Francis Poulenc - Sonata for Oboe and Piano

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  • čas přidán 27. 06. 2024
  • - Composer: Francis Jean Marcel Poulenc (7 January 1899 -- 30 January 1963)
    - Performers: Maurice Bourgue (oboe), Jacques Février (piano)
    - Year of recording: 1976
    Sonata for Oboe & Piano, FP 185, written in 1962.
    00:00 - I. Élégie (Paisiblement)
    05:14 - II. Scherzo (Très animé)
    09:10 - III. Déploration (Très calme)
    Poulenc composed his sonata for Oboe and Piano one year before his own death in 1962.
    - Given the first movement's title "Élégie," it sounds remarkably peaceful. The oboe begins with a four-note phrase starting on its high D, from which both instruments derive and unspool a winding, lyrical theme; the piano brings in a rising theme just as lyrical, before a third theme, in a double-dotted, tripping rhythm, enters. This provokes an unexpectedly thunderous outburst before the pastoral material of the opening returns.
    - The mercurial emotional turn of the first movement comes back in the second-movement Scherzo, albeit reversed. Here, an A section full of pointed, racing rhythms, contrasted briefly with smoother phrases, brakes at the behest of a few piano chords for a far slower B section with a rhapsodic theme introduced and mostly developed by the piano.
    - The third movement, titled "Déploration" and marked Très calme, is the most obviously funerary of the three. After a piano introduction, the oboe takes a lamenting, chorale-like theme over a stolid piano pulse. The pulse quickens and the tripping rhythm from the first movement makes a re-appearance, but the brief moments of solace in the music always feel unstable and fleeting, an impression confirmed by a bleak ending with distant, ghostly piano chords supporting inward lyrical imprecations from the oboe. The oboe's final sustained note, with dissonant splashes by the piano underneath, seems to hang in the air for long after its sound dies.
    Francis Poulenc dedicated his Sonata for Oboe and Piano, the last of this three wind sonatas, to the memory of Sergey Prokofiev ["à la mémoire de Serge Prokofieff"].
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Komentáře • 115

  • @SteveofArms
    @SteveofArms Před 8 lety +123

    It's like he has an infinite dynamic range on every note.

    • @pattmahiney
      @pattmahiney Před 5 lety +5

      He does have really good dynamic control.

  • @rafikhan01
    @rafikhan01 Před 3 lety +14

    I love how there are moments of derangement in the middle of peaceful or nice passages, like 0:30 and many more. It's a really special part of this piece tbh and I love it a lot.

  • @TheYourDeadNow
    @TheYourDeadNow Před 8 lety +161

    Never ever remove this from yt

    • @olla-vogala4090
      @olla-vogala4090  Před 8 lety +50

      +TheYourDeadNow I certainly wasn't planning to :)

    • @MegaPianogenius
      @MegaPianogenius Před 6 lety +8

      the pic at the beginning is so wistful seeing him marking the score on an old upright making beautiful timeless music in such a setting i should imagine Chopin doing the same in Majorca on his old upright composing such works as his 2nd ballade

    • @vilikdoshoyan3622
      @vilikdoshoyan3622 Před rokem

      @@olla-vogala4090 гезйе99»04 в хэш ш зднхнщйзйюншжййщшйднэшжызшХу

  • @tejasnair3399
    @tejasnair3399 Před rokem +9

    I used to listen to this on the drive to my beautiful highschool every morning. Now this is one of those pieces that is so nostalgic that I actually have trouble listening to it emotionally.

  • @charlesmchugh8811
    @charlesmchugh8811 Před 8 lety +62

    Another masterpiece. Lyrical, funny and deeply moving. I've always loved Poulenc and this is one of his best. And he is paying tribute to another great master. Thanks for your note, that always helps to set the stage.

  • @musicfanBRA
    @musicfanBRA Před 7 lety +30

    This is so beautiful... melancholy, mysterious... I'm new to this piece. The more I listen to it, the more I like it. I think it will become one of my favorites, like the sublime flute sonata.

