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La Tragédie de Salomé: Florent Schmitt’s most famous composition … 15 commercial recordings and counting.

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Salome (Gustave Moreau)

Salome: Painting by French Symbolist Artist Gustave Moreau (1826-1898)

Without question, La Tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50 is Florent Schmitt’s most famous composition.  Composed in 1907 and revised in 1911, this ballet is far more often performed as a symphonic suite these days (although the Mariinsky Ballet revived the stage version in 2013).

The composition became famous from the very start – recognized by music critics and audiences alike as one of the best examples of French tone painting.

It’s also the composer’s best-known “orientalist” work – a bright star in a constellation that also includes other femme-fatale heroines like Cléopâtre, Abisag, Salammbô and Oriane.

Florent Schmitt, La Tragedie de Salome, album booklet from Columbia set M-157

Florent Schmitt himself conducted the second recording of “La Tragedie de Salome” in Paris in 1930, leading the Straram Concerts Orchestra. This is the album booklet from the American Columbia release (Set M-157) which sold for US$8 in 1931 — the equivalent of $98 in today’s dollars!

So it’s not surprising that Salomé is also the composition of Schmitt’s that has enjoyed the most commercial recordings over the years.

Beginning in 1929/30 – when the first two recordings were waxed within a few months of one another – and continuing up to the present day, there have been no fewer than 15 commercial recordings made of this music.

One recording of the original unpublished 1907 ballet has also appeared – a fascinating reading of a version that’s nearly twice as long as the one the world knows best.

We are very fortunate to have a variety of interpretive approaches to this music.  I have listened to all but one of the recordings (the elusive 1942/43 Charles Munch reading).  While a number of the recordings appeal to me more than others, to my ears each of them has its own merits.

Indeed, Florent Schmitt has been quite fortunate in the quality of conductors and orchestras that have been inspired to bring this music in front of the microphones.

[In fact, one recording could be considered a “definitive” interpretation because the composer himself is leading the musical forces.]

Listed below are all of the commercially released recordings of La Tragédie de Salomé of which I’m aware.  (Corrections or additions to the data are welcomed.)

Orchestre Symphonique du Gramophone, Piero Coppola, conductor.  Recorded September 1929 … Original 78-rpm release:  Gramophone W 1055-57 … CD reissue:  Lys 373 (with works by Golestan, Honegger, Rabaud, Roussel)

Orchestre des Concerts Straram, Florent Schmitt, conductor.  Recorded April 18-19, 1930, Théatre des Champs-Elysées (Paris) … Original 78-rpm release:  LFX 68-71 … CD reissue:  EMI  54840-2 (with works by Roussel)

Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire, Charles Munch, conductor.  Recorded October 15, 1942 and April 3, 1943, Salle du Conservatoire (Paris) … Original 78-rpm release:  Gramophone W 1559-62 (Never reissued)

L’Orchestre du Théatre National de l’Opéra de Paris, Pierre Dervaux, conductor.  Recorded October 16, 1957, Maison de la Mutualité (Paris) … Original LP release:  EMI/Voix de Son Maitre FALP 530 … CD reissue:  Forgotten Records FR 410 (with works by Dukas)

Florent Schmitt Lalo Richard Strauss Paul Paray DSO Mercury

Prix de Rome winner: Paul Paray’s 1958 recording of “Salome” — the first release of this music in stereophonic sound.

Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Paul Paray, conductor.  Recorded March 23, 1958, Orchestra Hall (Detroit) … Original LP release:  Mercury SR 90177  Stereo … CD reissue:  Mercury Living Presence 434336-2 (with works by Liszt, Saint-Saëns, Richard Strauss, von Weber)

Orquestra Sinfónica Nacional, Pedro de Freitas Branco, conductor.  Recorded July 14, 1961, Studio A, Emissora Nacional de Radiodiffusão (Lisbon)  (Live recording) … Original CD release:  Strauss SP 4113 (with works by Debussy, deFalla)

New Philharmonia Orchestra, Antonio de Almeida, conductor Recorded 1970, London … Original LP release:  RCA Victor LSC 3151  Stereo … CD reissue:  ReDiscovery RD 082 (with works by Chausson, Dukas, Duparc)

Florent Schmitt Salome Psaume Martinon EMI

Passionate advocate: Jean Martinon’s 1972 EMI recording of Florent Schmitt’s “Salome” is a highly effective interpretation.

L’Orchestre National de l’O.R.T.F., Jean Martinon, conductor.  Recorded October 6-7, 1972, Salle Wagram (Paris) … Original LP release:  EMI/Pathé Marconi C 069-12166  Stereo/Quadraphonic … CD reissue:  EMI CDC 749748-2 (with works by Schmitt, Debussy)

L’Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio-France, Marek Janowski, conductor.  Recorded  October 1988, Studio 103, Radio-France (Paris) … Original CD release:  Erato 2292-45029-2  Stereo … CD reissue:  Apex 2564-62764-2 (with works by Schmitt)

Florent Schmitt: La Tragedie de Salome (original version) (Marco Polo)

Double the music, half the musicians:  The original 1907 version of “Salome,” recorded by Patrick Davin and Marco Polo in 1991.

Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz, Patrick Davin, conductor.  Recorded December 18-19, 1991, Pfalzbau-Hall (Ludwigshafen) … Original CD release:  Marco Polo 8.223448  Stereo  (Original 1907 version)

BBC National Orchestra of Wales, Thierry Fischer, conductor.  Recorded October 24-25, 2006, Brangwyn Hall, Guildhall (Swansea) … Original CD release:  Hyperion DCA 67599  Stereo  (with works by Schmitt)

Schmitt Stravinsky Debussy Cambreling

Sylvain Cambreling’s recording is part of Hanssler Classic’s multi-volume survey of the Ballets Russes’ Parisian stage productions from 1900 to 1925.

SWR Symphony Orchestra (Baden-Baden u. Freiburg), Sylvain Cambreling, conductor.  Recorded December 2007, Konzerthaus (Freiburg) … Original CD release:  Hänssler Classic 93.223  Stereo  (with works by Debussy, Stravinsky)

Borusan-Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra, Sascha Goetzel, conductor.  Recorded May 24-29, 2009, Borusan Oto, Istinye (Istanbul) … Original CD release:  Onyx 4048  Stereo  (with works by Hindemith, Respighi)

Orchestre Métropolitain, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, conductor.  Recorded July 2010, Église Saint-Ferdinand, Laval (Québec) … Original CD release:  ATMA ACD2 2647  Stereo  (with works by Franck)   (View a video clip of the recording session)

Florent Schmitt Tragedie de Salome Tortelier OSESP

Transnational flair: The superlative 2010 Chandos recording features a French conductor and Brazilian musicians.

Orquesta Sinfónica do Estado de São Paulo, Yan-Pascal Tortelier, conductor.  Recorded July 5-9, 2010, Júlio Prestes Cultural Center (São Paulo) … Original CD release:  Chandos CHSA 5090  Super Audio  (with works by Schmitt)

A measure of the importance of the Salomé score — and of the performers involved – is the fact that nearly all of these recordings remain available today in CD or download formats — even most of the ones from the 78-rpm and pre-stereophonic era.



First-ever recording of Florent Schmitt’s ballet Le petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil to be released.

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Little Fairy Sleepy-Eyes, printed by Tolmer for Duffield (1923)

The English-language version of the children’s book, printed by A. Tolmer in Paris for Duffield Publishing Co. (1923).

Timpani, the French CD label that specializes in recording unfamiliar French repertoire of the romantic and modern eras, has just announced plans to release the first-ever recording of Florent Schmitt’s children’s ballet, Le petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil, Opus 73.

The Ferme-l’oeil score is quite interesting in that it began life in 1912 as a suite of seven movements for piano duet (Schmitt’s Opus 58). 

In the early 1920s, the composer orchestrated and expanded the score, turning it into a 45-minute full-length ballet that was premiered at the Paris Opéra in 1924.

It’s infectious music that deserves pride of place next to Maurice Ravel’s Ma Mère l’Oye, another other French children’s ballet that also started out as a piano duet suite.

Jackes Mercier, French conductor

Passionate advocate for Florent Schmitt’s music: French conductor Jacques Mercier.

I wrote about this music a few months back, noting at that time the lack of a recording of the full ballet score. 

Now Timpani is rectifying this yawning gap in Schmitt’s discography – and doing it in great style with a sparkling performance by Jacques Mercier directing L’Orchestre National de Lorraine.

Although the recording isn’t set for release until January 2014, Timpani is providing a great foretaste of this special disk by publishing an audio clip of the first number in the ballet, La noce des souris  (The Nuptials of the Mice).

We owe a debt of gratitude to Maestro Mercier, who has been an advocate of Florent Schmitt’s music and who has brought us fine recordings of such scores as Antoine et Cléopâtre, Mirages and Salammbó.

Timpani record label logo… And likewise to the Timpani label, which has been offering up brilliant recordings of these “exotic flowers of late romanticism” since 1990.


The Invencia Piano Duo Completes its Florent Schmitt Series on the NAXOS Grand Piano Label

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Invencia Piano Duo 10th Anniversary Recital

The Invencia Piano Duo’s Tenth Anniversary recital featured the music of Florent Schmitt and Paul Bowles.

One of the most intriguing recent projects involving the music of French composer Florent Schmitt is the complete music for two pianos and piano duet, recorded by the Invencia Piano Duo (Andrey Kasparov and Oksana Lutsyshyn).

These works have been released on the NAXOS Grand Piano label over the past year, with the final two installments (Volumes 3 and 4) released in the previous several months.

These two volumes contain some of Schmitt’s most inventive piano four-hands music, and include several world premiere recordings:

  • Musiques foraines, Op. 22 (Carnival Music)
  • Trois pieces récréatives, Op. 37
  • March for the 163rd Infantry Regiment, Op. 48, No. 2

Also included on these CDs is the first-ever recording of the Lied et Scherzo, Op. 54 in Schmitt’s version for piano four-hands, but played on two pianos in this recording.  (The original version of the piece was composed in 1910 for double woodwind quintet, along with alternative versions prepared by the composer for horn and piano as well as cello and piano.)

In late September 2013, I had the opportunity to visit with Andrey Kasparov and Oksana Lutsyshyn on the occasion of the Invencia Piano Duo’s 10th Anniversary gala concert at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, VA – a recital that featured the music of Florent Schmitt, Frédéric Chopin, Louis Moreau Gottschalk, and the American composer-and-author Paul Bowles.

The two pianists were kind enough to share their thoughts and insights about their Florent Schmitt recording project as it comes to completion.

PLN:  Tell me which pieces on Volumes 3 and 4 of the series are ones that you find particularly memorable?

Florent Schmitt Piano Four-hands music (volume 3) (Invencia Piano Duo)AK:  The Musique foraines is a major six-movement work composed between 1895 and 1902, and we are giving it its world-premiere recording.  It’s very colorful – and also very cosmopolitan.  You’ll hear as much ‘Morocco’ in the Belle Fathima movement as you do ‘Paris’ in the other movements.

To my mind, Schmitt took a cue from Georges Bizet in his Jeux d’Enfants – in that these are pieces written for two piano virtuosos. 

Most four-hand music is not written that way; usually it’s composed for two ‘passable’ players who can make things happen together.  Even Liszt’s four-hand music isn’t particularly virtuosic. 

Schmitt picked up where Bizet left off.  And yet the music is so deceptive that it doesn’t sound particularly difficult, leading some music critics to assert that the music doesn’t stretch the capabilities of the players.  This is a complete misreading of the reality!

PLN:  Does this mean that this music is likely to remain underperformed, even with its new-found visibility?

AK:  I’m not particularly optimistic that it will take root in the four-hand repertoire.  I wouldn’t be surprised if when many pianists try to play this music, after a few rehearsals they just give up.

OL:  The same situation exists with a work like the Trois pieces récréatives.  When we sight-read this music, it seemed so easy.  But when you play it in concert, it’s very exposed.  If you miss something, it’s a mess!

AK:  That’s correct – it’s a lot about phrasing.  I only realized the power of phrasing after I worked with the compositions of Schmitt that utilize just five set notes for the primo part.  In addition to the Récréatives, those works are the Eight Short Pieces, Une Semaine du petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil, and Sur cinq notes

All of these composition really require you to think hard about how to phrase the music properly so that it ‘works.’

Florent Schmitt wasn’t the only composer doing this, by the way.  It was quite in vogue at that time; André Caplet wrote a suite based on five notes as well.  It’s really invaluable pedagogical repertoire – and its purpose was noble indeed.

But here’s the thing:  Schmitt goes way beyond pieces written just for teaching purposes.  His are true concert pieces.

PLN:  I’ve seen Bruno Belthoise and Claude Maillols’ YouTube performance of the final ‘Chinese Umbrella’ movement from Une Semaine du petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil.  Watching the fingering ‘gymnastics’ required to play the two parts on one piano makes me realize just how difficult it must be to get it right.

AK:  You are absolutely correct!  Schmitt was very determined that the primo part would have nothing but those five notes, which makes it nearly impossible to play that final movement properly.

PLN:  One of the pieces in Volume 4 that appeals to me as well is Humoresques, from 1911.  What do you think of this composition?

Florent Schmitt volume 4 Invencia Piano DuoAK:  This music reveals some of Schmitt’s tongue-in-cheek humor for which he was so famous. 

Take the opening Marche militaire, for instance.  It starts out very pompously – and then it just sort of fades away. 

One wag suspected it was Schmitt’s way of characterizing the French military in satirical terms:  the great disappearing army.  Or French artillery tanks – you know, the ones with backup lights!

By the way – the Humoresques is another one of those pieces by Schmitt that is very pleasant and easy to listen to.  But they’re full of polyrhythmic invention – and may be really brutal to perform and record as a result.

PLN:  Volumes 3 and 4 contain several transcriptions:  the 163rd Regiment March and the Lied et Scherzo.  What are your thoughts on these pieces?

OL:  The March is an interesting composition.  When we read through it the first time, we didn’t take it too seriously.  But with more study, we started to hear more harmonies that really piqued our interest.  We ended up liking the work a lot.

AK:  And the Lied et Scherzo is a phenomenal piece.  In fact, it’s more challenging than some of the larger compositions Schmitt wrote for piano four-hands.  It’s a piece that flows in different metric streams – at times much like the composer Elliott Carter, who of course came along much later. 

I think Schmitt’s two-piano arrangement of the Lied et Scherzo is actually more successful than many of his other arrangements of this music.  The advantage of the piano is that you don’t have to breathe to sustain a note, so you can take things as slowly or as fast as you wish.  That adds a lot to this music.

