Ibert Flute Concerto Program Notes For Faure

  

  1. Music Program Notes

The cultural scene of the 1920s was infused by a spirit -- part relief, part jubilation -- in which entertainment could be enjoyed guilt free, unfettered by the sobriety, austerity, and destruction that had attended the recent Great War. Dance and theater enjoyed a creative explosion, and composers of every musical persuasion participated, producing perhaps more incidental and theater music and ballet scores than at any other time since; scarcely any composer of note escaped the decade without having produced his or her share of such works.

Ibert's Divertissement is drawn from the incidental score the composer produced for the farcical nineteenth century Labiche play The Italian Straw Hat. Labiche's comedy, a classic of its type, recounts the adventures of a nervous bridegroom on his wedding day as he attempts to save a woman's honor by searching for a replacement for a hat he inadvertently ruined, all the while concealing his frantic mission from his intended bride, her suspicious father, and the entire wedding party. Along the way, disguises, unlikely deceptions, misunderstandings, and mistaken identities propel the action to ever greater frenzy before a tidy resolution.

The celebrated and ubiquitous Flute Concerto is now a classic avidly seized upon by flautists all over the world. It perfectly exemplifies both Ibert’s strengths and weaknesses. It perfectly exemplifies both Ibert’s strengths and weaknesses. Solo Flutist Sir James Galway talks about Ibert's Flute Concerto before performing it at the Opening Night Gala of the 08/09 Season at the New York Philharmonic. Sir James Galway on Ibert's Flute Concerto, Lorin Maazel and the New York Philharmonic. Flute Concerto. EMMANUEL PAHUD - IBERT FLUTE CONCERTO AbsolutelyPahud. Unsubscribe from AbsolutelyPahud? Cancel Unsubscribe. Subscribe Subscribed Unsubscribe 4.8K.

The confluence of periods in the Divertissement -- a genre with roots in the Baroque applied to a nineteenth century comedy by a twentieth century composer -- is reflected in the parodistic pastiche that informs the work's six sections. In addition to Ibert's 'own' music, references to other styles, both sly and blatant, abound. By the end, the astute listener has made his way through a thicket strewn with blues and jazz, music hall tunes, spiky modernist dissonance, Viennese waltzes, and the Wedding March from Mendelssohn's music for A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Parts/Movements

  1. Introduction. Allegro vivo
  2. Cortège. Moderato molto
  3. Nocturne. Lento
  4. Valse. Animato assai
  5. Parade. Tempo di marcia
  6. Finale. Quasi cadenza

Appears On

Concerto

Music Program Notes

YearTitleLabelCatalog #
2018 Chandos CHAN 20088
2017 Warner Classics 560476
2017 Warner Classics 0190295886738
2016 Chandos CHSA 5168
2013 Berlin Classics 0300426BC
2011 EMI Classics / Warner Classics 509990946932
2011 Signum Classics SIGCD 211
2010 Decca
2010 Decca 4215272
2010 Dorian 92109
2008 EMI Classics 5176392
2006 L'Empreinte Digitale 13132
2005 Virgin Classics
2003 Testament 1309
2000 Naxos 8 554222
1999 London 448571
1997 Dutton Laboratories 1002
1996 Newport Classic 85598
1994 Dorian 90181
1994 BIS 630
1993 RCA 61429
1993 ASV 517
1992 Koch International Classics 7094
1992 Chandos 9023
1992 Telarc Distribution 80294
Essay Recordings 1086
London 421527
Fantasy 8430
Virgin 59695
Carlton Classics 5691912
London 421173