alexandre, who I believe (although I haven't yet managed to make him admit it) must have learnt to play this music before he started walking; it just seems to flow from his fingers as if it were second nature." J-G Queyras

Long a soloist with the Ensemble Intercontemporain, Jean-Guihen Queyras was profoundly influenced by working with Pierre Boulez. His discography, distinguished by a musical eclecticism, includes works by Haydn (on period instruments) as well as Dvorák and 20th-century composers. He has premiered concertos by Ivan Fedele, Gilbert Amy, Bruno Mantovani and Philippe Schoeller (Wind's Eyes), some of which will be recorded for harmonia mundi in late 2008. Alexandre Tharaud devotes a large part of his activity to chamber music. His recording of Schubert's Arpeggione Sonata with Jean-Guihen received unanimous critical acclaim. An enthusiastic advocate of contemporary music, he premiered Thierry Pécou's cycle Outre-Mémoire, as well as his concerto L'Oiseau innumérable (HMC901974, July 2008). His recital programmes 'Hommages' intersperse harpsichord pieces by Rameau and Couperin played on the piano with tributes by living composers.

“Vividly captured in a warm acoustic, Queyras and Tharaud's is an intimate approach which exactly suits the two short sonatas of Debussy and Poulenc, the former with its abrupt changes of direction and unpredictable mood swings, the latter brimful of Poulencian wit and, not surprisingly as it was sketched in 1940 (completed in 1948), replete with some self-plagiarising from Babar.
These are fine accounts, the programme made even more attractive by the inclusion of the seven short movements of Poulenc's Suite française (1935) based on 16th-century dances by Claude Gervaise. It's a charmer. Apart from this, there are five other short works by the two composers making a truly delightful whole.”
Gramophone Classical Music Guide, 2010

Harmonia Mundi - HMC902012

(CD)

$17.50

In stock - usually despatched within 1 working day.

Children’s Cello

Children’s Cello


Beach:

Berceuse, Op. 40 No. 2

Blake, H:

Archangel's Lullaby

Boccherini:

Minuet in A major from String Quintet Op. 11 No. 5, G275

Bridge:

Spring Song

Bryars:

With Miriam by the River

Carse:

A Merry Dance

Cassadó:

Requiebros Gabriel's Corner

Dyson:

Melody

Earnshaw:

Tarantella

Fauré:

Berceuse, Op. 16

Gabriel-Marie I:

La Cinquantaine

Goltermann:

La Foi

Graves:

The Swans glide on the Bishop's Palace moat

Hough:

Angelic Song & Angelic Dance

Isserlis:

The Haunted House

Lebell:

Berceuse Orientale

Mendelssohn:

Song without Words for Cello & Piano, Op. 109

Mustonen:

Frogs Dancing on Water-Lilies

Nelson, S:

Mad as a Hatter

Popper:

Gavotte

Poulenc:

Serenade

Sibelius:

Lulu Waltz

Squire:

Danse Rustique

Stutschewsky:

Kinnereth & Wanderer's Song

Trowell:

Gavotte

Tuby:

Serenade

Warren, F P:

A Sunday Evening in Autumn & Cradle Song


Steven Isserlis (cello), Stephen Hough (piano) & Simon Callow (narrator)

The disc is packaged in a slipcase designed by Sara Fanelli, graphic artist and illustrator of children’s books. Steven Isserlis’s own book for children, Why Handel Waggled his Wig, is published by Faber in conjunction with the release of the present disc

“Steven Isserlis and Stephen Hough open with a beginners' open-string solo (Ludwig Lebell's Berceuse orientale) and continue with increasingly challenging material that culminates in Gaspar Cassadó's bravura Requiebros. The contemporary selections are especially satisfying. Gavin Bryars's With Miriam by the River pays homage to the composer's cello-playing mother in music of quiet, lyrical intensity. Howard Blake's Archangel's Lullaby, written to celebrate the birth of Isserlis's son Gabriel, has a Fauré-like sensibility... Hough's Angelic Song (yet another gift to Gabriel Isserlis) is a ravishingly simple meditation. Isserlis père's own The Haunted House may not merit repeated hearings but its silliness is sure to provide a chuckle or two, aided by Simon Callow's sly narration, and the cello's role a sound-effects machine could motivate many youngsters to pick up instrument. Delightful.” Gramophone Magazine, July 2006

BIS - BISCD1562

(CD)

$16.75

(also available to download from $10.50)

Usually despatched in 2 - 3 working days. (Available now to download.)

Copyright © 2002-13 Presto Classical Limited, all rights reserved.