Skip to product information
1 of 1
Customer 1
Customer 2
Customer 3
Larry , Jon and 10,000+ others love our products!

Debussy / Dukas / Ansermet,ernest - Debussy / Dukas: Orchestral Works - Music CD

Debussy / Dukas / Ansermet,ernest - Debussy / Dukas: Orchestral Works - Music CD

Regular price $16.34 USD
Regular price Sale price $16.34 USD
Sale Sold out
🔥 Trending Now: 1784 views in the past 24 hours
Amazon
American Express
Apple Pay
Diners Club
Discover
Google Pay
Mastercard
PayPal
Shop Pay
Visa

...

Fast shipping. Estimated delivery times may vary slightly during high demand.

Mix & Match & Save Sitewide!
2 Items = 5% Off, 3 or More = 10% Off

Discount applied automatically at checkout
La Mer was a signature work for Ernst Ansermet. He made four recordings of Debussy's trilogy of symphonic sketches through the course of his career. The first and second of them, from 1947 and 1951, have been made available in new remasterings by Eloquence. Now they are joined by the third, from 1957. All the recordings are remarkably similar in overall outline, differing in minutiae of balance and coloration. Ansermet's exacting approach to details of orchestral balance is particularly suited to the fastidiously crafted music of Paul Dukas. At sessions with the Paris Conservatoire Orchestra in September 1954, Ansermet directed the composer's orchestral showpiece L'apprenti sorcier as well as the much less familiar Orientalist ballet from 1912, La Pri. Conceived by Dukas as a 'pome dans', it is the pre-eminent forerunner to the late masterpiece to which Debussy gave the same unusual classification: Jeux: his elusive, half-lit score for Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes. Ansermet and the OSR made their first recording of Jeux in 1953; the second, in stereo, was reissued on 4800127. Thus Decca initially issued the two pomes danss together, and reserved L'apprenti sorcier for an 'Ansermet Orchestral Concert', coupling it with La Valse and Bolro of Ravel, and Pacific 231 by the conductor's fellow countryman, Arthur Honegger. By 1957, Ansermet had been conducting this music for almost half a century. 'Debussy never repeated himself,' he remarked in an interview with Peter Heyworth in 1962. 'In his music the work itself, the inspiration, creates the form.' And of Jeux: 'Here Debussy's fantasy is exceptionally free and it's formal development is quite extraordinary.'
View full details