  • @stellamoon2532
    @stellamoon2532 Před 7 lety +21

    Since I've started to learn oboe I wanted to play this wonderful piece. Just awesome😍

  • @Iceland874
    @Iceland874 Před 2 lety +5

    I love Poulenc. I’ve played his flute sonata, piano and organ works. This makes me want to start playing oboe again. This is so beautiful!

  • @musiquemusique4456
    @musiquemusique4456 Před 8 lety +10

    On ne sait laquelle des trois sonates admirer le plus. Trois sommets de la musique française.

  • @asdf0747
    @asdf0747 Před 2 lety +10

    this sonata is one of the hardest Oboe sonata despite it's appearance of being "slow". the intonation is very hard to control and embouchure control is imperative.
    This is the sonata got me into NY All-state and All eastern Conference when I was a senior in High school. I've done Hummel Theme and Variation before this for Senior Concerto Audition but this Sonata got me exhausted even before I got to the second Movement.

  • @johnlloydarevalo2922
    @johnlloydarevalo2922 Před 2 lety +12

    The modulation in 1:38 is so beautiful.

  • @musicfanBRA
    @musicfanBRA Před 6 lety +2

    Beautiful, melancholic. Thank you for posting it.

  • @JoelAWeiss
    @JoelAWeiss Před 7 lety +6

    I swear the oboe isn't playing at rehearsal 4!!! Amazing. Had to listen 3 times to faintly here it. PPP - fabulous. So gorgeous.

  • @na3044
    @na3044 Před 4 lety +1

    Wow. I love this expressiveness. The Scherzo is god-tier.

  • @pattmahiney
    @pattmahiney Před 5 lety +2

    Wonderfully written and performed.

  • @daveluttinen2547
    @daveluttinen2547 Před 5 lety +2

    I have these on CD and they are among my favorite pieces of music.

  • @khool63
    @khool63 Před 7 lety

    un moment de quiétude , de calme comme je les aime ,, on se laisse transporter par la grâce du piano et du haut bois surtout ,, merci

  • @cameroncharles5944
    @cameroncharles5944 Před 5 lety +45

    Playing the first and second movement for solo ensemble they are going to drop dead I've been practicing this since last year

  • @brynjarhoff-lr6hw
    @brynjarhoff-lr6hw Před rokem +2

    YES,THIS IS WAS FAR BETTER THAN YOUR OTHER FRANCE SONATA ON CZcams,THE BEST POULENC ATER MY TASTE. GRETTINGS FROM A COLLEGA!!

  • @monte-verdianopapasyriopou9201

    A mercurial master

  • @dbdb1518
    @dbdb1518 Před 4 lety +2

    so lovely

  • @10mimu
    @10mimu Před 6 lety +1

    Beautiful sonata. The main theme of the elegy is nostalgic.

  • @feneb6497
    @feneb6497 Před 3 lety +2

    The ending of the second movement is sooooooo good!

  • @zykonxt
    @zykonxt Před 6 lety +3

    Masterpiece and masterperfornance.

  • @ginavingara3092
    @ginavingara3092 Před 4 lety +17

    This piece has completely opened my eyes (& ears) to oboe repertoire and Poulenc. I don't think I would have felt as connected to the piece if it weren't for the score. It's one thing to hear the interplay between the piano and oboe parts, but to see it in the score adds so much depth to the experience.

    • @GhtPTR
      @GhtPTR Před 11 měsíci

      Indeed, this is the piece that made me learn the oboe, decades ago...

  • @grade8william
    @grade8william Před 8 lety +7

    my favourite of the three

  • @martinosimone4232
    @martinosimone4232 Před rokem

    excellent composition and beautifully played

  • @luisfeliperey
    @luisfeliperey Před 7 lety +2

    Thank you!!

  • @martinezalguizuriblasquiz

    Es una auténtica maravilla. Magnífica interpretación.

  • @TiticatFollies
    @TiticatFollies Před 6 lety +2

    There's nothing of Poulenc's I do not like, and usually love. Original and charming.