PLN:  The music world owes the Invencia Piano Duo a debt of gratitude for taking on such an ambitious project.  Those of us who love Schmitt’s musical legacy thank you!  Are there any final thoughts to share as you wrap up the series?

OL:  I feel that Florent Schmitt is underestimated as a composer.  He wrote some great music, and we are happy to introduce it so that people can become acquainted with it.

AK:  We genuinely love this composer.  And we are fortunate in that we could take the proper amount of time to study and practice these pieces.  This music requires substantial effort to get it right. 

We have a studio in our home with two pianos, so we could rehearse at all times.  It may be that other pianists won’t be able to go “all out” like we’ve done.

And one other thing we’ve discovered about Schmitt’s music:  There are always new insights to be learned!  Just tonight, for instance, when we performed the Trois Rapsodies, all of a sudden some new musical details and nuances came to light – right in real-time, during the performance! 

This is unusual enough that it’s absolutely thrilling to encounter when it happens — and it’s surely the mark of a true musical masterpiece. 

But for duo-pianists in recital, this can also be very intimidating and forbidding — not to say disastrous for people without sufficient pianistic experience.

Invencia Piano Duo in recital (Kasparov + Lutsyshyn)

The Invencia Piano Duo in recital (Oksana Lutsyshyn and Andrey Kasparov).

Thankfully for us, the Invencia Piano Duo has been an ideal ensemble to bring Florent Schmitt’s four-hand piano music treasures to the world.

We should be very grateful to them – as well as to Old Dominium University and the artistic management at the NAXOS label – for giving us the opportunity to get to know this interesting and highly inventive collection of music.


L’Eventail de Jeanne: When Florent Schmitt teamed up with his compatriots to create an “omnibus” ballet.

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Throughout classical music history, “omnibus” compositions have been rather rare – and for the most part, they’ve been forgotten shortly after their celebrated premieres.

Haxameron composers

The composers of “Hexameron” … led by Liszt.

Perhaps the earliest one of these interesting concoctions that has at least remained on the fringes of the repertoire is Hexameron — a morceau de concert put together in the late 1830s under the aegis of Franz Liszt — to which some of the leading composers of the day contributed.

Hexameron consists of a theme, variations and finale – with the theme coming from Vincenzo Bellini’s opera The Puritans.  The musicians who contributed variations to Hexameron included Frédéric Chopin, Karl Czerny, Henri Herz, Johann Pixis and Sigismund Thalberg, in addition to Liszt.

Originally written for piano, Liszt also created a version of Hexameron for piano and orchestra.  Having listened to that rendition, my conclusion is that the music is … interesting enough to hear once or twice.

L'Eventail de Jeanne (music score)

“L’Eventail de Jeanne”: The ballet score was a collaborative effort by ten French composers including Florent Schmitt.

Happily enough, a later collaboration – this time in Paris of the 1920s – resulted in a work that is much meatier musically.  It’s titled L’Eventail de Jeanne (Jeanne’s Fan), and it was first mounted as a ballet in 1927.

The roster of composers who contributed music to this ballet reads like a “Who’s Who” of the Parisian classical music scene of the time:  Maurice Ravel, Albert Roussel, Jacques Ibert, Georges Auric, Darius Milhaud, Pierre-Octave Ferroud, Alexis Roland-Manuel, Francis Poulenc, Marcel Delannoy … and Florent Schmitt.

What brought these ten composers together to create this work?  The answer lies in the “Jeanne” of the ballet’s title.  This is one Jeanne Dubost, a popular Parisian hostess and patroness of the arts.

In the chronicles of the Paris salon, Mme. Dubost ranks right up there with the other famed ladies who opened their homes to the arts community – women like Pauline Viardot and Winnaretta Singer, Princesse de Polignac (and heiress to the Singer sewing machine fortune).

In some respects, Jeanne Dubost was perhaps more interesting than many of the other celebrated Parisian hostesses in that her political views were an eyebrow-raising mix of socialism and libertarianism.  In addition to the various artistes whom she invited to her salon on the Avenue d’lena, she was famous for opening her home to left-leaning politicians like Paul Boncour, Aristide Briant and Paul Painlevé.

An amusing story recounts how during one of Mme. Dubost’s soirées featuring a Native American chieftain as the guest of honor, the chief proceeded to regale the other guests with a series of (presumably authentic) blood-curdling war-cries.  This was followed by a stately and dramatic presentation of an enormous eagle’s feather to the hostess.

In addition to her highly active social activities and entertaining, Mme. Dubost also ran a children’s ballet company and was active in several important music societies.  And here’s where our ten Parisian composers come into the picture.

Popular legend has it that Mme. Dubost presented leaves from her fan to these composers, asking each of them to compose a short dance number for her pupils.

The reality is a tad less flamboyant:  In order to thank their hostess for her pleasant gatherings of artists and politicians, Ravel, Roussel and Schmitt decided – along with their junior compatriots Auric, Delannoy, Ferroud, Ibert, Poulenc and Roland-Manuel – to surprise Mme. Dubost with a suite of dances performed at her home by the young dancers of her school.

The “fan” title was chosen for its symbolism – with each movement of the ballet “unfolding” before the audience like the leaves of Jeanne’s fan.

So on June 16, 1927, the Dubost salon was the venue for a new “cooperative” ballet – L’Eventail de Jeanne – mounted in a production that featured scenery and costumes by the celebrated designer Marie Laurencin, famous for her charming costumes and highly effective mirror effects.  The chamber-sized orchestra accompanying the dancers was conducted by Roger Desormière.

Tamara Toumanova, ballerina

Ballerina Tamara Toumanova (1919-1996): Her Paris debut was in “L’Eventail de Jeanne.”

Thoroughly enchanted by this “juvenile entertainment,” theatre director Jacques Rouché decided to bring the ballet to the stage of the Paris Opéra.  That production, which was mounted in March 1929, again featured Mme. Laurencin’s costumes along with new choreography by Yvonne Frank and Alice Bourgat.

Budding ballerina Tamara Toumanova – then all of 10 years old – was featured in the ballet’s starring role.  This was Mlle. Toumanova’s Parisian début before she went on to become an international ballet star.

What gives L’Eventail de Jeanne its staying power?  More than the story, it’s the quality of the music – a series of ten tableaux that unfolds as follows:

1.    Fanfare  (Maurice Ravel)
2.    Marche  (Pierre-Octave Ferroud)
3.    Valse  (Jacques Ibert)
4.    Canarie  (Alexis Roland-Manuel)
5.    Bourrée  (Marcel Delannoy)
6.    Sarabande  (Albert Roussel)
7.    Polka  (Darius Milhaud)
8.    Pastourelle  (Francis Poulenc)
9.    Rondeau  (Georges Auric)
10.  Kermesse-Valse  (Florent Schmitt)

Several of these selections have gone on to enjoy a certain measure of fame wholly apart from the ballet – most noticeably Poulenc’s Pastourelle and Milhaud’s Polka.

And with several of the other composers’ contributions, one can hear distinct echoes of other compositions they wrote – for instance, Ibert’s Valse (shades of Divertissement) and Roussel’s Sarabande (similar in style and flavor to the same-named movement from his Suite in F Major).

And what about Florent Schmitt’s musical contribution?  The Kermesse-Valse is the longest and most substantial number in the entire ballet, coming as it does at the conclusion of the work in a carefree danse-générale.

In creating this music, Schmitt turned to a “carnival waltz” he had sketched out for piano back in 1903 (in London of all places).  The work is very much on the same plane as the waltz-rhythm numbers that comprise Schmitt’s piano four-hand scores Reflets d’Allemagne and Trois Rapsodies.

In a move that also seems wholly fitting to the composer, the Kermesse-Valse calls for much larger orchestral forces than any of the preceding numbers in the ballet – and it likely stretched the capabilities of the musicians performing at Mme. Dubost’s salon in the 1927 premiere.

But we are the beneficiaries today, because there’s no denying that Schmitt’s highly colorful music brings L’Eventail de Jeanne to a rousing and highly satisfying conclusion.

… Which we can experience, too, because the complete ballet has been recorded twice:  first by Geoffrey Simon and the Philharmonia Orchestra in 1984 (on the Chandos label) and shortly thereafter by Pierre Stoll and the Rhineland-Palatinate Philharmonic Orchestra (on the Cybelia label).

L'Eventail de Jeanne ballet (Geoffrey Simon/Philharmonic, Chandos)The Simon/Philharmonia recording has been uploaded to YouTube in its entirety.  It’s a captivating, polished performance that sounds as good today as when it was first released some 30 years ago.

What have been the fortunes of Florent Schmitt’s Kermesse-Valse since making its first appearance in the “omnibus” ballet?  Certainly, it has not achieved the same degree of fame independent of the ballet as has been the case of Poulenc’s Pastourelle.

But the work was published as Schmitt’s Opus 80, and it had its first concert hall performance in April 1936 by the Colonne Concerts Orchestra directed by Paul Paray – the conductor who premiered more of Schmitt’s compositions than anyone else.

Autotgraphed manuscript for Kermesse-Valse (Florent Schmitt)

A page from the autographed manuscript for Florent Schmitt’s “Kermesse-Valse.” Note the composer’s small, precise handwriting — a characteristic of all of his manuscripts.

Listening to the charms and excitement of the Kermesse-Valse gives us a tempting foretaste of what Reflets d’Allemagne and Trois Rapsodies must surely sound like in Schmitt’s own orchestrations of these scores, which he prepared at roughly the same time.

Those works still await their first recordings – at least in the post 78-rpm era.  Here’s hoping some of today’s most ardent Schmitt advocates – perhaps Leon Botstein, Stéphane Denève, JoAnn Falletta or Jacques Mercier – will choose to take them up soon.


Florent Schmitt’s Crépuscules (1898-1911): Richly evocative tone painting in the finest French pianistic tradition.

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Cimetierre at duskComposed between 1898 and 1911, Florent Schmitt’s Crépuscules, Op. 56 is a set of four pieces for solo piano that was published in 1913.

It’s one of the most compelling French piano works of the period.  It also looks forward to Ombres which came along just a few years later, — and which is probably the composer’s ultimate expression in this idiom.

Roughly translated into English as “Twilight,” Crépuscules’ four movements are as follows:

  • Sur un vieux petit cimetière (In an Old, Small Cemetery)
  • Neige (Snowfall)
  • Sylphides
  • Solitude

    Florent Schmitt and Ralph Vaughan-Williams

    Florent Schmitt and composer Ralph Vaughan-Williams, pictured together in about 1957: Schmitt had dedicated the first movement of “Crepuscules” to his English counterpart nearly 50 years earlier.

With uncanny ability, Schmitt’s highly descriptive music establishes the moods suggested by these titles.

The first movement, which was dedicated to Schmitt’s lifelong friend and fellow composer Ralph Vaughan-Williams, conjures up the dark, oppressive stillness of a graveyard – eerily presaging Ravel’s own piano suite Gaspard de la nuit.

The quietly expressive “Snowfall” movement and fluid-yet-nervous virtuosity of “Sylphides” that follow provide a fitting contrast to the dark hues of the first movement.

The final “Solitude” movement returns to the atmospherics of the opening number.  Schmitt’s manuscript for this movement bears an inscription from the French symbolist poet Léon-Paul Fargue (1876-1947):

“…But what we love always ends up disappearing, and we are alone.  Always alone … all aim for solitude.”

Leon-Paul Fargue and Maurice Ravel

The Symbolist poet Paul-Leon Fargue (left), pictured with Maurice Ravel (near left) and several other members of “Les Apaches.”

Schmitt’s characterization of Fargue’s poignant sentiment is perfectly rendered – proving that he was every bit as capable as his compatriot Ravel in setting to music the verses of the man known as “The Poet of Paris.”

And small wonder, since all three gentlemen were part of Les Apaches, a loose-knit group of musicians and writers who were in the forefront of artistic and aesthetic trends in Paris in the early years of the 20th Century.

In any number of Parisian salon gatherings, you could expect to find Schmitt, Ravel and Fargue together in attendance.

Considering its highly effective pianistic writing and evocative characteristics, Crépuscules is a suite that deserves to be far better known than it is.

In fact, it has had only two commercial recordings to my knowledge.

Florent Schmitt piano music (Alain Raes)

First “Crepuscules” recording: French pianist Alain Raes in 1985.

The French pianist Alain Raës recorded the suite in 1985, and more recently fellow-Frenchman Laurent Wagschal (in 2005).  These performances are available on YouTube.

Happily, both of them are quite good — although my personal preference leans more towards Laurent Wagschal’s interpretation.

And there is now a pianist from among the newest generation of performers who is championing this music:  a young Australian artist named Kenan Henderson.

Kenan Henderson, pianist

Young Australian pianist Kenan Henderson: Passionate advocate for Florent Schmitt’s “Crepuscules” piano score.

Still in his early twenties, Kenan Henderson is the 2013 recipient of the inaugural Peter Schodde Piano Scholarship prizeCrépuscules was part of the core repertoire program Mr. Henderson performed during the various rounds of this competition (along with music of Franz Liszt).

Thanks in part to the Schodde scholarship prize proceeds, Kenan Henderson is embarking on several years of additional music study in Germany.

Recently, I had the opportunity ask the pianist to share his thoughts on Florent Schmitt’s piano music — and the Crépuscules score in particular.  Here are highlights from that interview:

PLN:  How did you become acquainted with the music of Florent Schmitt, and of Crépuscules in particular?

KH:  I first became aware of Florent Schmitt and his music through my own personal exploration.  I knew he was a prominent member of the aesthetist group Les Apaches, of which Maurice Ravel was also a member.  I have always had a deep love of French music from this period, so I decided to do some further research.  

Florent Schmitt piano music (Laurent Wagschal)

Early inspiration: Laurent Wagschal’s recording of “Crepuscules,” released on the Saphir label.

The wonderful recording of Crépuscules by Laurent Wagschal was actually the first piece by Florent Schmitt I ever listened to, and it made a great impression.  I loved it immediately.

PLN:  What do you find most appealing about the music?

KH:  I love the dark sensuality of the music.  In fact, I find it to be one of the richest and most colorful works by any French composer of this time period.  

In many ways, Crépuscules is an embodiment of the ideals of the Symbolist artistic movement – a period of art which I have always loved.  I also think the work has a very visual, almost synaesthetic quality, and the depiction of the subject matter of each movement is incredibly strong.

It’s a shame the composition is almost entirely unknown because it really deserves to be as famous and frequently played as works by Ravel or Debussy.

PLN:  Do you have a movement from the set that is your favorite – or that you find particularly noteworthy?

