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The Busque-Bouquet-Lemaire Trio Play Music Of Lalo – 1954 – Past Daily Weekend Gramophone

Edouard Lalo
Edouard Lalo – certainly no stranger to either the concert stage or record library.
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Lalo – Trio for Piano, Violin and Cello – Hélèle Busque, piano – Paule Bouquet, violin – Jules Lemaire, cello – Paris Radio session – circa 1954 – ORTF – Gordon Skene Sound Collection –

Music of Edouard Lalo this weekend. His trio for Piano, Violin and Cello featuring Hélène Busque, piano, Paule Bouquet, violin and Jules Lemaire, cello in this Paris radio studio recital, circa 1954.

Background on Lalo via Wilipedia:

Lalo was born in Lille (Nord), in the northernmost part of France. He attended that city’s conservatoire in his youth. Beginning at age 16, he studied at the Paris Conservatoire under François Antoine Habeneck. Habeneck conducted student concerts at the Conservatoire from 1806 and became the founding conductor of the Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire in 1828.

For several years, Lalo worked as a string player and teacher in Paris. In 1848, he joined with friends to found the Armingaud Quartet, in which he played the viola and later second violin. His earliest surviving compositions are songs and chamber works (two early symphonies were destroyed).

Lalo and Julie Besnier de Maligny, a contralto from Brittany, married in 1865. She aroused Lalo’s early interest in opera and led him to compose works for the stage, of which Le Roi d’Ys is the most notable. These works were never really popular, despite their originality, and incurred considerable criticism for being allegedly too progressive and Wagnerian. This led Lalo to dedicate most of his career to the composition of chamber music, which was gradually coming into vogue in France, as well as works for orchestra.

Although Lalo is not one of the most recognized names in French music, his distinctive style has earned him a degree of popularity. Symphonie espagnole for violin and orchestra still enjoys a prominent place in the repertoire of violinists, and every now and then his Cello Concerto in D minor is revived. His Symphony in G minor was a favorite of Sir Thomas Beecham (who recorded it) and it has occasionally been championed by later conductors.

Lalo’s idiom is notable for strong melodies and colourful orchestration, with a rather Germanic solidity which distinguishes him from other French composers of his era. Such works as the Scherzo in D minor, one of his most colourful pieces, might be considered appropriate embodiments of his distinctive style and strong expressive bent.

The aforementioned Le Roi d’Ys, an opera based on the Breton legend of Ys, is Lalo’s most complex and ambitious creation. (This same legend inspired Claude Debussy to compose his famous piano piece, La cathédrale engloutie.) Lalo became a member of the Legion of Honour in 1873. For many years though, Le Roi d’Ys was not considered performable, and was not staged until 1888, when Lalo was 65 years old. He died in Paris in 1892, leaving several unfinished works, including his opera La jacquerie, completed by Arthur Coquard. He was interred at the Père Lachaise Cemetery.

So there you have it – enjoy.





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