Composer: Germaine Tailleferre
- Impromptu
- Romance
- Pas trop vite
- Pastorale in D Major
- Hommage à Debussy
- Très vite
- Sicilienne
- Pastorale in A-Flat Major
- Fleurs de France: No. 1, Jasmin de Provence
- Fleurs de France: No. 2, Coquelicot de Guyenne
- Fleurs de France: No. 3, Rose d'Anjou
- Fleurs de France: No. 4, Tournesol du Languedoc
- Fleurs de France: No. 5, Anthémis du Roussillon
- Fleurs de France: No. 6, Lavandin de Haute - Provence
- Fleurs de France: No. 7, Volubilis du Béarn
- Fleurs de France: No. 8, Bleuet de Picardie
- Chiens
- Pastorale Inca
- Minuet in B-Flat Major
- Berceuse
- Au Pavillon d'Alsace
- Fugue du Parapluie
- Chant chinois
- L'Aigle des rues: No. 1, Valse
- L'Aigle des rues: No. 2, Berceuse
- L'Aigle des rues: No. 3, La Dispute
- L'Aigle des rues: No. 4, Fugue
- L'Aigle des rues: No. 5, Lent
- Pas de Deux
- Pastourelle
- Larghetto
- Valse lente
- Partita for Piano: I. Perpetuum mobile
- Partita for Piano: II. Notturno
- Partita for Piano: III. Allegramente
- Sonata alla Scarlatti
- Reverie
- Barbizon
- Escarpolète
- Singeries
Quynh Nguyen, piano
Date: 2023
Label: Music and Arts Programs of America
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I recently reviewed a twofer of music for two pianos by Reynaldo Hahn, Charles Koechlin and Germaine Tailleferre. Tailleferre studied with Koechlin and with Ravel, and Satie gave her much encouragement, before she became the only female member of Les Six. The character of her music evolved throughout her life, but she already had her own style when she was 20, long before Les Six.
Tailleferre’s style manifests itself in the first few works on this disc: the Impromptu, the Romance and Pas trop vite.(The latter and the somewhat later Sicilienne demonstrate her humorous side.) She was a mature and accomplished composer, and a fine pianist, when she wrote the children’s suite Fleurs de France (Flowers of France). The suite may seem simple, but it shows great imagination. Tailleferre gives imaginative descriptions of each of the eight flowers (see contents at the end of the review), and works in the atmosphere of the eight localities – all that in nine minutes. I especially liked the serene Anthémis [chamomile] du Roussillon, although Lavandin [lavender] de Haute-Provence is just as distinctive.
Jumping ahead chronologically, tracks 31-37 contain some of the composer’s best piano works. Let me leave the Larghetto and the Valse lente aside for a moment. The Partita for Piano, like Fleurs de France, compresses a great deal into a small span of time. After a stimulating Perpetuo mobile, the Notturno is the heart of the work, with all the emotional depth Tailleferre brought to her later works. The Allegretto looks back fondly at her teacher Ravel.
The music discussed so far was written for the concert hall. The works on the remainder of the disc originated in Tailleferrre’s operas, ballets and film scores. (She also wrote for radio and television.) French film studios were among the first to employ classical composers to wrote original scores for their films. Tailleferre started in 1929 with a documentary about the Incas. The selections here, Chiens (Dogs) and Pastorale Inca, more than merely descriptive, show a sense of the potential of film music rare among classical composers at that time. Another documentary film score was L’Aigle de rues (Street Hawk). Its scenario has unfortunately been lost, but one must admire Tailleferre’s handling of the opening material in the five sections here.
Tailleferre also wrote the music for the ballets Parisiana and Paris-Magie. The two excertps demonstrate her love of the capital city. The most impressive piece in this group is the Larghetto from the score for George Debecque’s only feature film, Coincidences. Tailleferre shows a depth of expression that makes one long for the entire score. One more film score, about the 19th-century Barbizon school of painting, intriguingly in a Baroque style, is a complete success.
Much of the programme has been recorded before, but rarely so well. Quynh Nguyen, who studied in Paris among other places, is familiar with the milieu of Tailleferre’s music, and she demonstrates affection and understanding for the music itself. She is especially good with the slower works. No nuance of the composer’s style escapes her in this sympathetic survey of fine music.
-- William Kreindler
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Germaine Tailleferre (19 April 1892 – 7 November 1983) was a French composer. She studied piano with her mother at home, at the Paris Conservatory where she met other members of Les Six, and with Maurice Ravel at his home in Montfort-l'Amaury. Despite facing opposition from her father and first husband, Tailleferre still pursued her passion and became a successful composer. Her music is often characterized by a light and playful style, with influences from neoclassicism and French Impressionism. Her most important works include the First Piano Concerto, the Harp Concertino, ballets and film scores.
***
Quynh Nguyen (Vietnamese: Nguyễn Thuý Quỳnh, born 1976) is a Vietnamese-American pianist. She studied at the Hanoi Conservatory, the Moscow's Gnessin State Musical College, the Juilliard School, Mannes College of Music, and CUNY Graduate Center. Nguyen currently serves on the piano faculty of Hunter College and the International Keyboard Institute and Festival in New York City. She has performed extensively throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia, to wide critical acclaim. She made her New York debut in 2001, and was selected as one of the "19 young stars of tomorrow" by Musical America in 2004.
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