  • @marianaiurcovich
    @marianaiurcovich Před 5 lety

    beautiful

  • @Just4Sax
    @Just4Sax Před 3 lety

    Beautiful Version of this piece! 😊

  • @djnka0
    @djnka0 Před 6 lety

    I accompanied an oboist friend of mine on piano; one of my favorite piano parts to have played

  • @yowo6105
    @yowo6105 Před 4 lety +4

    I use this piece as a warming up piece in between practicing other pieces and its so much fun to play!! I love it! (I definitely don't play as well as the oboist here, but I love the diversity between quick parts and slow parts, high notes and low notes. It just makes playing a lot more enjoyable!!)

  • @johnstag1391
    @johnstag1391 Před 2 lety

    Someone stole my cassette tape containing this among other Poulenc gems. Different players. Same pearl of great price. Thank you.

  • @fredericchopin7538
    @fredericchopin7538 Před 2 lety

    Marvelous!

  • @user-bk6nc7un2f
    @user-bk6nc7un2f Před 5 lety +7

    플랑은 20세기의 보석같은 작곡가이다. 특히 독주곡들의 선율이 굉장히 아름답다.

  • @oboist3
    @oboist3 Před 5 lety +2

    This is one of the great recordings of this piece. There is certainly only one Maurice Bourgue.

  • @nikoo8035
    @nikoo8035 Před 11 měsíci +1

    You can clearly see that it's the same composer for the clarinet, flute and oboe sonata. For example at 2:27 you clearly have the clarinet sonata.
    Poulenc made some incredibile music, i love it. In particular the clarinet sonata is divine

  • @nono6269
    @nono6269 Před rokem +3

    2:27 sounds just like the clarinet sonata (first movement during “très calme”)

  • @brayanchelis6554
    @brayanchelis6554 Před 7 lety +1

    la mejor!!!😌😌

  • @thethikboy
    @thethikboy Před 8 lety +7

    A particularly delicious woodwind confection by the master chef of French music feasts.

    • @treesny
      @treesny Před 4 lety +1

      "Confection" is perhaps not quite the right word for a piece which conveys such melancholy and sense of loss. Hear also Poulenc's Elegy for Horn & Piano, composed in memory of French Horn great Dennis Brain. Plus the unusual structure of encasing a fast movement between two slow, pensive ones. Curiously, Australian composer Malcolm Williamson did the same thing in another commemorative work, written in memory of Dame Edith Sitwell: his fine Violin Concerto (commissioned in 1964, so it's just possible that he heard or saw the score of Poulenc's piece).

    • @forsaken696
      @forsaken696 Před 11 měsíci

      @@treesny😐

  • @Luca-gj9xn
    @Luca-gj9xn Před 3 lety +2

    Poulenc is really brilliant. My choir sang "Les Tisserands" in quarantine style. Write this down in the research. You will love it for sure:
    Corale Novarmonia - Les Tisserands (F. Poulenc)

  • @stevebartley8902
    @stevebartley8902 Před 4 lety +1

    When genius hits the ether you have Poulenc.

  • @janosdertrompeter998
    @janosdertrompeter998 Před 2 lety +1

    Danke an
    Maurice Bourgue und Jacques Février fürs Spielen, an Herrn Poulenc fürs Komponieren, an olla-vogala fürs hochladen und das Label fürs Aufnehmen!

  • @maggieclancy6378
    @maggieclancy6378 Před 4 lety +3

    This was mentioned in the book I was reading!

  • @richardlitwin4046
    @richardlitwin4046 Před 7 lety +2

    Dear, dear, dear man.

  • @kayodj3152
    @kayodj3152 Před 3 lety +2

    Dedicated to the memory of Serge Prokofiev!!
    There is a brief quote of Mussorgsky: in the middle section of the second movement, of chromatic descent of the mad Tsar Boris.

  • @marcustorquatus
    @marcustorquatus Před 8 lety +4

    Quelle merveille !

  • @miles3756
    @miles3756 Před 8 lety +5

    You should post more works for woodwinds!!

  • @kiaraeijo
    @kiaraeijo Před 7 lety +26

    I've never heard his oboe sonata but I feel like it captures the personality of the oboe. I still prefer the flute sonata though

    • @cygnebleu
      @cygnebleu Před 7 lety +17

      it's Poulenc's master piece, his very last work before he died, and listen to the END of the sonata, it's like an unanswered question, so beautiful and moving!