KH:  I love all of the movements!  But I’d say ”Sylphides” is perhaps the most remarkable, as it combines amazing harmonic shapes and colors with dangerously stark and quicksilver-like textures.  It’s very difficult to play — but when played well, it’s absolutely stunning.

The impression of the piece upon hearing it for the first time tends to be a bit of a blur of notes, but it is actually constructed in an incredibly efficient manner by a composer with a remarkable ear for color.

In my opinion it’s one of the Florent Schmitt’s best pieces – and perhaps one of the most daring and original piano works of all from this period!

PLN:  Some people see a connection between this piece and the piano works of Ravel or Debussy.  In what ways do you see the music as similar … or different?

KH:  I agree that there is a very strong connection between Crépuscules and the piano music of Debussy and Ravel.  The impressionistic inspiration behind the work is quite similar to a number of Ravel and Debussy compositions such as Debussy’s Images or Estampes and Ravel’s Gaspard de la nuit or Miroirs – all of which depict similar subject matter to Crépuscules

The presence of bell-like sonorities is also a similar feature — along with how the scores are often written on three staves for atmospheric effect.

It’s important to remember that these men were all in the same social circles and lived in close proximity to each other most of the time.  So it’s no surprise at all that they would be influenced by each other’s works.  

I’ve read about a story where one day Ravel announced to his circle of friends that it was impossible to write effectively for piano anymore.  Florent Schmitt then proceeded to write his remarkable Les Lucioles (Fireflies, Op. 23, No. 2) in reaction to Ravel’s contention, which subsequently provoked Ravel into writing his innovative and famous Jeux d‘eau.  This shows just how closely linked these two figures were in day-to-day life.

At the same time, I think of Crépuscules as being quite unique.  It’s more contrapuntal than anything Debussy or Ravel composed, making it structurally more similar to the music of César Franck, for example.

The arrangement of the four movements also mimics the typical classical sonata form (i.e. ‘sonata’ opening movement, intermezzo ‘slow’ movement, scherzo, rondo) which I think is a deliberate gesture – and a unique one at a time when it was quite fashionable to be dismissive of classical forms.

PLN:  How would you characterize the music’s difficulty, technically and interpretively?

KH:  The music is quite difficult, but not generally in technical details (although “Sylphides” is one of the more difficult pieces I’ve learned).  Its difficulty lies more in carefully constructing a hierarchy of ideas.

The piece is actually quite “symphonic” in nature, and one would do well to approach it as an orchestral work:  building up the many levels of sounds and sonorities over time.  

The music also features extensive rhythm changes; often, the performer is required to play in three or even four rhythmic pulses at the same time!  This took me a great deal of practice to achieve — particularly in the “Neige” movement which combines unusual rhythmic patterns that often change bar by bar (although one might not initially hear it).

PLN:  Tell me about your decision to include Crépuscules as part of your piano competition repertoire.  This must have been a very unique selection!

KH:  I learned this work for my final Honours recital.  It was quite possibly the Australian premiere of the work, and it received a lot of praise afterwards.  I have an affinity for French music of this period, so I decided to include this work in the Schodde piano competition after several people suggested I perform it.  

Also, I had not played the music in a while and missed performing it!

PLN:  Where have you performed this music?

KH:  For the most part, I’ve played this work in my hometown of Adelaide, South Australia, in performances for Recitals Australia and for other events.  It has been recorded twice for radio – so perhaps it has been heard internationally over the airwaves, too. 

I also performed selected movements of the work throughout Germany for several music professors during a study trip in 2012.  Most of them had never even heard of Florent Schmitt — let alone Crépuscules.  They were intrigued by the music and surprised at the work’s high quality.

PLN:  What sort of audience reaction have you experienced when you perform Crépuscules?

KH:  People love this music!  I’ve always received warm comments afterwards, with audience members commenting on how much they enjoy the work’s brooding atmosphere and changing colors.

PLN:  I understand that you wrote a college thesis on the topic of this music …

KH:  Yes, I wrote my college thesis on this work at the suggestion of my Honours professor, who thought it would be an interesting project.  

I had great difficulty finding any material on the work – or even on the composer, which surprised me.  I was forced to rely primarily on information contained in CD booklets, websites and so forth, since I could not locate even a single volume in English on the composer’s music or his life, which astounded me.

In my research, one of the most interesting things I discovered about Crépuscules was how long it took for the composer to complete it.  Schmitt began working on it as a student – and finished it a decade later as one of the most famous French composers of his time.  

In many ways, this work is a synopsis of this transition for the composer.  Schmitt must have felt a great sense of accomplishment when he finally completed it.

PLN:  Are there other piano works by Florent Schmitt that you have studied or performed?

KH:  I am familiar with other Schmitt piano pieces from several CDs I now own, as well as from my own research into the composer’s output.  I would love to perform Ombres and Enfants in the near future, and possibly Chaine Brisée also. 

There is also a great body of two-piano music in his oeuvre.  Perhaps I can convince a friend to learn and perform some of those pieces with me!

PLN:  Tell me briefly about your background in music.

KH:  I started learning piano at the age of five and continued with regular lessons until I was 11 or 12 years old.  I then began learning violin, but eventually switched back over to piano, which I had begun to take more seriously by the age of 16.

I studied architecture at the University of Adelaide, but decided halfway through the degree program that I wanted to focus on music as well.  So I completed my architecture degree and began studying Classical Performance in 2009. This year I finished my Honours, attaining a First Class result, and I will be commencing a Masters degree in Germany in 2014.

PLN:  Do you see your studies in architecture and design relating to your musical activities in some ways?

KH:  Perhaps there is some unconscious or subconscious link I am not aware of, but I can’t really think of any examples where my studies in architecture have directly influenced my musical thinking or sensitivities.  To me, there’s quite a gap between these two parts of my life, actually.

PLN:  What are your current activities involving studying, performing or teaching piano?

Kenan Henderson pianist

Australian pianist Kenan Henderson in recital (Adelaide, South Australia).

KH:  At the present time, I’m teaching piano at several schools in order to help raise money for my Masters degree in Germany next year.  I won the Peter Schodde Memorial Scholarship competition which will also contribute towards this goal, and I’m applying for several other major scholarships to help raise funds for my studies.

As for recitals, I will soon be performing a concert series around South Australia, which is currently in the organizational stages.

PLN:  What future plans do you have for performing Crépuscules or other piano music by Florent Schmitt?

KH:  My desire is to learn new Schmitt piano music for upcoming concerts – possibly Ombres.  As for Crépuscules, it is such a stunning piece, I’m sure I’ll be playing it for many years to come, wherever I have the opportunity to perform.

… To which we can only say in response:  We hope Kenan Henderson keeps Crépuscules in his repertoire “forever and ever” …


Lied et Scherzo (1910), Florent Schmitt’s Incredible Piece Featuring the French Horn

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One of the most interesting works by Florent Schmitt is his Lied et Scherzo, Op. 54, which he composed in 1910.

Paul Dakas, French Composer

Paul Dukas (1965-1935): Florent Schmitt’s “Lied et Scherzo” was dedicated to his fellow French composer.

The piece was first conceived as a work for double wind quintet, with one of the French horns acting as soloist throughout.

The work was dedicated to Schmitt’s fellow French composer Paul Dukas, who was famous for his own concertante work for French horn, the Villanelle (composed four years earlier in 1906).

Musicologist Pierre Barbier describes Lied et Scherzo as a “surprising diptych” that begins in a “dreamy, passionate” mood followed by a “fantastic, biting scherzo.”

To this, I’d add that the music sounds positively “orchestral” in its conception — notwithstanding the limited number of players.

Simply put, it’s a thrilling piece of music.

I have heard four recordings of Lied et Scherzo in its original all-winds form – one featuring members of the Lydian Chamber Players recorded in concert in November 1977 at the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City (released on the AmCam label) … another with the Sylvan Winds, from 1992 (on the Koch label) … a third one featuring the Czech Nonet, recorded in 2000 and released on the Praga label … … and a French recording from 2008 featuring members of L’Orchestre d’Harmonie de la Région Centre (on the Corelia label).

Schmitt Lied et Scherzo Czech Nonet

Precision and passion: The Czech Nonet’s impressive performance of Florent Schmitt’s “Lied et Scherzo.”

Of the four, my own favorite is the Czech Nonet performance, which to my mind possesses the perfect blend of precision and ardor – not least in the very challenging horn part.

But as with a number of other works by Florent Schmitt, the composer also created alternate versions of this music featuring different instrumentation.

One version features cello and piano, in which form the music was first performed in 1911 by the renowned cellist Paul Bazelaire.

About that performance, Schmitt biographer Yves Hucher wrote of the score’s “melodious daydreams, passionate development and fantastic rhythms,” and how the music “positively shimmers.”

To my knowledge, no recorded performance of the cello-and-piano version of the Lied et Scherzo exists … but we do have a very fine performance of another alternate version of this music:  one featuring French horn and piano.

Florent Schmitt Lied et Scherzo del Vescovo + Hubeau

A personal favorite: the French horn and piano version of “Lied et Scherzo” with Pierre del Vescovo and Jean Hubeau.

In this case, it is a stellar realization by the very impressive French horn soloist Pierre del Vescovo, joined by pianist Jean Hubeau, in an Erato recording dating from 1980.  That recording remains available today in a multi-disc set featuring five important Schmitt works for orchestra and chamber ensemble.

[Pierre del Vescovo is just one of a number of horn players who have been attracted to the "challenging charms" of this music.  The Australian/American performer Barry Tuckwell is another accomplished soloist who has played this music in recital in the United States and Canada.]

The French horn/piano version happens to be my own personal favorite of all of the permutations of this music that Schmitt created.

But … we mustn’t give short shrift to the composer’s fourth and final version – this one created for piano four-hands.  It had its premiere recording only in 2012 — more than a century after its composition — and was released in 2013 by NAXOS Grand Piano in a highly effective reading by the Invencia Piano Duo  as part of this group’s 4-CD set of the entire catalogue of Florent Schmitt’s works for piano four-hands.

Writing about the all-piano version of the Lied et Scherzo, the South African/British music critic Dan Morgan stated:

Lied et Scherzo … is remarkable for its ‘solo’ passages set against discreet utterances from the ‘orchestra,’ as it were.  It makes for a perky little dialogue, a strong sense of argument and counter-argument, which is always genial.  It’s certainly not loquacious – that’s not Schmitt’s way – and this 11-minute tête à tête seems to pass in a flash.”

Florent Schmitt volume 4 Invencia Piano DuoGoing further, the Invencia Piano Duo’s Andrey Kasparov has written that “the melodious Lied gradually segues into the driving and goal-oriented Scherzo, at times featuring intense polymetric layerings of contrasting materials that presage similar ideas by Ravel, Carter and others.”

As a measure of the importance of this score, the Lied et Scherzo was one of the works featured in the 1914 cross-American tour of the Barrère Ensemble of Wind Instruments, a performing group organized by the Franco-American principal flautist of the New York Philharmonic, Georges Barrère.  Among the cities where the work was performed were Detroit, Cincinnati, New York City – and even Charleston, West Virginia.

Georges Barrere, French flautist

Georges Barrere (1876-1944): The Franco-American flautist included Florent Schmitt’s “Lied et Scherzo” in the repertoire of the Barrere Ensemble’s cross-American tour in 1914.

As recounted in Nancy Toff’s biography Georges Barrère, Monarch of the Flute, a reviewer at one of the concerts (at the Cooper Union) wrote this of the Schmitt piece:  “Only a portion of the audience seemed to take a fancy to this latter ultra-modern music.”

One could certainly quibble about whether the music was indeed “ultra-modern” in 1914 — and it certainly doesn’t seem that way today.

Either way, I find the Lied et Scherzo to be one of Schmitt’s most musically satisfying compositions – not least the incredible – and thrilling – Scherzo section of the work.

I recommend you investigate this highly interesting score.  See if you don’t feel the same way.


Elegance and Class: Florent Schmitt’s Quartet Pour presque tous les temps (1956).

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Ensemble Martinu (Rendezvous + Florent Schmitt)

The Ensemble Martinu’s 2008 recording of Florent Schmitt’s quartet “Pour presque tous les temps” is stunning.

One of the last works created by the French composer Florent Schmitt was a quartet he titled Pour presque tous les temps.

It is one of the last numbered compositions in Schmitt’s entire output (#134 out of a total of 138 opus numbers) and was completed in 1956, two years before the composer’s death.

Schmitt was known to use plays-on-words for the titles of some of his compositions.  Thus, we have pieces like Hasards (“Chances”) … Suite sans esprit de suite (“Suite that is not in the Style of a Suite”) … Le Clavecin obtempérant (“The Ill-Tempered Clavichord”) … Suite en rocaille (“Suite On-the-Rocks”) … and in the case of the Opus 134, “Quartet for Almost All the Time.”

Some musicologists have surmised that Schmitt was doing a riff on Olivier Messiaen’s Quatuor pour la fin du temps (“Quartet for the End of Time”), which was composed in 1941 during Messiaen’s wartime captivity in Germany.

But I find this cheeky connection rather unlikely because of the substantial difference in the length and scope of the two works.  (Messiaen’s is fully 50 minutes long, whereas Schmitt’s work is closer to 10 minutes in duration — and of a vastly different musical character.)

Schmitt’s quartet is scored for flute, violin, cello and piano.  The dedication on the manuscript is to the Quatuor Instrumental de Paris.  Taken together, its four movements clock in at fewer than 11 minutes, with all but its third movement lasting fewer than three minutes each.

  1.  Alerte
  2. Au clair de la R – IV
  3. Lent mais non languide
  4. Vif

What I find delightfully surprising is how fresh and vigorous the music sounds – it hardly seems the work of a composer who was, by then, well into his ninth decade.

The musical idiom is “agreeably modern” – even “neo-classical” – but with a big measure of impressionistic flavor overlaid on it.

In fact, the music sounds far more lush than similarly scored pieces by other composers like Albert Roussel, Darius Milhaud and Jacques Ibert.  In the end, this is music that remains true to Schmitt’s Romantic inclinations.

Another characteristic of this music is this:  It never grows old.  I find that with each additional hearing, fascinating new musical elements come to the fore.  Because of this, I consider Pour presque tous les temps to be an “important” piece within its genre.

Unfortunately, Pour presque tous les temps finds its way onto music programs only occasionally.  A quick online search reveals only three or four references to public performances of the score within the past several years – and none of them happening in the United States.

The situation is similar in recordings; to my knowledge, the piece has been recorded only twice.

Florent Schmitt Pierre Wissmer

First recording (to my knowledge): The Marcal label’s 2006 release of Florent Schmitt’s late-career quartet “Pour presque tous les temps.”

