Description
SKU/Barcode: 3760009291799
The aim of this rather challenging disc, according to pianist Claire Chevallier in her erudite, thoughtful, and yet entertaining booklet notes, is to demonstrate "the existence of a continuous line of thought in Satie's life." The line of thought under discussion is Satie's unorthodox spirituality, which was by all accounts closely linked to his music, and which took various forms during the first part of his career. The music on the program is all drawn from that time period, although it is not chronologically organized; the program ends with the very early Ogives (1886). Satie flirted with Rosicrucianism (in a distinctive Parisian sect also attractive to Debussy) but loved to visit Notre-Dame. Later he founded a single-member church of his own, which he called the "Eglise M tropolitaine d'Art et de J sus Conducteur." The musical counterparts to these ideas were stark harmonies and modal tunes derived from Satie's studies of chant and medieval music. Chevallier takes these pieces as a group and realizes their commonalities in an unusual way. She uses a 1905 Erard piano, gleaming like a jewel in a period postcard reproduced in the booklet. Its most striking characteristic is the vivid set of harmonics that appear in rhythmically spare passages, intensified by Chevallier's liberal use of the pedal. She takes slow tempos, uses the piano to create kaleidoscopic colors in seemingly simple lines, and generally weaves a hypnotic spell. Sample the "Air du grand ma tre" from the Sonneries de la Rose + Croix (track 9) for one of the most complicated sets of sounds anyone has ever generated from a passage of bare octaves. Even the best-known work on the program, the set of three Gymnop dies (tracks 11-13), is subjected to this kind of treatment; even though these pieces aren't usually grouped with the others, Chevallier makes a good case for doing so. The disc as a whole is murky, incantatory, and, as Chevallier points out, quite rigorous in its way; her readings are strikingly detailed. They certainly don't represent the last word on Satie: any and all of the remarks Chevallier quotes in the booklet could be taken as humorous, and humor is a strand in Satie's thinking that finds little representation here. Nevertheless, one way to evaluate a Satie disc is to see how much it gets to the sheer weirdness of the man, and by that measure this album ranks near the top of the list. The cooperation of the sound engineers of the French label Zig Zig Territoires is close and absolutely praiseworthy.