  • @staceyxiang3513
    @staceyxiang3513 Před 8 lety +27

    At figure 6 (2:26), this phrase is almost exactly replicated in his clarinet sonata. Just found that interesting.

    • @ramistucky9104
      @ramistucky9104 Před 8 lety +2

      I'm noticing he does this a lot. Do you recognize the 1:12 mark? I swear I recognize it but cannot place it.

    • @TheOboeCrack
      @TheOboeCrack Před 6 lety +6

      Poulenc's wind sonatas share similar thematic material. For example, motifs in the final movement of the Clarinet Sonata can be heard in the Scherzo of the Oboe Sonata. Similarly, the Second Movement of the Clarinet Sonata opens with a motif that can be seen as an inversion of the opening of the Elégie of the Oboe Sonata. Source:Wikipedia

    • @jeanszulc
      @jeanszulc Před 4 lety +4

      @@TheOboeCrack Quite an old thread, but there is also very similar thematic material in other pieces from Poulenc. One off the top of my head is his "Gloria", which has some very close material to his wind works.

    • @arielorthmann4061
      @arielorthmann4061 Před rokem

      All Poulenc ressembles Poulenc, to be honest. You can find some of the thematic / harmonic material from here as far back as from the 2 piano concerto/ improvisations

  • @ozdecanyalcn891
    @ozdecanyalcn891 Před 4 lety +1

    İ love it i playin oboe too

  • @philippecirse4872
    @philippecirse4872 Před 4 měsíci

    Chants parfaits pour lire les formes subjectives des nuages et suivre d'un œil attendri les rainures des tiges des arbres; apprécier l'écriture complexe des branches imbriquées, goûter les couleurs de la décomposition de la lumière en gouttelettes d'eau dans un jardin, ressentir fortement le sol humide de la forêt ancestrale pour percevoir les traces des animaux du passé profond 🍍🌴

  • @musicshin2
    @musicshin2 Před rokem +1

    Bueatiful harmony structure🤭🤭🤭Such a Romantic piece

  • @user-kb6yy8uk5n
    @user-kb6yy8uk5n Před rokem

    The opening of third movement is very similar to his cello sonata’s second movement

  • @erinyun
    @erinyun Před 4 lety +6

    random
    1-0:06 2-2:26 3-5:15 4-6:21 5-6:32 6-8:26 7-9:11

  • @phuocvananhnguyen2467

    This sonata makes me feel like i'm taking a midnight walk in the forest, and the gloomy full moon is following me. I try to escape but everything change since then, the trees move, the flowers bloom, the wind flow, and the silence begins to whisper. The scence is both beautiful and scary.

  • @BCscores
    @BCscores Před 6 lety +3

  • @WilfriedBerk
    @WilfriedBerk Před 6 lety +5

    Excellent, even better then the Clarinet Sonata ...

    • @rashakor
      @rashakor Před 3 lety

      No offense but this sounds like the draft for the Clarinet version. Many phrases are retaken almost note for note.

  • @nono6269
    @nono6269 Před rokem +1

    At figure 3 of the third movement of this sonata, the start of that phrase sounds way too familiar and I don’t know where I know it from

  • @gerardbegni2806
    @gerardbegni2806 Před rokem

    This duo sontat is less capricious than , for instance, the clainet sonata. Following the initial quiet movement in a quiet G major, the following movement is a good example of Poulenc's style, linking sharply tonal cells. Similar techniques can be found for instance in Richard Strauss' and, (closer to Poulenc's style) Prokofiev's works.. This apparently free harmonic juxtapositions are indeed quite carefully ordered. The oboe is wiittten in a very suited idiom. Poulenc was indeed quite interested in woodwind instruments

  • @TatTwamAsi
    @TatTwamAsi Před 3 lety

    SO Francis and yet a true, loving honorouble tribute to his musical twin brother Sergey and Sergey would feel the same.
    They both composed from the heart and fuck conventions.

  • @VincentTurregano
    @VincentTurregano Před 4 lety

    Am I the only one that hears the Stravinsky Violin concerto in the first movement.

