PACM076 - Marguerite Long plays Fauré: Piano Quartets & Ballade French
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Marguerite Long, piano
Trio Pasquier
Jacques Thibaud
Maurice Vieux
Pierre Fournier
Orchestra de la Société des Concerts du Coservatoire
conductor André Cluytens
Recorded in 1940, 1950 and 1956

XR remastering by Andrew Rose at Pristine Audio, March 2011
Cover artwork based on a photograph of Marguerite Long

Total duration: 68:54
©2011 Pristine Audio.

Download ID: 1432865-8

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Classic Fauré from the composer's favourite interpreter

Marguerite Long brings huge authority to these fabulous new transfers

 

  • FAURÉ Piano Quartet No. 1 in C minor, Op. 15 [notes / score]
    Trio Pasquier:
    Jean Pasquier, violin
    Pierre Pasquier, viola
    Etienne Pasquier, cello

    Recorded Maison de la Mutualité, Paris, 13 February 1956
    Issued as Columbia FC1057

  • FAURÉ Piano Quartet No. 2 in G minor, Op. 45 [notes / score]
    Jacques Thibaud, violin
    Maurice Vieux, viola
    Pierre Fournier, cello

    Recorded Studio Albert, Paris, 10 May 1940
    Issued as Voix de son maître DB5103-5106
    Matrix Nos 2LA3350-3357

  • FAURÉ Ballade for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 19 [notes / score]
    Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire
    conductor André Cluytens
    Ballade Recorded Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Paris, 30 October 1950
    Issued as Columbia 78s: LFX1000-1001
    Matrix Nos: CLX 2802-5
    Issued as Columbia LP: FCX169


    Marguerite Long,
    piano

FLAC Downloads include PDF scores of all three works

 

"I carry great memories of the recording of the Second Quartet of Fauré which I made with my friends Jacques Thibaud, Maurice Vieux and Pierre Fournier. We had played it in public a week beforehand for the Société des Amis de Fauré. Maurice Maréchal had played the cello. It was on the tragic morning of the 10th May 1940 that the recording was due to take place. Bombs had been falling on Paris all night. At eight o'clock I switched on the radio and heard: 'M. Frossard [a Minister at the time] is speaking to you.' Silence, then: 'Holland has been invaded.'

Roger Thibaud, Jacques' son, was in the front line in this area. I feared the worst when I went to fetch Jacques Thibaud to go off to the Pathé-Marconi studios in the Rue Albert at the far end of Paris. He already knew the unhappy news.

Overcoming our mortal fear with that courage that artists so need, we started our recording in an extraordinary atmosphere. Never had Thibaud played so well. We were all overwhelmed. Swept up by the music beyond the reach of the present time, we succeeded in the tour de force of recording, without any lapse, the entire Quartet in one day. It was sublime. After the astonishing Quartet, where the piano assumes the leading role, the red light went out and Jacques Thibaud, whose humour had not left him, put his hand in his waistcoat pocket, took a two sous coin from it, put it on the piano and said to me: 'What you have just done there pays well, my dear Marguerite.' Poor, dear Jacques, he had no inkling that, two days later on the 12 May, destiny was to take his son from him.

When, many years later, I played this record to my friend Gilels, the great Russian pianist, I could not hide my emotion. He was still enraptured, seeking words to express his feelings, and finally he said slowly: 'That, Madame, is one of life's great moments.'"

Marguerite Long At The Piano with Fauré (1963, René Julliard)
(Translated by Olive Senior-Ellis, Kahn & Averill, London 1981)


 

 

Notes on the recordings:

Marguerite Long is perhaps the French pianist most closely associated with the music of Gabriel Fauré - a virtuoso who studied and worked for a decade with the composer and dedicated her long and successful career to the promotion of his (among others) music. The three recordings here span some 16 years and reach almost to the end of her recording career with respect to the composer - she went on to make a small number of solo records in 1957.

It has been particularly rewarding to restore the 1940 recording described above which, in its original state, sounded particularly dim and boxy but, with XR remastering, has blossomed into a glorious rendition of this fine work which only occasionally shows its age against the other two. The 1956 recording was, as one might expect, a much more straightforward project, though this too has been considerably enhanced, with much greater depth to be found than originally expected, as well as a fine treble extension.

Long regarded the Ballade as her own, and recorded it five times. The 1950 recording with Cluytens was remade in 1952 but it seems has appeared only on CD - meanwhile the 1950 recording shows its "made for 78s" origin with some rather crude side changes and sonic variations between the sides, despite being sourced from LP, which I've had to deal with. Originally paired with Ravel's Concerto in G major, the release was awarded the Grand Prix de l'Academie du Disque Français in 1953.

Andrew Rose

 


Click here to view additional notes

 


Marguerite Long

Biographical notes from Wikipedia


Marguerite Long (13 November 1874 – 13 February 1966) was a French pianist and teacher.

Marguerite Marie-Charlotte Long was born in Nîmes. She studied with Henri Fissot at the Paris Conservatoire, taking a premier prix in 1891, and privately with Antoine François Marmontel. From 1906 to 1940 she taught at the Paris Conservatoire, and in 1920 she succeeded Louis Diémer as professor of piano. She also taught privately. Her students included Jacques Février, Samson François, Zvart Sarkissian, Georges Savaria, and Gabriel Tacchino, as well as Jean Doyen, Monique Duphil, Marie-Thérèse Fourneau, Waleed Hourani, Willem Ibes, and Micheline Laudun Denis.

Long's husband, Joseph de Marliave (1873–1914), was killed in August 1914 in action during World War I. Maurice Ravel dedicated the last section, the Toccata, of Le Tombeau de Couperin to him. Marguerite Long gave the first performances of this work in 1919, and in January 1932 the premiere of Ravel's Piano Concerto in G major, which was dedicated to her.

In 1943 she and violinist Jacques Thibaud established the Marguerite Long-Jacques Thibaud International Competition for violinists and pianists, which takes place each year in Paris. From 2011, it will include singers and be known as the Long-Thibaud-Crespin Competition, in honour of the soprano Régine Crespin.

She died in Paris in 1966, aged 91.

Notes continue here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marguerite_Long


 

 

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