The earlier of the two recordings (from 2006, released on the Marcal label) features violinist Anne Werner-Fuchs, cellist Jean Barthe and flautist Frédéric Werner, along with Genevieve Ibanez on the piano.  It is coupled with chamber music by the Swiss composer Pierre Wissmer.

I haven’t had the opportunity to hear the Marcal reading, but I have heard a newer recording by the Ensemble Martinů, released in 2008 on the Cube Bohemia label in a CD that also contains music by other French composers (Ravel and Ibert) and Czech composers (Martinů, Kurz and Riedlbauch).

The Cube Bohemia recording is polished and effective, performed by clearly first-rate musicians.  I heartily recommend it to anyone curious to sample this highly engaging music.

The music score and instrumental parts are available for viewing and downloading here.

Pour presque tous les temps is a piece that could certainly use more advocates.  I hope several other ensembles will choose to take it up soon – particularly in the United States.  Any takers?


Janiana: Florent Schmitt’s Rich, Robust Symphony for String Orchestra (1941)

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L'Orchestre feminin de Paris

Jane Evrard and L’Orchestre feminin de Paris premiered Florent Schmitt’s “Janiana” Symphony in 1942.

We know that Florent Schmitt’s penultimate work was the Symphony No. 2, composed in 1957 and premiered in 1958 by Charles Munch and the French National Radio Orchestra a few months before the composer’s death at age 87.

The question is, which composition stands as Schmitt’s first essay in the genre?  Because in fact, the composer left no work specifically labeled as a “first” symphony.  So there’s confusion as to whether the Janiana Symphony for String Orchestra, Op. 101 from 1941 represents the composer’s first one … or if that designation should go to the Symphonie Concertante for Piano & Orchestra, Op. 82, composed in 1931.

Personally, I feel that Janiana should be get the nod, in that it is a four-movement symphony in every sense of the term – its brevity notwithstanding.

And what a wonderful piece this symphony is:  richly scored and musically fulfilling from first note to last.

Anyone who thinks that Schmitt’s considerable talents in orchestration might prove far less effective in a piece scored for string instruments alone need not worry.  In fact, Schmitt treats the strings with the same degree of luxuriance that we hear in the composer’s big orchestral scores like La Tragédie de Salomé, Antoine et Cléopâtre and Salammbô.

Taking a look at the string parts for Janiana reveals all sorts of devices that add musical interest — and that take this piece far beyond the realm of “string quartet writ large” – such as numerous divisi, tremolos, arpeggios and trills.

Too, the melodies and harmonies in this symphony are robust, complex flavors that combine to produce a richness that is all-too-often missing from string-only scores.

Janiana is a work that certainly doesn’t overstay its welcome; taken as a whole, the symphony lasts less than 20 minutes.  It’s divided into four movements as follows:

  1. Assez anime, a telescoped sonata form of fewer than 100 measures
  2. Musette d’allure joyeuse, featuring a capricious and playful scherzo rhythm
  3. Chorale (Grave, assez lent), its fervent character suggesting an homage to Schmitt’s teacher and mentor, Gabriel Fauré
  4. Avec entrain, sans precipitation, a spirited conclusion that delivers not only pounding rhythms, but also passionate musical passages and lavish harmonies that are “to die for” …

    Jane Evrard, French conductor

    Jane Evrard (1893-1984), wife of French conductor Gaston Poulet and founder of L’Orchestre feminin de Paris, led the first performance of Florent Schmitt’s “Janiana” Symphony.

The Janiana Symphony was composed in 1941 at Schmitt’s summer home in Artiguemy, high in the Pyrenees Mountains.  As alluded to in its title, the symphony was dedicated to Jane Evrard and her Orchestre féminin de Paris – an ensemble of 25 women musicians she founded in 1930, and for which other French composers such as Albert Roussel, Jean Rivier and Jean-Yves Daniel-Lesur also wrote scores.  It was Evrard’s orchestra that would give the premiere performance of the symphony in Paris in the spring of 1942.

To my knowledge, there has been only one commercial recording of this work ever made – recorded by Erato in 1966 with the Jean-François Paillard Orchestra.  As one of the first of Schmitt’s orchestral works beyond La Tragédie de Salomé to receive a recording in the modern era, I’m frankly surprised that no additional recordings have emerged in the decades since, because it’s one of the most full-bodied and engaging scores to come from Schmitt’s pen – so very satisfying on so many levels and with obvious audience appeal.

Florent Schmitt Janiana Symphony Jean-Francois Paillard Orchestra

The only commercial recording of the “Janiana” Symphony so far — with the Jean-Francois Paillard Orchestra (1966).

Fortunately, the Erato recording remains available today as part of a multi-disc set featuring five important Schmitt works for orchestra and chamber ensemble.

To my mind, the Janiana Symphony is a gem of a piece that would be a stellar addition to the repertoire of any chamber or string orchestra.  It is a piece that deserves to be far better known.  If they haven’t done so already, here’s hoping groups like the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and the St. Paul Chamber Orchestra will take it up someday.



Florent Schmitt and the Flute

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For a composer who wrote many pages of chamber and instrumental music featuring nearly every instrument of the orchestra, Florent Schmitt’s compositions featuring the flute are comparative few. 

Philippe Gaubert, French flute player and composer

Philippe Gaubert (1879-1941), French flautist and composer: Florent Schmitt dedicated his Scherzo-Pastorale to him.

In fact, I count only three such works in the Schmitt catalogue.  They span all the way from his earliest years as a composer (1887) to nearly to the end of his life (1954).  And all three scores are well-worth getting to know.

The earliest of these works is the Scherzo-Pastorale, Op. 17, a work for flute and piano which Schmitt began composing in 1889 when he was not yet 20 years old.  The piece had a long gestation, receiving its final revisions as late as 1912.  At the time of its publication it was dedicated to the famous French flute player and fellow composer Philippe Gaubert.

Kathryn Thomas, flautist

Premiere recording: English flautist Kathryn Thomas.

Until very recently, this music was hardly known.  It received its world premiere recording only in 2008, by English flautist Kathryn Thomas and pianist Richard Shaw, in a highly interesting CD release on the Deux-Elles label titled Faure and His Circle.

Just about five minutes in length, the Scherzo-Pastorale is revealed as a highly appealing early work.  In the CD’s program notes booklet, pianist Richard Shaw characterizes the piece as “a short, charming and inventive work,” adding that “its sparkling character and harmonic language suggest the influence of Richard Strauss.”

Faure and his Circle (Deux-Elles CD) (Kathryn Thomas, flute)Personally, I don’t hear strong Richard Strauss influences – and I suspect that the piece’s composition predated most of the German composer’s international successes.  Either way, I agree that the music is infectious and interesting throughout – and is over way too soon.

I also find that the Scherzo-Pastorale stands up very well in comparison to the other works on the Deux-Elles disk, including music of Camille Saint-Saëns, Gabriel Fauré, Charles Koechlin, Georges Enesco, Alfredo Casella and Lili Boulanger.

More than three decades would pass before Schmitt composed another work featuring the flute – in this case, four of them.  His Quartet for Flutes, Op. 106, which was composed in 1944, stands nearly unique in the flute repertoire. 

It’s true that composers like Franz Anton Hoffmeister and Joseph Boismortier composed music for flute ensemble – but those works appeared in the 1700s. 

Other compositions featuring flute quartet would come along in the modern era (from 1970 on), created by composers like Eugène Bozza, Jacques Castérède, Pierre Dubois, Serge Lancin and Paule Maurice.  But Schmitt’s Quartet stands nearly alone in the period before this.

Quatuor Arcadie

Premiere recording of Florent Schmitt’s Flute Quartet: Quatuor Arcadie (ca. 1972).

Is Schmitt’s score more than simply a curiosity?  Fortunately, we have several fine recordings that give us an affirmative answer.  The one I know best was performed by the Quatuor Arcadie, recorded in the early 1970s and released on the Edici label.  It would be the only recording available until 2005, when a performance by the Israel Flute Ensemble was released on the Centaur label. 

Impressions Francaises (Israel Flute Ensemble)To my knowledge, the Arcadie Quartet premiere recording hasn’t been reissued on CD or in download form, but the Israel Flute Ensemble reading is available here.

A short work, the Quartet’s four movements, taken together, comprise only about eight minutes of music:

I.  Pompeux

II.  Vif

III.  Lent

IV.  Avec entrain, mais sans précipitation

I have known the Arcadie Quartet recording for years.  It reveals a highly inventive score, rather similar in spirit to Schmitt’s compositions featuring other woodwinds (the Saxophone Quartet and the Clarinet Sextet in particular).  It’s a fine piece that deserves to be better known; I’m sure it would make a highly effective recital number for flute players.

Jean-Pierre Rampal, French flautist

The great French flute player Jean-Pierre Rampal, to whom the Suite for Flute & Orchestra by Florent Schmitt was dedicated.

… Which brings us to Florent Schmitt’s third and final work featuring the flute:  the Suite en quatre parties, Op. 129, a work completed in 1954 and dedicated to the great French flautist Jean-Pierre Rampal.

Unfortunately, Rampal never performed the piece, declaring it to be “atrocement difficile” (horribly difficult). 

And in fact, until very recently, the work was never performed or recorded in its flute-and-orchestra incarnation, although it has been performed on occasion using a piano reduction score.

Today, we owe a debt of gratitude to the Brazilian flautist James Strauss for discovering the orchestral manuscript of the Suite in the archives of the Durand publishing house in 2002, resurrecting the work, and making the world premiere recording in 2013 with the Lithuanian National Symphony Orchestra conducted by Laércio Diniz.

As soloist Strauss has recounted about the early days of this music:

“There never was a premiere with orchestra; the flute part with piano accompaniment was performed for the first time on October 29, 1959, a little more than a year after the death of Florent Schmitt.”

Writing about the Suite, he continues:

“It is, without doubt … one of the most difficult works for flute and orchestra composed in the 20th century.  I always thought there was no impressionistic flute concerto ever composed – but then found this one. 

“The Suite is within the impressionistic universe of Debussy and Ravel; the orchestration is quite transcendental.  It really does sound like a Debussy or Ravel concertante piece.  And the ending is remindful of Daphnis et Chloë, with a dance in 5/8 time.”

I am not in complete agreement with Mr. Strauss’ assessment, in that I also consider Jacques Ibert’s 1934 Flute Concerto to be fairly impressionistic in flavor.  But I’m hard-pressed to think of any others beyond that one complementary case.

James Strauss, Brazilian flute player

Premiere recording: James Strauss with the Lithuanian National Symphony Orchestra.

To give you a flavor of the inventive music in the Suite, this YouTube clip contains brief excerpts from each of its four movements, as performed by James Strauss and the LNSO.

Listening to Florent Schmitt’s Suite for Flute & Orchestra, it’s clear that the composer was able to assimilate the best of the 20th Century’s classical music idioms, reaching back to the time of Ravel and Debussy without sounding derivative or dated. 

In this respect, I sense similarities with the composer’s penultimate work, the Symphony No. 2 (written in 1957).  Likewise, that piece, while sounding thoroughly contemporary, also hearkens back to the sumptuousness of the ecstatic middle section of Psaume XLVII, a work Schmitt had composed more than a half-century earlier.


Originality, Eclecticism … and Female Voices: Florent Schmitt’s Six Chœurs (1931).

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Music lovers who know Florent Schmitt’s stunning Psaume XLVII (1904) might wonder what other choral music may have come from the composer’s pen.

Florent Schmitt Choral Music (ATMA)

Premiere recording of Florent Schmitt’s Six Choeurs: Gilbert Patenaude on the ATMA label.

And in fact, there are nearly 25 individual choral scores written by Schmitt, composed over more than a half-century’s time.

None of them are nearly as famous as the Psalm, but they contain rich musical rewards and are well-worth discovery.

Interestingly, among Schmitt’s choral compositions are more than a few that are scored for a capella voices – as well as sizable number that are scored for all-male or all-female voices.  In this regard, Schmitt’s choral output could be considered pretty unique.

A good case in point is Six chœurs, Op. 81.  Composed in 1930/31, this set of six choruses featuring female voices presents a rich and varied blend of poetry and music that is highly characteristic of Schmitt’s musical and literary eclecticism.

Cecile Sauvage, French poet

Cécile Sauvage (1883-1927), French poet (and mother of composer Olivier Messiaen): Her poetry inspired one of the movements of Florent Schmitt’s Six choeurs.

The music is set to the poetry of Paul Fort, Cécile Sauvage, Charle-Auvrey and the composer himself, making it a work of great contrasts.

The Canadian choral director Gilbert Patenaude has noted that in the Six Choruses, “symbolism, playfulness, tenderness and humor are blended together.”  I heartily agree with this characterization.

The titles of the six movements are testament to the varied musical moods in store for the listener:

I.  Le page et la reine  (The Page Boy and the Queen)

II.  Marionettes

III.  Si la lune rose  (The Pink Moon)

IV.  Ezann

V.  L’Amoureuse

VI.  Canards libéraux  (Broadminded Ducks)

Paul Fort, French Symbolist poet.

Paul Fort (1872-1960), French Symbolist poet: Two of his poems were set to music in Florent Schmitt’s Six Choruses.

The Page Boy and the Queen, set to words by Paul Fort — a particularly favorite poet of Schmitt’s — relates a tale of adultery in medieval times.

Another Fort-inspired movement, L’Amoureuse, is one that is drenched in sentimentality.

Si la lune rose, setting a poem written by Cécile Sauvage (who was the mother of Olivier Messiaen, incidentally), is a lullaby to a newborn child.

In great contrast, Marionettes, set to a poem by Charle-Auvrey, conjures up the spinning and whirling of puppets to masterful effect.

The two remaining movements, which are set to Florent Schmitt’s own texts, are little more than exercises in word-sounds and onomatopoeia.  The nonsensical phrases and sentences are remindful of Sacheverrel Sitwell’s verses, so masterfully set to music by Sir William Walton in Façade.

Paul Paray, French Conductor

Paul Paray, conductor of the premiere performance of Six Choeurs in its orchestral garb (1933).

The first performance of Six Chœurs was given in 1933 by the Chorale Amicitia with the Colonne Concerts Orchestra under the direction of Paul Paray – the person who premiered more of Florent Schmitt’s compositions than any other conductor.

Shortly thereafter, Schmitt prepared a version of the music for female chorus and piano, and it is in this form that the music has been more commonly heard.

Moreover, the choral/piano version has been recorded twice to my knowledge, whereas the chorus/orchestra version still awaits its first recording.

