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Les Illuminations
Britten - Les Illuminations
Britten - Serenade for Tenor, Horn & Strings
Britten - Nocturne
Bostridge; Baborák; Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra / Rattle
EMI 558 0492

Release date October 2005

“Britten’s music is ephemeral,” said the late Malcolm Williamson, Master of the Queen‘s Music from 1975, “it will not last”. With new readings of his song-cycles as confident and engaging as these, there can be no doubt as to the longevity of these unique works. The clear highlight of the disc is the 1958 Nocturne, written in advance of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. The work is set in one continuous movement, but each verse is that of a different poet, with a correspondingly different harmonic world. Each opens with an instrumental obbligato presented with impeccable clarity and always retaining an improvisatory nature. Bostridge demonstrates his remarkable ability to control the dramatic tension not only of his own vocal power but that of the ensemble around him – the change of tone at the close of The Kraken on the words ‘In roaring he shall rise and on the surface die’ sends shivers down my spine. The wonderful timpani obbligato opening the verse from Wordsworth’s The Prelude sets up a journey to an orchestral explosion unlike any other orchestral music by Britten. In Les Illuminations, the strings use a raw, edgy, sometimes unpolished sound, which energises the ensemble from the outset. The BPO’s typically vast palette of tone-colours is fully employed, from the eerie pulsating of Villes to the sonorous landscape of Interlude, which from somewhere seems to draw the timbres of a full orchestra. Bostridge invites us into his musical world and there you are transfixed until the final repetition of ‘Jai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage’ (‘I alone have the key to this savage parade’) and the hauntingly beautiful Départ. Throughout, the control of the ensemble appartently passes effortlessly from the orchestra to Bostridge and back again – but of course it is Rattle’s confident musical vision that secures this dramatic effect.

Reviewed by Frances Boyson