Country : Germany Label : Capriccio Genres and styles : Modern Classical / Opera Year : 2024

Walter Braunfels – Jeanne d’Arc

· by Frédéric Cardin

I must confess to being a great fan of the music of Walter Braunfels (1882-1954). I discovered his sonic palette, at the crossroads of post-romantic and modern styles (a little Strauss, a little Korngold, a touch of Bartok and Mahler, maybe even Hindemith), when listening to Der Kaiser von Atlantis, a little opera barely an hour long but a great 20th-century masterpiece. Abandoned after the turmoil of the Second World War, and even before that because he was partly Jewish and therefore blacklisted by the Nazis, Braunfels could have become an icon of modern creation. History, and certain men, had other ideas. Fortunately, time is slowly making things right. We are hearing more and more of this composer of rare quality, and so much the better.

YOU MIGHT ALSO BE INTERESTED IN: THE REVIEW OF THE PRESENTATION OF THE OPERA DER KAISER VON ATLANTIS AT THE MONTREAL FESTIVAL CLASSICA 2024

Here is a rare, but not unique recording (a Decca CD has already appeared, then disappeared, among others) of his opera Jeanne d’Arc, written between 1939 and 1943 and never heard by its author (Braunfels also wrote the libretto based on transcriptions of the 1431 trial and a text by George Bernard Shaw). This version brings together a star-studded, powerful and brilliantly expressive cast, convened as part of the Salzburg Festival 2013. On this occasion, apparently unique as only one evening’s performance took place, the immense talents of Juliane Banse and Johan Reuter in the roles of Jeanne and Gilles de Rais, could be heard by a privileged crowd. Jeanne’s strong-willed, incandescent character is harnessed with great force by Banse. Reuter is suitably vibrant with contradictory emotions, torn between his love (never historically confirmed) for Jeanne and the inner demons, already prescient, that would later make him, perhaps, history’s first serial killer. I’d also like to highlight Pavol Breslik’s fragile presence as Charles, the future Charles VII, crowned thanks to Jeanne. Manfred Honeck, an ardent supporter of Braunfels, conducts the powerful musical forces of the ORF Vienna Radio Symphony Orchestra, the Salzburger Bachchor and the Salzburger Festspiele und Theater Kinderchor, with great finesse and sonic dexterity. Oh, and those choirs! What a luminous presence. What heartfelt and sometimes piercing interventions! Braunfels’ choral score alone is a dominant character in the work. Magnificent.

Braunfels’ skill lies in his attention to Jeanne’s personal interactions with those around her, rather than her political and mystical dimensions. In this way, he infuses her with a genuinely touching psychological life. There’s something intimate about it, despite the impressive scale of the musical forces involved.

Having never had the opportunity to hear the Decca version released in the early 2000s, I can’t make any comparisons. It also featured Juliane Banse, with Honeck conducting, but with a Swedish orchestra. That said, I doubt this Salzburg recording could be taken seriously at fault with the previous incarnation, especially as Banse can only have integrated her character even more intimately, and Honeck refined his reading of the rich score all the more.

The resurrected music of a brilliant and important composer, unjustly forgotten, could not benefit from a better presentation. A real treat.

Latest 360 Content

Meggie Lennon – My Best Self

Meggie Lennon – My Best Self

Critique Love… Critical Minerals in Montreal’s Underground

Critique Love… Critical Minerals in Montreal’s Underground

The Mars Volta – Lucro sucio; Los ojos del vacio

The Mars Volta – Lucro sucio; Los ojos del vacio

Laurence Hélie – Tendresse et bienveillance

Laurence Hélie – Tendresse et bienveillance

From Zigaz to Charlie Juste

From Zigaz to Charlie Juste

FACS, WORKS, and DahL at Quai Des Brumes

FACS, WORKS, and DahL at Quai Des Brumes

Before Sitting Down Alone at The Piano, Ingrid St-Pierre Responds

Before Sitting Down Alone at The Piano, Ingrid St-Pierre Responds

Virginia MacDonald, clarinet rising soloist with ONJM

Virginia MacDonald, clarinet rising soloist with ONJM

Lionel Belmondo , Yannick Rieu and l’OSL: Symphonic Jazz Around Brahms, Ravel and Boulanger

Lionel Belmondo , Yannick Rieu and l’OSL: Symphonic Jazz Around Brahms, Ravel and Boulanger

Djo – The Crux

Djo – The Crux

Université de Montréal: Stars shine on music’s next gen

Université de Montréal: Stars shine on music’s next gen

Bon Iver – SABLE, fABLE

Bon Iver – SABLE, fABLE

Magnificent Heiresses

Magnificent Heiresses

Stéphanie Boulay: Healing Album, Reconstruction Album

Stéphanie Boulay: Healing Album, Reconstruction Album

Joni Void wants you to ‘watch experimental films in the club’ or at La Lumière

Joni Void wants you to ‘watch experimental films in the club’ or at La Lumière

Marcus Printup at U de M: Wisdom, Generosity, Musicianship

Marcus Printup at U de M: Wisdom, Generosity, Musicianship

Pascale Picard Dives Back Into Creation

Pascale Picard Dives Back Into Creation

Dean Wareham – That’s The Price of Loving Me

Dean Wareham – That’s The Price of Loving Me

Pro Musica | Lucas Debargue, Pianistic Free Thinker

Pro Musica | Lucas Debargue, Pianistic Free Thinker

Éléonore Lagacé – Brûlez-moi vive

Éléonore Lagacé – Brûlez-moi vive

Laurence Hélie Has Found Her Name

Laurence Hélie Has Found Her Name

Quatuor Molinari and Berio, in the words of Olga Ranzenhofer

Quatuor Molinari and Berio, in the words of Olga Ranzenhofer

Tunisian Goddess Emel Presents MRA

Tunisian Goddess Emel Presents MRA

Shreez – ON FRAP II

Shreez – ON FRAP II

Subscribe to our newsletter