The two chorus/piano recordings were made roughly contemporaneously.  A Canadian release featuring Gilbert Patenaude directing Le Jeune Opéra du Québec was recorded in 2000 and issued on the ATMA label.

Florent Schmitt choral works (Calliope)

Florent Schmitt’s Six Choeurs: Original issue on the Calliope label (2001).

The following year a second recording, featuring Régine Theodoresco directing the Chœur de femmes CALLIOPE, was released on the Calliope label.  Happily, that recording has just been reissued by Timpani Records.

Florent Schmitt: Choral Works for Female Voices (Timpani)

The reissued recording on the Timpani label (2014).

While both recordings of Six chœurs feature quality performers, my personal preference is for the CALLIOPE interpretation, which is more spirited and brings forth the music’s many contrasts to more forceful effect.

In 1942, the music critic Robert Bernard made this observation about Florent Schmitt and his compositions:

“No musician is less bound than is Florent Schmitt by a formula’s constraints, and a substantial and significant part [of his output] is steeped in the most playful liveliness and an ironic verve that stretches to utterly paradoxical and truculent fantasy.”

Indeed, Mr. Bernard could have been writing about the Six Choruses.


Excitement on Steroids: Five Live Concert Recordings of Florent Schmitt’s Blockbuster Choral Composition Psalm 47 (1904)

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Florent Schmitt: Psaume XLVII

A sonic “experience”: Florent Schmitt’s Psalm 47.

For many classical music lovers, nothing can compare to a live performance.  While studio recordings promise greater precision and better sound quality — along with avoiding distracting audience noise – this is often accompanied by a loss of spontaneity and immediacy.

And for a piece of music as viscerally thrilling as Florent Schmitt’s Psalm XLVII, Op. 38, composed in 1904, the excitement is even more exhilarating in a live concert performance. 

But concert performances of this music are still quite rare.

Fortunately for us, the full measure of excitement is captured in five live recordings of this music that are currently available on CD or via high-res download.  Even better, they’re directed by some of classical music’s great conductors:  Désiré Inghelbrecht, Jean Martinon, Eugene Ormandy, Jean Fournet and Leon Botstein.

Here are details on each of these live recordings along with links to where they can be purchased:

Désiré Inghelbrecht/L’Orchestre National de l’O.R.T.F. & Chorus (1964): 

Desire Inghelbrecht, French conductor

Désiré Inghelbrecht gave the premiere performance of Florent Schmitt’s Psaume XLVII in 1906 … and his last one more than a half-century later.

This performance is historically important in that this conductor was the one who gave the world premiere performance of Psalm XLVII back in 1906. 

Maestro Inghelbrecht would return to the score numerous times in the ensuing decades, culminating with this 1964 concert he gave a short time before his death.  While the performance itself is a bit rough-hewn, it’s well worth hearing.  It is available from the archives of French Radio and Television, including as a high-res download.

Jean Martinon/L’Orchestre National de l’O.R.T.F. & Chorus (1973): 

Jean Martinon, French conductor

Jean Martinon’s legendary EMI recording of Schmitt’s Psalm XLVII was preceded by a live performance that’s full of vigor and passion (1972).

This was the public performance that preceded Jean Martinon’s celebrated recording of the Psalm, released by EMI and still considered a touchstone recording by many music lovers 40 years on. 

In the live performance, the huge pipe organ played by famed organist Gaston Litaize is missing, but the overall excitement level is incredibly high.  As in the EMI recording, the live performance features the dazzling soprano soloist Andréa Guiot.  This performance is also available from French Radio and Television, including as a high-res download.  (A low-res version is also available on YouTube.)

Eugene Ormandy/Philadelphia Orchestra + Mendelssohn Club Chorus (1977): 

Eugene Ormandy

Eugene Ormandy conducted the Philadelphia premiere of Florent Schmitt’s Psaume XLVII in 1977.

This concert performance, which also features soprano Kathryn Bouleyn, appears to have been very well-received by the audience if the hearty applause heard at the end of the piece is any guide. 

This performance has proven to be rather elusive over the years, but is currently available for purchase through the Music in the Mail website (Disco Archivia #748).  Those interested in investigating Maestro Ormandy’s approach to this work should definitely take action while the recording remains available.

Jean Fournet/Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra + Shinyu-kai Chorus (1992): 

Jean Fournet, French Conductor

Jean Fournet’s 1992 live concert performance of Psaume 47 is available on the Japanese Fontec label (FOCD 9249) — a highly effective reading.

The French conductor Jean Fournet was the music director of this Japanese orchestra for many years, during which time he programmed much French music including Schmitt’s Psaume XLVII and La Tragédie de Salomé

This live concert performance of the Psalm, captured in 1992, has been issued commercially on Fontec, a Japanese CD label.  I consider it the most successful of these five live performances based on a combination of the interpretation, musical precision, and sound quality.  The CD recording is available for purchase from Fontec directly.

Leon Botstein/American Symphony Orchestra + Bard Festival Chorale (2012): 

Florent Schmitt: Psalm 47, Leon Botstein, American Symphony Orchestra, Bard Festival Chorale

Leon Botstein’s 2012 performance at the Bard Music Festival was the second time he programmed Schmitt’s Psalm 47 with the American Symphony Orchestra.

The most recent of the five  performances is one that has been commercially available for about a year now. 

This performance is the swiftest interpretation of the Psalm I’ve ever heard.  Perhaps as a result of this, there are a number of instances when the orchestra, chorus and soprano soloist aren’t quite in sync with one another, which will prove problematic for some listeners. 

Maestro Botstein first performed this work with the ASO back in 1999 – a concert I was privileged to attend.  That time, he adopted the “conventional” tempo (which I find more effective — and utimately more successful).  Still, it’s good to have this 2012 rendition so readily available through Amazon.

Without doubt, Psaume XLVII is one of the most exhilarating choral works in the musical literature.  Hearing it in the “immediacy” of a live concert atmosphere makes the excitement even more palpable – which is why these five performances are so necessary to hear. 

Simply put, they’re glorious renditions. You’re missing out on something special if you don’t explore them.

[If you have any personal observations about these performances that you'd like to share for the benefit of other readers, please leave a comment below.]


Spanish flautist Roberto Casado talks about Florent Schmitt’s Sonatine en Trio and Suite en rocaille – and their place in French Impressionistic music.

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Roberto Casado, Spanish Flute Player

Roberto Casado

The Spanish flautist and chamber musician Roberto Casado discovered the music of Florent Schmitt as part of a quest to find new repertoire pieces in the French Impressionist tradition

His goal was to find scores that weren’t derivative, but instead contained interesting touches that distinguished them from the well-known works of Ravel and Debussy.

This mission led him to two compositions by Schmitt:  The Sonatine en Trio, Op. 85 and the Suite en rocaille, Op. 84.  Mr. Casado and his colleagues – instructors at the Conservatory of Vitoria-Gasteiz in Spain – introduced these pieces to Spanish audiences in 2012 and 2013.

Vitoria-Gasteiz Conservatory of Music (Spain)

Conservatorio Vitoria-Gasteiz (Spain)

Recently, I asked Mr. Casado to share his thoughts on the music of Florent Schmitt – and of these two pieces in particular.  (His observations below are translated from Spanish into English.)

How did you discover the music of Florent Schmitt?

As a flute player, I am always looking for new repertoire to study and perform.  Several years ago, I wanted to prepare a recital of chamber music featuring three instruments:  flute, clarinet and piano.  My pianist introduced me to the Sonatine en Trio

Looking at the score, I was immediately struck by the perfect balance between the three instruments; each of them is given a prominent voice in the piece.  To my mind, it was one of the best pieces of music scored for flute, clarinet and piano that I had ever seen. 

Pahud-Meyer-Le Sage

Early inspiration: Emmanuel Pahud, Paul Meyer and Eric Le Sage in Florent Schmitt’s Sonatine en Trio on EMI.

I then listened to Emmanuel Pahud’s recording of the Sonatine and enjoyed his interpretation very much.  So we decided to learn this music (although we were not able to perform this piece in recital until 2013 – a year after the Suite en rocaille, which I had actually discovered later).

What attracted you to Schmitt’s music?  What aspects of it are particularly appealing to you personally?

I love the atmosphere created by the composer – the musical style is so highly effective.  I would consider the music basically impressionistic – particularly the Sonatine

The Suite en rocaille could be considered a little more advanced harmoically.  But its combination of string trio, flute and harp is quite impressionistic – and also very French.

Some people see a connection between the Suite en rocaille and works by Debussy, Ravel and Roussel that feature the same instrumentation.  In what ways do you see these composers and their compositions as similar … or different?

I do see similarities between Florent Schmitt and all of these other composers.  After all, they lived in the same time and shared the same musical milieu in Paris.  These shared experiences must have influenced all of them. 

And in fact, we see that they – along with Marcel Tournier, Gabriel Pierné and others – wrote pieces of similar types featuring the same groups of instruments.

When did you first perform these two pieces?

The Sonatine was first performed in 2013 in a recital that included clarinet, flute and piano pieces spanning some 250 years – from C.P.E. Bach to Camille Saint-Saëns, Dmitri Shostakovich, Tony Aubin, Clare Grundman, Mario Kuri-Aldana – and Florent Schmitt. 

I have also worked on the Sonatine with my chamber music students in the conservatory.

Quinteto Tournier

The Tournier Quintet in recital.

The Suite en rocaille was first performed in 2012.  It was part of a program that explored the “colors of Impressionism.”  This was done with my chamber group which is called the “Quinteto Tournier.”  The program included music by Gabriel Pierné, Marcel Tournier and Jean Françaix in addition to Florent Schmitt.

How did the audience react to the Schmitt pieces?

The audiences loved the music!  They could enjoy the colors and atmosphere – as well as the big contrasts between the slow, languid movements and the more spirited fast ones.

How would you characterize Schmitt’s music in terms of its technical or interpretive challenges?

From a technical and interpretive standpoint, it isn’t easy music.  It is quite difficult to get the rhythmic challenges correct, while also bringing out the different voices, colors and sounds. 

That being said, Schmitt’s music is well-worth the effort to learn, and the rewards are definitely there for the audience as well as the players.

Tell me something about the Tournier Quintet.

Marcer Tournier, French composer and harp player

The Tournier Quintet took its name from Marcel Tournier (1879-1951), French composer, pedagogue … and virtuoso harpist.

The members of the Quinteto are teachers at the Conservatory of Vitoria-Gasteiz in Spain.  The group was formed many years ago, and it has been my pleasure to be part of this ensemble. 

We adopted the name of the composer Marcel Tournier for the Quintet because of his sympathies with the instruments making up our ensemble.  In fact, we perform Tournier’s music frequently as part of our concerts.

Our philosophy is to present the music of lesser-known composers alongside the standard repertoire – provided the worth of the music is on the same high plane.  This kind of discovery is rewarding for the public as well as for us players!

Does the Quintet have plans to perform the Schmitt scores again in the future?

We would love to do so, but currently there are no plans.  Unfortunately, the current economic crisis in Spain is having a negative impact on the number of concerts and recitals that can be organized and put on.

Tell me briefly about your own background in music.

I began studying the flute when I was about 9 years old.  I started in my home city of Pamplona, Spain, and then continued my studies in France (Les Landes and Evreux). 

My musical career has been mainly in Spain and France, as well as several other European countries.  I would love to offer some musical recitals in the United States and the Far East, too.

Are there any other works by Florent Schmitt besides these two that you have studied or performed?

I have worked on several other pieces, but haven’t performed them in concert – the Suite for Flute, a wind quintet, and the Quartet for Four Flutes.  I would love to perform these works someday, but the opportunity hasn’t been presented yet.

It may be some time before we can hear Roberto Casado and his musical colleagues tackle these other Schmitt compositions.  But fortunately for us, their performances of both the Sonatine en Trio and Suite en rocaille have been uploaded to YouTube.  You can sample them here and here.


Voluptuous Colors: Florent Schmitt’s Suite for Trumpet (1955)

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Hakan Hardenberger, Florent SchmittOver his long composing career, Florent Schmitt wrote numerous concertante pieces showcasing nearly every instrument of the orchestra.

As with a good number of other French composers, some of these works were written as examination pieces for students at the Paris Conservatoire.

A representative example is Schmitt’s Suite en trois parties for Trumpet & Piano, Op. 133, a work he composed in 1955.

Schmitt’s score isn’t the only piece for trumpet composed for students of the Conservatoire; other works composed during the first half of the 20th century included ones by Camille Saint-Saëns, Claude Debussy, Arthur Honegger, Philippe Gaubert, Olivier Messiaen, Guillaume Balay, André Chailleux, Jeanine Rueff and Theo Charlier.

The Trumpet Suite is a late work:  It is #133 out of a total of 138 opus numbers in the Schmitt catalogue – written when the composer was in his mid-80s.

To my ears, the music bears no indication at all of an aged or tired musician.  Instead, I hear three contrasting movements exuding a level of inspiration that rises well above that of a mere competition or demonstration piece.

To be sure, there are many challenging passages for the soloist, but they don’t seem to have been incorporated into the piece purely for the pyrotechnics.  And at no time does the music come across as ”rhetorical.”

As was his custom with many of his compositions, Florent Schmitt orchestrated the Suite, and so this music has had a life in the concert hall in addition to recital programs.

In fact, Schmitt’s Suite stands alongside several notable trumpet concertante works composed by other French composers during the same time period – among the most famous being the trumpet concertos of Henri Tomasi and André Jolivet.

The musicologist Adélaïde de Place has written that the three movements of the Suite reveal Florent Schmitt to be an “ardent colorist.”  She adds:

“The first and third parts of the suite [Gaiement and Vif] are gay, incisive and forceful, while the second part [Lent sans excès] is rather wildly lyrical, with the trumpet letting itself go over the evocative melody played by the strings and the limpid, mysterious sonorities of the harp.”

Eric Aubier, French Trumpet Player

Only recording of the orchestral version: Eric Aubier and l’Orchestre de Bretagne.

I am aware of just one recording of the Trumpet Suite in its orchestral garb – a fine quality performance by Eric Aubier with l’Orchestre de Bretagne conducted by François-Xavier Bilger.  It was released in 1998 on the Pierre Verany (Arion) label.

By contrast, in its original trumpet-and-piano form the Suite has had more exposure in the recital hall and in recordings.

To my knowledge, the first recording was made in 1989 by noted Swedish trumpeter Håkan Hardenberger with Roland Pöntinen at the piano (released on the Philips label).

That blockbuster recording, which also features György Ligeti’s Mysteries of the Macabre, remains my personal favorite of the numerous trumpet CDs Mr. Hardenberger has recorded.

