Laurent Lefrançois
(b. 1974) www.facebook.com/lefrancoiscompositeur
was born in Caen, France. A graduate of orchestration and composition with Michel
Merlet at the École Normale de Musique de Paris, he studied harmony and counterpoint
with Stéphane Delplace and composition and orchestration with Guillaume
Connesson.
He has received commissions from the Festival Présences of Radio
France 2004, L’association ProQuartet CEMC in 2006, the Modigliani Quartet and
Lise Berthaud, Alla Breve: Radio France Musique, the Festival de Radio France
et Montpellier in 2007, the Music Festival in Empéri in Salon-de-Provence in
2009, the orchestra of Le conservatoire de Douai in 2014 and new music released
in 2015 for the clarinetist Paul Meyer and the orchestra of Rouen. Laurent
Lefrançois won the Boulogne Public International Young Composers Competition
Award in 2006.
A new release from
Evidence Classics http://evidenceclassics.com
brings together a number of chamber
works written by Laurent Lefrançois between 2003 and 2013 featuring Paul Meyer
(clarinet), Magali Mosnier (flute), François Meyer (oboe), Gilbert Audin
(bassoon), Ria Ideta (marimba), Cyril Guillotin and Nima Sarkechik (pianos) and
Quatuor Parisii.
EVCD005 |
Laurent Lefrançois wrote his Sextuor Mixte for flute, clarinet, violin, viola, cello and piano
(2003) following a commission from the Présences Festival. It shoots off
full of energy and joy with something of the feel of Poulenc in his chamber
music. However elements such as occasional moments of minimalism make this a
thoroughly 21st Century work. Each instrument helps weave the
phrases and motifs bringing some fine textures. A slower section arrives with
some fine string passages before the music takes off momentarily before slowing
again with gentle pizzicato strings and a fine clarinet melody. There are more
fine textures from these instrumentalists before moving quickly forward through
some shimmering textures to the subtle coda.
This is a most enjoyable piece that receives an excellent
performance.
Padouk Phantasticus
(2009) was written for the interesting combination of marimba and clarinet
and commissioned by the Musique à l’Emperi Festival. The title refers to both
the ‘stylus phantasticus’ of the Baroque era and the wood that the marimba is
made from. The marimba provides the opening notes before the clarinet quickly
joins, in an attractive melody, rhythmic and flowing. These two instruments are
shown to be natural bed fellows; the mellow clarinet sound complementing the texture
and tone of the marimba perfectly, especially in such fine writing as
this. The varying rhythmic passages are
expertly handled with some fine passages as the two instrumentalists
occasionally vie against each other. Soon a quieter, slower section arrives with
an exquisite part for the marimba and little contributions from the clarinet, playfully
as though a cat and mouse game. The music takes off again before a flourish
leads to the end.
This is a lovely work played with extraordinary
musicianship.
In 2013 Lefrançois took Frescobaldi’s
organ work Toccata sesta d'après and
arranged it for string quartet. This is an arrangement that will take me
looking for the original such are its attractions. This fine arrangement uses
so many of the sonorities of the quartet to bring an intoxicatingly vivid
realisation, very finely played and sensitive to the dynamics.
Approaching a City
wind trio for oboe, clarinet and bassoon (2006, rev. 2012) was written for
wind trio consisting of oboe, B flat clarinet (clarinet in A in the second
movement) and bassoon and won the audience prize at the Boulogne Young
Composers Competition in 2006. In three movements, the title refers to a
painting by Edward Hopper (1882–1967) that depicts a city landscape with a deserted
railway track and tunnel from which one expects a train to suddenly appear.
Movement I has a
rhythmic pulse as it moves quickly forward, these three instrumentalists
providing a very fine texture, each bringing his own fine timbre and colours
with rhythms that are rather syncopated in nature. The music slows to a quieter
passage before leading to the end. The clarinet opens Movement II with a gently flowing melody to which the others join.
There are lovely little decorations, skilfully written, full of finely
conceived ideas and with such a natural development. These players weave some
lovely fugal lines, bringing a lovely flow. Movement
III opens with an insistent theme for all the players which is then varied,
different textures added, with varying rhythms, the theme heard through the
prism of an ever changing variety of ideas.
These three players provide a first rate performance.
Erinnerung for string
sextet (2007) is performed here in its version for string quartet. Commissioned
by the ProQuartet – European Centre for Chamber Music, the composer was asked
to write a piece with Viennese symphonies as a reference point; hence there is
a glimpse of the well-known theme from Mozart’s Symphony No.40 and another less
obvious theme.
There is an astringent edge to the opening phrases but soon
a gentler theme is heard as the music leads forward. There are some little forward
surges as the music builds as well as the allusions to Mozart. Indeed the work
seems to hide a myriad of ideas within its textures. When the music picks up in
tempo and rhythm there are some terrific passages. Later it slows with some
lovely whimsical moments before a hushed coda.
This is a terrific work, brilliantly played by Quatuor
Parisii.
Finally we come to the work that gives this disc its title, Le Nouveau Balnéaire (2007) (The New Sea
Resort). Laurent Lefrançois was inspired by a train timetable slogan ‘A sea
town 2 hours from Paris’ and reflects the Normandy of the Impressionists
together with aspects of the city’s industrial past and cargo ships. Originally
for orchestra, it is performed here in the composer’s version for piano four
hands.
A little theme opens but consistently one piano line tries
to break it up. Soon the lower line begins to conform and blend in with the fine
flowing theme, very French, bringing to mind the influence of Debussy. The
music works through some lovely passages with varying rhythms and a fine melodic
flow, with Lefrançois’ distinctive rhythms and subtle repetitions. The music builds
before quietening to a reflective beautifully played section with a little
underlying pulse over which jewel like phrases are heard. Later there is a passage
where phrases are picked out slowly over the underlying theme before leading to
a gentle hushed coda.
This is another really fine work that receives a very fine
performance from pianists Cyril Guillotin and Nima Sarkechik.
I am very glad to have been introduced to this fine
composer. Here, there are works that I will return to frequently. The recording
is excellent and there are informative booklet notes.
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