François Mardirossian – Philip Glass: Études pour piano – Intégrale (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

François Mardirossian – Philip Glass: Études pour piano – Intégrale (2022) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

A major minimalist composer, Philip Glass is perhaps one of the most listened to and most popular of contemporary composers.

François Mardirossian – Satie et les Gymnopédistes (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

François Mardirossian – Satie et les Gymnopédistes (2023) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Erik Satie is a beacon around which all kinds of musicians never cease to turn and marvel. And it’s been the case for more than 100 years. American minimalists (Glass, Reich, Adams, Riley, La Monte Young) today recognize in him a kind of spiritual father. Through this double-disc, I wanted to pay a tribute to him, through his works but also those of his friends, his followers and his heirs. I thus discovered new works never recorded (Cliquet-Pleyel, Mesens, Dortu, Fargeat) and also generated new compositions. My personal approach to sincerity also led me to choose, for the interpretation of his works, a piano that he could have known: a Blüthner from 1900. As a historically well-informed musician, the last track of the first disc, Je te veux, has been recorded on Pleyel droit from 1923, not very well tuned, with hazardous mechanics and a good cabaret taste. Here is a particular discographic object with very subjective musical choices. After three records dedicated to some American figures (Moondog, Glass and Hovhaness) I was dead set on showing how important Erik Satie was for a few musicians, and to illustrate how he is a tutelary and smiling figure of a contemporary musical movement open to side steps – let’s call them minimalists or not, it doesn’t matter. I have brought together all these figures under the term “gymnopedists”.

François Mardirossian – Alan Hovhaness: Œuvres pour piano (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

François Mardirossian – Alan Hovhaness: Œuvres pour piano (2022) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Few composers can boast of their music being performed during their lifetime by people like Serge Rachmaninov or Keith Jarrett. Even fewer could claim to be admired by Ornette Coleman, Philip Glass, Leopold Stokowski or Ravi Shankar, and to have had the support of John Cage himself or the great choreographer Martha Graham. The American composer Lou Harrison (also a friend) said “he was one of the greatest melodic writers of the 20th century”. And yet Alan Hovhaness remains unknown in France.

Ensemble Triptikh – Grand Écran (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Ensemble Triptikh – Grand Écran (2020) [FLAC 24 bit, 88,2 kHz]

Led by nyckelharpa virtuoso Marco Ambrosini – first heard on ECM with Rolf Lislevand – Ensemble Supersonus applies its unique instrumental blend, capped by the otherworldly overtone singing of Anna-Maria Hefele, to very wide-ranging repertoire. Building bridges between cultures and traditions, Resonances sets compositions by Biber, Frescobaldi and Hildegard von Bingen next to Swedish folk music, Ottoman court music, and original pieces by the band members. Three pieces – “Ananada Rasa”, “Fjordene”, “Ritus” come from the pen of Wolf Janscha, the ensemble’s jew’s harp specialist. Ambrosini’s nyckleharpa solo “Fuga Xylocopae” opens the programme, leading on to a fresh and sparkling account of Heinrich Ignaz Franz Biber’s ”Rosary Sonata No. 1”. All of Ensemble Supersonus contribute to the spirited arrangements of the music.

Ensemble Le Déluge, Laurent Wagschal – Camille Saint-Saëns: Duos pour piano et cordes (2021) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

Ensemble Le Déluge, Laurent Wagschal – Camille Saint-Saëns: Duos pour piano et cordes (2021) [FLAC 24bit, 88,2 kHz]

Though chamber music is incontestably the least well-known component of his corpus, Camille Saint-Saëns was a master of the genre, leaving us with a large collection of works. We may think of Saint-Saëns as a conservative and very academic composer. And yet, we would be well advised to remember that he was, in fact, a pioneer. Even as a young man, Saint-Saëns delved into chamber music instead of opera, the conventional form for an up-and-coming musician. He composed chamber music throughout his life – through to the final woodwind sonatas in 1921 – restoring lustre to the form which, in France, had been all but forgotten. A driving force in the 19th century movement to reinvigorate the French school, Saint-Saëns paved the way for an entire generation of French musicians. This included his student Gabriel Fauré, who would go on to make an important contribution to the chamber music repertoire himself. These works embody the essence of Saint-Saëns’ composition: his lifelong and unyielding quest for perfection in form, and quality of the melodic line. It is fair to call Saint-Saëns a natural-born melodist, a true aesthete devoted to endowing a phrase with purity and beauty.