More recently, Schmitt’s Trumpet Suite has been recorded by Pascal Vigneron (in 2005 on the Quantum label) and Hannes Läubin (in 2006 on the Audite label).

Tora Thorslund, Swedish Trumpet Player

Tora Thorslund’s live performance of Florent Schmitt’s Trumpet Suite is uploaded on YouTube.

Also, there is a highly effective live recital performance of the Suite available on YouTube, featuring another Swedish trumpet player, Tora Thorslund.

Interestingly, when comparing the piano and orchestra versions of the Suite, it quickly becomes clear that Schmitt managed to conjure up the same dose of “color” in both.

As British music critic Paul Griffiths has claimed, the second movement of the Suite, with its muted trumpet sounds, is positively “voluptuous” even in the piano version.

Griffiths is correct:  That movement – and indeed the entire Suite – has atmosphere to burn.


Introït, récit et congé: Florent Schmitt’s tour de force for cello and orchestra (1948).

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Gabriel Faure, French composer

Gabriel Fauré (1845-1924), Florent Schmitt’s teacher and mentor.

Over his seven decades-long composing career, Florent Schmitt would pen three concertante works for cello. 

The early Chant élégiaque (from 1899-1903) seems clearly influenced by Schmitt’s teacher and mentor, Gabriel Fauré, who had composed his own Elegy for Cello & Orchestra in the 1880s.

The 1932 Final for Cello & Orchestra comes from Schmitt’s middle period of creativity – a piece that still awaits its first recording.

But it was Schmitt’s last cello concertante work that is the most substantive – and the most musically rewarding.  It’s the Introït, récit et congé, Opus 113, composed in 1948 for the French cellist André Navarra (1911-1988).

Andre Navarra, French cellist

Renowned cellist André Navarra (1911-1988) gave the first performance of Florent Schmitt’s Introït, récit et congé in 1951.

At the time, André Navarra was one of the most famous cellists in the world, with a decades-long solo and chamber-music career already behind him.  Having taken several years away from performing during World War II (during which time he served in the French infantry), Navarra had recently resumed concertizing worldwide, along with taking up a teaching position at the Paris Conservatoire.

During the 1940s and 1950s, Navarra was to commission new works from a number of Fracophone composers including Jacques Ibert, Arthur Honegger, André Jolivet, Claude Pascal – and Florent Schmitt.

The skill and virtuosity of the cellist gave Schmitt a golden opportunity to compose a highly dramatic piece of music that exploited the most dazzling attributes of the cello. 

From reading the composer’s own words about the music, it is clear what he had in mind:

“… The prelude, andante and finale [are] all three linked so as not to let the performer catch his breath, although in no way would he ask to breathe – especially if he had the good fortune to be named André Navarra.”

Paul Paray, French Conductor

Conductor of the 1951 premiere performance: Paul Paray (1886-1979), who led more world premieres of Florent Schmitt’s orchestral works than any other conductor.

The Introït, récit et congé was given its first performance in December 1951 by André Navarra with the Colonne Concerts Orchestra under the direction of Paul Paray.  Maestro Paray was the conductor who premiered more orchestral works of the composer than anyone else.

More than 60 years would go by until the work finally received its premiere recording, made in 2013 by cellist Henri Demarquette with l’Orchestre National de Lorraine conducted by Jacques Mercier, a modern-day evangelist for Schmitt’s music.  The recording was released in early 2014 on the Timpani label.

Listening to this recording makes it abundantly clear that the wait was worth it.  In the fine interpretation by Messrs. Demarquette and Mercier, we get to hear just how impressive the music really is. 

Florent Schmitt: Introit, Recit & Conge, Op. 113

First recording: Henri Demarquette, with Jacques Mercier and l’Orchestre National de Lorraine (2013).

It makes it easy to understand why, in 2011, music critic and editor of MusicWeb International, Rob Barnett, exclaimed that “the most direly needed [Schmitt premiere] recording is his later masterpiece for cello and orchestra, the Introït, récit et congé.  How long, O Lord?”

In fact, this is a relatively short cello concertante composition, clocking in at under 15 minutes.  But in this short duration, the composer takes us on an incredible sound journey involving a large roster of players (including triple wind parts, extensive brass and a battery of percussion) with the cello and orchestral forces alternating between exuberant dance rhythms and poignant melodic interludes. 

In the middle section (Récit), the accent is on lyricism accompanied by lush harmonies that bring to mind the amorous effusions of other Schmitt compositions going back decades – all the way to the Psaume XLVII of 1904.

Henri Demarquette, French cellist

Vigorous passion: French cellist Henri Demarquette.

But make no mistake:  This is contemporary music, punctuated by spikey rhythms and changing meters – and culminating in a feverish coda.  

Cellist Henri Demarquette – who has made a name for himself championing neglected 20th Century cello concertante works of composers such as Guy Ropartz, Jean Cras, Maurice Emmanuel and Henri Dutilleux – proves himself a worthy successor to the Navarra tradition of “muscular romanticism”:  He tears into the score in a way that will leave many listeners breathless.

Cellists everywhere should take note of this music.  Its rediscovery proves that as a showpiece of cello pyrotechnics, it has few equals.  Even better, the music itself is fresh, interesting and inventive throughout.

One other thing bears noting:  The Introït, récit et congé hardly seems the work of a musician who was nearly 80 years old at the time of its composition!


“Pure Music Masterpiece”: Florent Schmitt’s Sonate libre for Violin and Piano (1918-19).

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Within Florent Schmitt’s musical output are a half-dozen works that feature the violin.  Perhaps the most significant of them is his Sonate libre, Op. 68, a work he composed in 1918-19 at Artiguemy, his country retreat in the Hautes-Pyrenees.

Florent Schmitt Sonata libre (Fournier + Doyen) (Vega)

First recording: Jean Fournier and Ginette Doyen (1959).

The formal title of the music is a real mouthful:  Sonate libre en deux parties enchaînées, ad modem Clementis aquæ.

Evidently, Schmitt was using a play on words in the title – a reference to French Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau’s newspaper L’Homme libre which later became known as L’Homme enchaîné.

The French novelist and musicologist Benoît Duteurtre has written that the Sonata’s title “perfectly sums up the spirit of a work that is at the same time magnificently constructed and astonishingly free in expression.”

He likens the style to Olivier Messiaen’s early works that were to come along a number of years later.

I agree with Duteurtre’s sentiments.  This is a lengthy sonata:  a half-hour long, two-movement work that exploits the full range of sonorities, with a magnificent rhapsodic interplay between the violin and piano in the first movement, titled Lent sans exagération.

In the second movement that follows without a break – titled Animé – we are treated to completely different atmospherics.  The piano-only introduction tells us immediately that this is the Florent Schmitt of sass and irony, replete with nervous energy and spiky rhythms.

MusicWeb International contributing reviewer Jonathan Woolf has written that the second movement “is a particular example of Schmitt’s predilection for juxtaposing the winsome and the dramatic.”

They two movements are vastly different … yet they do seem made for one another:  two sides of the same mirror casting different reflections, as it were.

When the piece was premiered in Paris in March 1920 at a Société Musicale Indépendante concert (performed by violinist Hélène Léon and pianist Lucien Bellanger), it was warmly received.

The composer and critic Alexis Roland-Manuel wrote these words about the Sonate libre in his review of the concert:

“The music is so flowingly captivating and diverse that at no moment does our attention wander; it moves along with the freedom of running water, and its merit lies not only in the charm of its free and solid structure, but also in the fruitful search for a melodic, harmonic and instrumental style that is quite new.”

Roland-Manuel went on to write:

“It is a pleasure to hear a sonata for piano and violin in which two timbres that are usually so essentially opposed are in harmony; the flowing arabesques contrast or merge in the subtlest, most perfect manner.”

For such an interesting and important composition, it may be surprising to learn that there have been only two commercial recordings made of this music.

The first one was recorded by the husband-and-wife duo team of violinist Jean Fournier and pianist Ginette Doyen in 1959 for the French label Véga, which issued the Sonata on a 10” LP.

Florent Schmitt Sonate libre Fournier + Doyen

The premiere recording of Florent Schmitt’s Sonate libre with Fournier and Doyen has been reissued on CD (on the ACCORD label).

[Long considered a touchstone recording, the Fournier/Doyen performance has been reissued on CD, on the ACCORD label.]

More than 30 years would go by before the second recording of the Sonate libre was made, by violinist Régis Benoit and Franco-Turkish pianist Huseyin Sermet.  It was recorded in 1992 and released on the Valois label.

Interpretively, I consider the Valois recording to be every bit the equal of the classic Fournier/Doyen performance.  It also boasts better sonics, sounding more natural and less “boxy.”

Florent Schmitt Sonate libre (Regis Benoit + Huseyin Sermet) (Valois)

This 1992 performance of Schmitt’s Sonate libre by Régis Benoit and Huseyin Sermet is a brilliantly conceived interpretation.

The Benoit/Sermet recording is also available for audition on YouTube:

In terms of the musical riches that await the listener, I think you will find that this is a half-hour of time well-worth spent.



French Cellist Henri Demarquette talks about the Music of Florent Schmitt and the Introït, récit et conge (1949)

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Henri Demarquette, French cellist

Vigorous passion: French cellist Henri Demarquette.

The recent release of the premiere recording of Florent Schmitt’s Introït, récit et congé, Op. 113, has given lovers of French music and cello music in general the opportunity to hear an interesting and inventive cello concertante piece that was composed in 1948 for the French cellist André Navarra.

Fortunately, this premiere recording (on the Timpani label) features an equally impressive cellist, Henri Demarquette, ably supported by the forces of l’Orchestre National de Lorraine conducted by Jacques Mercier.

Florent Schmitt: Introit, Recit & Conge, Op. 113

First recording: Henri Demarquette, with Jacques Mercier and l’Orchestre National de Lorraine (2013).

One could not hope for a better interpreter of Schmitt’s powerful score than Mr. Demarquette, who has made a name for himself performing both standard and rare cello repertoire with orchestras in Europe and elsewhere.

He has also teamed up with musicians such as Jaime Laredo, Michel Dalberto, Louis Lortie, Boris Berezovsky and the late Brigitte Engerer in chamber music performances across the globe. I published a post on the Introït when the premiere recording was released in February 2014. More recently, I asked Mr. Demarquette to share his views about the piece – and his thoughts on the music of Florent Schmitt in general.

PLN: How did you become acquainted with the composer Florent Schmitt and his Introït, récit et congé?

HD: I became acquainted with Florent Schmitt through a series of lectures I gave last year on the life and work of Maurice Ravel. During my research, I discovered how important Schmitt and his music was in the early period of the 20th Century – and also that Ravel was a great admirer of Schmitt and his talent.

Specifically as for the Introït, I am grateful to Stéphane Topakian, the inventive and courageous founder and director of the Timpani recording label, for introducing me to this music. In fact, for many years now he has helped me discover and record much unexplored repertoire for the cello, including works by Jean Cras, Louis Vierne, Maurice Emmanuel and Guy Ropartz in addition to Florent Schmitt.

PLN: What are your impressions of Florent Schmitt and his music – what attributes do you feel are particularly noteworthy?

HD: Florent Schmitt was a man of passionate temperament. I can feel tremendous tension in his music. It’s characterized by total mastery in the writing, and it’s open towards modernity, too. He definitely pushes the instrumental limits! In the Introït, for instance, Schmitt’s writing demands great skill on the part of the cellist. The music includes a high cello range, rapid passages, challenging rhythms, double stops and so forth.

Florent Schmitt Introit recit & conge, music score

Florent Schmitt’s piano-reduction score to Introit, recit et congé, inscribed by the composer.

PLN: In listening to your recording of the Introït, I get the feeling that you really believe in this music. What aspects of the score do you find particularly interesting and inventive?

HD: I especially like the affiliation with Ravel that I can sense in the orchestration. I’m struck at how brilliant and dazzling the orchestra sounds – along with certain very dark passages that are very “modern.” Schmitt also has real melodic inspiration in this music. He composes very long phrases, which is quite unusual in French music.

PLN: Before you were introduced to the Introït, did you know any other music of Florent Schmitt?

HD: I had read through the Piano Quintet, but had never performed it. I wish to do that piece soon. It requires a great amount of practice and rehearsal; it’s a huge work for the pianist in particular, who has to read on four staves sometimes! Dating from 40 years earlier than the Introït, it is a composition definitely worth musical attention.

PLN: You have been quite active in resurrecting rare cello concertante works by French composers of the 20th century. How did this interest develop?

HD: Yes, this is a particular passion of mine! For one thing, I have the relationship with Stéphane Topakian and Timpani. The Timpani label is undertaking very important and virtuous work, and I am so happy to be participating in it. Through this relationship, I have discovered so many important works of music. My very first recording with Timpani was doing Louis Vierne’s Quintet in about 1995, so the association has been going on for nearly nearly two decades now.

I’m quite sure that the Introït, récit et congé will arouse the interest of other cellists. Another favorite work I’ve recorded with Timpani is the Legende by Jean Cras, which I have performed a good number of times in concert. I hope to have the same chance with the Introït.

I also hope to perform Jacques Ibert’s Concerto for Cello and Winds, which is another excellent piece that would be perfect for concert programs.

PLN: You have had a very active recording and concertizing career for many years now. Briefly describe your musical background and activities.

HD: I’ve been fortunate to have a very rich musical life, which began quite early. I attended the Paris Conservatoire, and was able to study with masters like Maurice Gendron, Pierre Fournier and Paul Tortelier

I have been able to play the great cello concerto repertoire with orchestras, as well as perform chamber music with well-known musicians.

But I am always keen to open my eyes and mind to other music, too. I am very involved with contemporary music, and in sparking interest in new works for the cello. I work with many composers in those endeavors; soon I will premiere three pieces that I commissioned for cello and choir composed by Eric Tanguy, Patrick Burgan and Alexandre Gasparov. Those commissions are part of a very large and exciting project known as Vocello.

I will also be premiering a new cello concerto written for me by Michel Legrand.

I don’t teach, but I am responsible for the music syllabus in the project Université Populaire in Caen, France, led by the French philosopher Michel Onfray.

Quinteto el Despues + DemarquetteI also play a good deal of tango music with a fantastic ensemble, the Quinteto el Después, including working with Richard Galliano, one of the greatest accordionists in the world.

PLN: What other recital, concerto or recording projects are you working on at the moment?

HD: I concertize regularly in the European countries as well as in South America, Japan and Korea. Most recently I have been performing the cello concertos of Lalo and Saint-Saëns, and I will be touring Japan and Korea performing the Dvořák Cello Concerto as well as doing chamber music performances with Jaime Laredo and Boris Berezovsky.

My most recent recording was of music by Philippe Gaubert, and my next recording due for release is the Ibert Concerto for Cello and Wind Instruments.

Considering Mr. Demarquette’s noteworthy accomplishments and highly interesting concert repertoire, we can only hope that he will add North America to his touring schedule before long!

In the meantime … if you’re interested in hearing Mr. Demarquette playing music outside the “standard classical” repertoire, here’s a YouTube clip of him performing Jalousie with accordionist Richard Galliano and the Quinteto el Después, in a live performance in Buenos Aires — certainly an authentic locale for tango music!


Brilliance and Sophistication: Florent Schmitt’s Trois Rapsodies (1904)

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One of the most satisfying of Florent Schmitt’s extensive trove of music for piano duet and duo – and the one that is my personal favorite of all of them – is Trois Rapsodies, Op. 53, a work he composed in 1903-4.

Made up of three movements titled Française, Polonaise and Viennoise, it is a work that fully engages the senses on first hearing.

Florent Schmitt: Trois rapsodies for two pianos, Op. 53, score

“Nearly every possible kind of ‘poly’ element – polyphonic, polyrhythmic, poly-thematic”: Florent Schmitt’s Trois rhapsodies (1903-4).

That’s not unexpected, considering the “immediate appeal” that music of this kind has on listeners; the rhapsodies of Liszt, Dvořák, Enesco, Ravel and Gershwin are also good cases in point.

What is perhaps more surprising is how interesting and inventive these rhapsodies continue to sound on subsequent hearings.

As it turns out, this isn’t superficial music at all. Instead, it is meaty material that continues to pay rich dividends every time it’s heard. I’ve known this music for more than 40 years, and it never grows old or “routine.”

As the CD booklet notes for one of the Rapsodies recordings puts it:

“The music is saturated with rich harmonies and textures, offering nearly every possible kind of ‘poly’ element – polyphonic, polyrhythmic, poly-thematic – in a rainbow of colors coated with grace and elegance.”

The Canadian pianist Leslie de’Ath contends that Florent Schmitt’s “mastery of the unexpected” is unsurpassed in this particular composition, writing:

“Schmitt’s cornucopia of delicious musical tricks seems always to be just one step ahead of the listener, while at the same time inviting us to savor each unexpected moment.”

The musicologist and librettist Charles Burr described the pieces as “sophisticated national rhapsodies.” He is correct: each of the movements possesses distinct “national” characteristics – yet they are also thoroughly cosmopolitan.

The French novelist and music critic Benoît Duteurtre senses the inspiration of three composers in the music: Chabrier in Française; Chopin in Polonaise; and Johann Strauss Jr. in Viennoise.  Perhaps — but I wouldn’t consider Schmitt to be aping these other composers in any sort of fashion.

More broadly, the Armenian-American pianist Andrey Kasparov discerns other aspects as well, describing the movements that make up the Trois rapsodies like this:

“[They] are conceived in the grand Romantic style, with the composer taking full advantage of the multilayered textural and coloristic possibilities of two pianos. Despite the intense contrapuntal writing and, at times, complex harmonic language, the work never loses its Gallic charm, lyricism and humor.”

Robert & Caby Casadesus (Florent Schmitt recording)

First recording: Robert and Gaby Casadesus for Columbia Masterworks (1956).

Fortunately, the music is well-represented on disk today, although it took decades before the first recording appeared.

That premiere recording was made by Columbia Records in 1956 with Robert and Gaby Casadesus – and it would remain the only recorded documentation of this music for nearly 40 years thereafter.

That full-bodied performance is viscerally very exciting, and I think it’s fair to say that no other recording since has delivered quite the swagger that the Casadesus team conveys.

It’s a shame that the Casadesus recording has never been reissued, because it clearly deserves a place in the catalogue. Fortunately, it is possible to hear the recording on YouTube. If you listen past the somewhat scratchy vinyl and the thin base response (a defect in the transfer, not in the original Columbia recording which is satisfyingly full-bodied), you’ll discover just how effective the Casadesus interpretation is.

Florent Schmitt: Trois rapsodies (Sermet + Paik) (Valois)

First stereo recording: Huseyin Sermet and Kun Woo Paik (1992).

In 1992, the first stereo recording of the Trois rapsodies appeared – another highly effective reading by pianists Huseyin Sermet and Kun Woo Paik. Released on the Valois label, this interpretation inhabits a sound-world redolent of the Casadesus performance — but perhaps with a bit more “icy brittleness.”

The three more recent recordings – two Canadian and one American – are more broadly expansive in their flavor. They are:

Kanazawa-Admony Piano Duo (Tami Kanazawa and Yuval Admony) – Roméo Records (recorded 2001)

Invencia Piano Duo (Andrey Kasparov and Oksana Lutsyshyn) – NAXOS Grand Piano (recorded 2010)

Leslie de’Ath and Anya Alexeyev – Dutton Epoch (recorded 2011)

Having listened to all five of the commercial recordings of the Trois rapsodies, I can confirm that each has its own merits. All of the performances are polished efforts; whichever interpretation one would consider “the best” is purely a matter of personal preference.

Invencia Piano Duo 10th Anniversary Recital

The Invencia Piano Duo’s Tenth Anniversary recital featured the Trois rhapsodies and Rhapsodie parisienne of Florent Schmitt (September 2013).

I have also been fortunate to see this music performed in recital — a terrifically exciting performance by the Invencia Piano Duo done in 2013. From this experience, I know first-hand that the rhapsodies make quite an impact when heard live.

It can be safely assumed that the audience at the recital I attended did not know this music at all before hearing it that evening … and yet the response was electric.

Interestingly, there is another two-pianist rhapsody by Florent Schmitt that exists – an unpublished work composed in 1900. Written in much the same vein as the Trois rapsodies, this other one is called Rhapsodie parisienne.

The score was discovered among the composer’s papers at the Bibliothèque National in Paris when Andrey Kasparov and Oksana Lutsyshyn (who make up the Invencia Piano Duo) were doing research as part of their project to record the entire works by Florent Schmitt for piano duet and duo. (Those four CDs were released by NAXOS Grand Piano in 2012 and 2013.)

Thanks to permission granted by Florent Schmitt’s granddaughter, the Rhapsodie Parisienne was able to be recorded.  It appears on the same Invencia CD as the Trois rapsodies, and it proves itself to be every bit as colorful as the other three pieces. An exciting public performance of this rhapsody, played by the Invencia Piano Duo, is also available on YouTube.

Schmitt was known to consider the piano a “convenient but disappointing substitute” for an orchestra. So it should come as little surprise that he orchestrated a number of his piano scores for performance in the concert hall. Examples of these works include Soirs, Feuillets de voyage, Puppazzi and Reflets d’Allemagne.

Such was the case with the Trois rapsodies also. The first movement to be orchestrated was Rapsodie viennoise, done by Schmitt in 1911. It received its first performance by the Orchestre Lamoureux later that year under the direction of Camille Chevillard (and it was recorded by Albert Wolff with this same orchestra in 1931).

Paul Paray, French orchestra conductor

Paul Paray (1886-1979) premiered more orchestral works of Florent Schmitt than any other conductor. The Trois rapsodies was premiered by Paray in Paris in 1928, several years after this photo was taken.

Subsequently, Schmitt orchestrated the other two movements as well. The orchestrations were published by Durand, and the full set was premiered by Paul Paray and the Lamoureux Orchestra in 1928.

[According to a report from Andrey Kasparov, when studying the manuscript for the Rhapsodie parisienne he noticed instrument markings made by Schmitt. This leads Kasparov to believe that the composer had intended to orchestrate this work as well.   Why he didn’t – and why the original two-piano version wasn’t published either – remains a mystery.]

Timpani Records Complete Albert Wolff recordings with Orchestre Lamoureux

Only orchestral recording (so far): Rapsodie viennoise, with Albert Wolff and l’Orchestre Lamoureux (1931).

Unlike the relatively robust recorded history of the piano version of the Rapsodies, no complete recording of the orchestral version has ever been made. The 1931 Rapsodie viennoise recording is still available today, contained in a large 4-CD set released by Timpani Records that includes all of Albert Wolff’s recordings made with the Lamoureux Orchestra.

Unfortunately both the interpretation and the sound quality of that Rapsodie viennoise recording are disappointing; the orchestra sounds lumpy and sluggish, and the sound is thin and boxy. It is nice to have it for historical reference – but that’s about all.

Clearly, this is music that is worthy of resurrection in the modern era. Having paged through the instrumental score, I can report that all of the trademark aspects of Schmitt’s compositional style are present – most particularly the beguiling and highly colorful orchestration in the grandest Rimsky-Korsakov tradition.

Here’s hoping that one of Florent Schmitt’s most ardent advocates will redress this situation in the coming years – perhaps one of the conductors Jacques Mercier, JoAnn Falletta, Lionel Bringuier or Stéphane Denève will step up to the podium and make the premiere recording. Who’s game?


A Surprising Collaboration and Friendship: Florent Schmitt and Frederick Delius (1894-1934)

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Frederick Delius, English composer

Frederick Delius (1862-1934): Florent Schmitt prepared piano/vocal transcriptions for four of the composer’s operas between 1894 and 1902.

One interesting yet virtually unknown early chapter in Florent Schmitt’s musical life involved the work he did in creating the piano/vocal reduction scores of the first four operas of the English composer Frederick Delius (1862-1934).

These efforts began around 1894 when Schmitt was not yet 25 years old, with the transcription of Delius’ opera IrmelinThe collaboration would go on for eight years …  and the two composers would remain friends for more than 30 years thereafter.

Based on a review of the Schmitt/Delius manuscripts, which are housed at the offices of the Delius Trust, it is evident that the two composers worked in close collaboration on them. The vocal lines in English, stage directions and some musical notations are in Delius’ own hand, while the musical notation is in Schmitt’s customary neat, meticulous penmanship.

Immediately following completion of the Irmelin project in 1894, Schmitt embarked on the piano/vocal reduction of Delius’ opera The Magic Fountain, completing it in 1895.

In 1898, Schmitt took on the same task for Delius’ next opera Koanga, and in 1902 he completed the transcription of A Village Romeo & Juliet – the only one of the four that would actually be published.

These efforts bring up an interesting question: How did the Frenchman Florent Schmitt come to make the acquaintance of Englishman Delius, and then to prepare the scores for four of the older composer’s operas?

David Eccott

David Eccott

For the answer, we can turn to the work of the English author and composer David Eccott, whose research is included in the book Frederick Delius: Music, Art and Literature, a volume published in 1997 that contains essays written by twelve contributing writers including Eccott.

In his preface, the book’s editor (and Delius biographer) Lionel Carley explained its rationale as follows:

“In commissioning this series of essays from around the world, what I have sought to achieve is firstly to take a step aside from the purely English viewpoint from which Delius has, in print at least, largely been surveyed since all these critics raised their eminent eyebrows in 1899, and then in a further sidestep to try to see the composer prismatically, as it were, through environments, relationships and events which held meaning for him.”

Speaking about David Eccott’s chapter on Delius and Schmitt specifically, Carley wrote:

“From Leipzig, it was on to Paris [for Delius] and an exhilarating circle of friends representative of just about every branch of the arts. Delius soon came to know and to like the yet-unknown Florent Schmitt, asking him over the course of several years to make vocal scores of no less than four operas …”

Recently, I had the opportunity to ask David Eccott to share what he learned about the relationship between Delius and Schmitt through his research:

PLN: How did you come to know about the professional and personal connection between Frederick Delius and Florent Schmitt?

DE: Actually, I came to know Florent Schmitt and his music through my interest in the artistry of Frederick Delius. I first wrote about the collaboration between the two musicians in a short essay that was published in the Delius Society Journal. The chapter in Carley’s book is a vastly expanded version of that original article.

William Molard, portrait by Paul Gauguin

Portrait of William Molard, painted by Paul Gauguin.

What I found in my research is that Delius and Schmitt likely met one another at the Parisian salon of William and Ida Molard. This couple – he a Frenchman and she a Norwegian – attracted a wide circle of musicians and artists by virtue of the fact that he was studying composition and harmony at the Paris Conservatory, and she was a sculptor.

In addition, the painter Paul Gauguin had his studio in the very same building, located a 6 rue Vercingétorix in the Montparnasse District of Paris, making the address a “must visit” location for many individuals in the creative arts.

William and Ida Molard studio and salon

6 rue de Vercingétorix, home of Le salon Molards and the studio of Paul Gauguin. (Photo taken ca. 1912)

[Apparently, the Molard salon was something quite noteworthy. It has been described by the author Thomas Millroth as follows: “With a mixture of brilliant and tragic figures – of true originals and commonplace spongers all coming together in the salon – ‘Les Molards’ soon became something of an institution among Scandinavians traveling to Paris, and to many other curious souls as well. Theirs was a place you just had to visit and to drink in the atmosphere …”]

PLN: Delius had spent time in Norway as well as Germany before coming to Paris, and was acquainted with Edvard Grieg. Is this how he might have come to know about the Molard salon?

DE: That’s quite probable. In fact, Delius was the only Englishman who was a regular guest at the Molards’ salon. Thus, the Scandinavian connection would seem to be an important factor.

PLN: … And Schmitt’s connection to the salon was because of attending the Paris Conservatoire at the same time as William Molard?

DE: Without a doubt. Maurice Ravel and Léon Moreau were also regular visitors at the Molard salon, and we know that a close friendship between Schmitt and Ravel began at this time and lasted until Ravel’s death in the late 1930s.

PLN: What do you think drew Delius and Schmitt to one another, considering that there were many other young musicians in Paris that Delius would have also met after he arrived there?

DE: Beyond the mutual recognition of the musical talent that both composers obviously possessed, I speculate that similarities in family heritage may have something to do with the bond that developed between Delius and Schmitt. Delius was born into a prosperous family active in the wool industry. Even though he was born in England, Delius’ father and mother had come from Germany.

Schmitt’s family was also mercantile – in a related field (the cloth industry). Even though he was born in France, Schmitt’s hometown was right on the pre-World War I border between France and Germany.

PLN: I don’t sense very much similarity in the musical style of the two composers, although I appreciate their music equally well …

DE: On the whole, I would agree with you, but of course Schmitt would go on to compose music for another 60 years, exhibiting many interesting and diverse styles along the way. However, during the time he was working on the opera transcriptions for Delius, Schmitt was composing relatively little of his own music. But in his Soirs, Op. 5, one can detect a ‘Delian’ flavor in some of the chromaticisms, even as we also hear the sylistic influence of Schmitt’s teacher Gabriel Fauré.

PLN: It was truly a rich environment for classical music in Paris during the period between 1890 and 1920, and Delius would end up settling in France for the rest of his life. Did the collaboration between Delius and Schmitt also continue long-term?

Delius home and garden, Grez-sur-Loing France

The Delius house and gardens at Grez-sur-Loing, France. The composer moved here in 1897 and stayed until the end of his life in 1934.

DE: Delius and Schmitt were firm friends almost from the ‘get-go,’ and it was a friendship that would endure until Delius’ death in 1934.  But after 1902 it was a personal relationship rather than a professional collaboration. 

Schmitt visited Delius at his home in Grez-sur-Loing often, including during the years when Delius’ amanuensis, Eric Fenby, was in residence there and Delius’ health was in serious decline. By that time, Schmitt had known Delius longer than anyone else who came to visit the household at Grez – even longer than Delius’ relationship with his wife, the painter and librettist Jelka Rosen.

Many years later, the musicologist and impresario Felix Aprahamian would recall a time when he’d asked Schmitt to talk about Delius in his Parisian days. Aprahamian reported that the composer “smiled like a schoolboy as he recalled the tall, handsome young Delius — ‘Le Grand Anglais’ – [and] his numerous lady admirers.”

PLN: What was it like to conduct the research you did in order to contribute to Lionel Carley’s book?

DE: It was an extremely interesting project for me, even though there turned out to be only a few primary documents beyond the manuscripts themselves that give us a first-hand glimpse into the relationship between the two men.  And there were few eyewitness accounts describing their social interaction.

More importantly, I gained deeper insights into both composers – especially Florent Schmitt, as this was the first time that I seriously began to acquaint myself with his music. From that time onwards, I think that Schmitt became as important to me as Delius had been.

Also, both composers have had an influence on my own music in certain instances: Delius in the first two movements of my Oboe Concertino, and Schmitt in my composition Rochester Creek.

Delius: Music, Art & Literature (edited by Lionel Carley)For those who are interested in learning more about the personal and professional relationship between Frederick Delius and Florent Schmitt, David Eccott’s essay in Frederick Delius: Music, Art & Literature is probably the most detailed account we shall ever have. Published by Ashgate, the book is available here. It’s well-worth a read.


Forgotten Records: Resurrecting noteworthy recordings of Florent Schmitt’s music from the LP era.

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Forgotten Records logoThere’s no question that in the past two decades, the breadth and depth of French composer Florent Schmitt’s music that has made it to the microphones has increased dramatically. 

Nearly every year, we are treated to world premiere recordings of more Schmitt works. 

The most recent examples are the complete works for piano duo and duet as recorded by the Invencia Piano Duo … the children’s ballet Le petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil with Jacques Mercier and the Lorraine National Orchestra … and the Introït, récit et congé for cello and orchestra featuring soloist Henri Demarquette

But back in the LP era, there were also a number of fine recordings made of Schmitt’s music — although many of them had only limited distribution beyond the borders of Schmitt’s native land.  

In too many cases the recordings didn’t stay in the catalogue for long, either. 

Back in the 1970s and 1980s when I was seeking out recorded repertoire beyond Schmitt’s most famous work, La Tragédie de Salomé, I found it nearly impossible to acquire these recordings. 

But then I was fortunate to become acquainted with a fellow classical music lover who lived in France, and we traded records: He passed along out-of-print French recordings of Schmitt’s music while I sent him RCA Camden LPs featuring symphonic recordings with America’s major orchestras that had been released originally on Victor 78-rpm sets in the 1940s. 

I still own those early Schmitt LPs, since most of the material never resurfaced on CD.

… Until recently, that is. And for that, we have a gentleman named Alain Deguernel and his family-operated boutique enterprise called Forgotten Records to thank. 

Mr. Deguernel is a retired professor of Spanish literature. He is also an avid collector of classical music and recordings, in addition to playing the piano avocationally.  He is described by music blogger Juliette Liu as “a soft-spoken, knowledgeable and extremely cultured gentleman — a species that is altogether rare nowadays.”

Alain Deguernel, Forgotten Records

Alain Deguernel, founder and head of the Forgotten Records CD label.

Over the span of a decade, Mr. Deguernel has taken hard-to-find recorded material featuring mainly French repertoire, and lovingly transferred these performances from mint-condition LPs to CDs.  In this endeavor, he is assisted by his son, an IT engineer, and his wife.

Everything is “made to order” and shipped in the form of physical CDs (downloads are not offered).  Having purchased more than a dozen CDs from Forgotten Records, I can personally attest to the precision and care that have gone into these releases – from the quality of the audio transfers to the design of the CD artwork and the inclusion of relevant online links to further information about the featured composers and performers. 

Impressively, the Forgotten Records catalogue now numbers nearly 1,000 CDs, generously filled (many containing more than 70 minutes of music) and priced affordably. 

Most of the earlier CDs released by Forgotten Records were of commercial recordings from the 1950s and 1960s. More recently, Mr. Deguernel has also been transferring rare compositions and performances from radio broadcasts – some of them the world premieres of contemporary French compositions.

Among the trove of Forgotten Records releases are eight CDs that contain the music of Florent Schmitt. They include: 

Schmitt Hasards Pasquier Trio Forgotten RecordsHasards, Op. 96 (1939), performed by pianist Monique Mercier and the Pasquier Trio — the same ensemble that premiered the work in 1943 (radio broadcast performance from May 30, 1959). Forgotten Records FR 922, coupled with works by Jean Rivier and Arnold Schönberg. 

Florent Schmitt String Quartet Champeil Forgotten RecordsQuartet for Strings, Op. 112 (1947), performed by the Champeil Quartet (recorded by EMI/Pathé-Marconi on December 7, 1956 at Maison de la Mutualité, Paris). Forgotten Records FR 323, coupled with Maurice Ravel’s String Quartet. 

Florent Schmitt piano works Casadesus Forgotten RecordsUne Semaine du petit elfe Ferme-l’oeil, Op. 58 (1912) and Trois rapsodies, Op. 53 (1903-4), performed by duo-pianists Robert & Gaby Casadesus (recorded in Paris by Columbia Records in June 1956). Forgotten Records FR 849, coupled with works by César Franck and Vincent d’Indy. 

Schmitt and Faure Violin Sonatas Jean Fournier + Ginette Doyen Forgotten RecordsSonate libre en deux parties enchaînées, Op. 68 (1919), performed by violinist Jean Fournier and pianist Ginette Doyen (recorded by Véga in 1959). Forgotten Records FR 345, coupled with the two Violin Sonatas of Gabriel Fauré. 

Schmitt Salome + Dukas Peri Dervaux Forgotten RecordsLa Tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50 (1907/12), performed by Pierre Dervaux and l’Orchestre du Théatre National de l’Opéra de Paris (recorded bu EMI in the presence of the composer on October 16, 1957 at Maison de la Mutualité, Paris). Forgotten Records FR 410, coupled with La Péri by Paul Dukas. 

Florent Schmitt Tragedie de Salome Dauvaux RTF Forgotten RecordsLa Tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50 (1907/12), performed by Pierre Dervaux and l’Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (radio broadcast performance from May 20, 1958). Forgotten Records FR 918, coupled with works by Emmanuel Chabrier, Claude-Achille Debussy, Édouard Lalo and Maurice Ravel. 

Schmitt Salome Freitas Branco Forgotten RecordsLa Tragédie de Salomé, Op. 50 (1907/12), performed by Pedro de Freitas Branco and l’Orchestre National de la Radiodiffusion-Télévision Française (radio broadcast performance from February 21, 1955). Forgotten Records FR 928, coupled with works by Louis Aubert and Guy Ropartz. 

Schmitt Trois Danses Gobet Forgotten RecordsTrois Danses, Op. 86 (1935), performed by pianist Françoise Gobet (recorded by Véga in 1958). Forgotten Records FR 541, coupled with works by Georges Auric, Claude Delvincourt, André Jolivet and Jean Rivier. 

In a recent note to me, Mr. Deguernel wrote, “I always try to find Schmitt recordings. It is not so easy!”

That may well be true … but we owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. Deguernel for his efforts on behalf of the music of Florent Schmitt and many other composers and performances – recordings that wouldn’t be available today were it not for the work he is doing with Forgotten Records. 

In the future, I am hopeful that he will be successful in unearthing more “forgotten” Schmitt treasures – such as several French Radio broadcast performances of Schmitt’s monumental Psaume XLVII; There are several fine renditions featuring conductors Igor Markevitch (1953) and Désiré Inghelbrecht (1958), ably supported by famed soprano soloists Elisabeth Schwarzkopf and Régine Crespin

Even better, releasing Charles Munch’s stunning 1958 world premiere performance of Florent Schmitt’s Symphony No. 2, conducted in Strasbourg in the presence of the composer just a few months before his death, would be an important historical as well as musical document to bring to the public. (This broadcast performance appeared very briefly in the early years of CD – and was difficult to obtain even then.)

For those who are interested in exploring the Forgotten Records catalogue, you can do so here(Warning:  Plan to budget at least an hour’s time to browse through the voluminous offerings!) 

Orders can be placed directly from the website, and the company ships worldwide.


The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Announces the North American Premiere Concert Performances of Florent Schmitt’s Complete Antoine et Cléopâtre Suites

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Le Palais hanté is also planned for performance and recording.

Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra

The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra performing at Kleinhans Music Hall.

North American classical music lovers are in for a treat this coming orchestra season.  The Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra has announced that its 2014-15 concert schedule includes the first performances in North America of Florent Schmitt’s complete Antoine et Cléopâtre Suites, Op. 69.

The performances of this music — one of Schmitt’s most strikingly powerful and colorful “orientalist” scores — will take place in Buffalo, NY at Kleinhans Music Hall, the acoustically resplendent home of the Buffalo Philharmonic, on March 7-8, 2015.  BPO Music Director JoAnn Falletta will conduct.

Edgar Allan Poe, American writer

American author Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849). His “Haunted Palace” first appeared in print in a magazine published in Baltimore, Maryland in 1839. The following year it was included in a larger volume of works titled “Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque.”

Those concerts will be preceded by performances of Schmitt’s symphonic poem Le Palais hanté, Op. 49, inspired by a literary work of Edgar Allen Poe, which will be performed by the orchestra on February 21-22, 2015.

In addition, the Buffalo Philharmonic announced that the Schmitt scores will be recorded by NAXOS, providing a welcome opportunity for audiences worldwide to hear these interpretations documented for posterity.

While the BPO/NAXOS readings will not be premieres, none of this music is particularly well-represented on recordings.

The Antony & Cleopatra Suites have been recorded just twice – the most recent of them featuring Jacques Mercier and the Lorraine National Orchestra (available on the Timpani label).

An earlier recording, made by Cybelia with Leif Segerstam and the Rhineland-Palatinate Philharmonic, is long out of print.

The Haunted Palace has fared slightly better, with three recordings:  the 1983 premiere with Georges Prêtre and the Monte-Carlo Philharmonic (EMI, out of print), along with newer ones featuring Yan-Pascal Tortelier and the OSESP (São Paulo) Orchestra on Chandos plus a live concert recording with Leon Botstein and the American Symphony Orchestra (available as a download from the ASO via Amazon).

JoAnn Falletta, American orchestra conductor

JoAnn Falletta, Music Director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra.

The upcoming Schmitt performances in Buffalo fulfill a long-time desire by JoAnn Falletta to popularize and record this composer’s music.

In fact, this is not the first time that Maestra Falletta has worked with these scores.  She programmed the first suite from Antoine et Cléopâtre in concert with both the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Virginia Symphony Orchestra in 2010 — the first time that suite had ever been presented in its entirety in North America.

Recently, I had the opportunity to ask JoAnn Falletta about her interest in this music and what she finds noteworthy about it:

“It seemed inconceivable to me that music so powerful, so complex and so emotionally riveting was largely unknown in the United States.  When we had the opportunity to play the first suite a couple of years ago, the musicians and I found it fascinating, gorgeously written — and very challenging.”

Maestra Falletta is also grateful for the opportunity to record the score with NAXOS Classics:

“When Klaus Heymann [head of NAXOS] agreed to have us record both suites, we were thrilled.  I think that the extraordinary strength of the music itself — coupled with the irresistible tale of Antony and Cleopatra — will engage a large listening audience for this recording.”

Andre Gide, French author

French author and impresario André Gide (1869-1951), photographed in 1893. Florent Schmitt composed the incidental music for Gide’s adaptation of Shakespeare’s play.

To my mind, it’s difficult to overstate the compelling nature of the Antony and Cleopatra story.  Schmitt composed his score in 1920 as incidental music for André Gide’s rather luridly over-the-top adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, turning the score into two suites several years later.

The titles of the suites’ six movements tell us that this is no ordinary music — and that listeners are in for a real aural treat:

Suite #1

  • Antony & Cleopatra
  • The Camp of Pompey
  • The Battle of Actium

Suite #2

  • Night in the Palace of the Queen
  • Orgies & Dances
  • The Tomb of Cleopatra

The Jacques Mercier/Timpani recording, which has been uploaded to YouTube, is a good reference to gain a sense of the musical atmospherics that are present in Schmitt’s heady musical brew.

But having attended one of the Buffalo concert performances of the first suite in 2010, I can say definitively that there is no comparison between the music as heard in recordings versus its overwhelming impact when heard live.

Suffice it to say, I am looking forward to the concert when both suites will be performed (which will also be the first-ever North American performances of the second suite, by the way).

The Haunted PalaceI find the selection of The Haunted Palace, an earlier Schmitt composition dating from 1904, to be a very appropriate disk-mate to Antony & Cleopatra.

Florent Schmitt wasn’t the only French composer who was inspired to create music based on Poe’s literary output; there’s something about Poe that seems to resonate with the French psyche.

JoAnn Falletta explained the strategy behind the choice of this music as follows:

“We needed a piece of a different form and structure to complement the multi-movement form of the Antony & Cleopatra suites.  I find The Haunted Palace to be an evocative, impressionistic tone poem which beautifully illustrates another side of Florent Schmitt’s genius.”

In some respects, Schmitt was continuing in the vaunted Lisztian tradition of tone poem writing when he composed Le Palais hanté.

On the other hand, it is a piece of music that is clearly Gallic in flavor, and few would confuse it with being a Central European work.

The Prêtre/EMI and Botstein/ASO recordings have been uploaded to YouTube; you can find them here and here.  They are useful to have as reference items … but again, the chance to hear this music in live performances comes along all too seldom.

Classical music lovers in Western New York, Toronto, Cleveland, Pittsburgh and further afield would be wise to take advantage of the opportunity to see and hear these pieces that are such rarities in the concert hall.


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