  • @franckmousset4022
    @franckmousset4022 Před 5 lety

    Début : réminiscences du concerto pour violon de Stravinsky ?

  • @gerardbegni2806
    @gerardbegni2806 Před 6 lety

    ONe of the last pieces of Poulenc. Very lyrical and a bit pastoral... or is it the tone of the oboe?

  • @yaguin.amp4
    @yaguin.amp4 Před 11 měsíci

    6:16 THE II - V - I OMGG

  • @henriaug
    @henriaug Před 4 lety +1

    Giant Steps in the beggining, anyone?

  • @josegutierrezmartinez512

    What’s the name of the notes in measure 7&8 above the half notes?

  • @pujiacy
    @pujiacy Před 4 lety +1

    Who is from Karl’s film?

  • @ilyaibrahimovic9842
    @ilyaibrahimovic9842 Před 3 lety

    The slow section of the second movement is based on a rather obvious reference to the slow(er) section of the second movement of Prokofiev's flute sonata

  • @romeobortolani1907
    @romeobortolani1907 Před 2 lety

    7.38 trumpet wagner

  • @ramistucky9104
    @ramistucky9104 Před 8 lety

    1:12

  • @mariaocampo3923
    @mariaocampo3923 Před 3 lety

    2:35

  • @rubenuron5397
    @rubenuron5397 Před 6 lety

    Eu só digo assim:🙉

  • @caeliusxviii
    @caeliusxviii Před 3 lety

    got here for my modules🙋

  • @MrChicaneur
    @MrChicaneur Před 8 lety

    A 2:38 le hautboïste ne respecte pas la triple croche liée à la croche... Un peu dommage mais sinon c'est une interprétation réussie. Merci du partage !

    • @annfenchlokentaz8592
      @annfenchlokentaz8592 Před 5 lety

      Lamdur, on attend avec impatience ton interprétation de cette sonate

  • @GIANNIMUSART
    @GIANNIMUSART Před 5 lety

    Ho perso il conto delle note stonate. Lasciamo stare anche tutte le note più difficili da legare che il nostro Maurice invece stacca per prudenza. Non consideriamo tutti quegli slanci espressivi mozzati probabilmente per assenza di fuoco interiore. La mia valutazione finale è: NON IDONEO

  • @aadri.gomezz9251
    @aadri.gomezz9251 Před měsícem +1

    Muy buena sonata. Pero Poulenc debería componer cosas que no se parezcan a lo que te ponen los de Movistar cuando estás esperando a que te atiendan. Saludos!

    • @AntonNoyaCampos
      @AntonNoyaCampos Před měsícem

      Me parece una falta de respeto muy grave hacia Poulenc y todos los compositores del neoclasicismo. Deberías limpiarte la boca después de decir eso. Saludos!

    • @aadri.gomezz9251
      @aadri.gomezz9251 Před měsícem

      @@AntonNoyaCampos Comprendo y aprecio tu pasión por la música y tu defensa del legado de Poulenc y otros compositores del neoclasicismo. Reconozco la importancia de su trabajo en la evolución de la música clásica y entiendo por qué mi comentario podría haber sido interpretado como una falta de respeto hacia su legado.
      Mi intención no fue menospreciar su contribución ni su lugar en la historia de la música. Cada periodo y estilo tiene su propia relevancia y belleza única, y es importante reconocer y valorar la diversidad de expresiones artísticas que existen.
      Agradezco que hayas señalado tu preocupación de manera respetuosa, y lamento cualquier incomodidad que mi comentario haya podido causar. Mi intención no fue faltar al respeto, y estoy abierto al diálogo para entender mejor diferentes perspectivas y puntos de vista en el mundo de la música. ¡Saludos!

  • @trstquint7114
    @trstquint7114 Před 8 měsíci

    I really like this sonata. BUT, the hobo sounds like a duck with a cold.

  • @charlesdavis7087
    @charlesdavis7087 Před 7 lety +2

    Fuck me. This is music that says, "Fuck me in the alley behind Le Chat Noir." "A thousand francs." "I don't carry that kind of money on me. But I'll be there between six and six thirty with it." "Until then. Remember... moi."
    Ah, what an alley that was!
    In West Hollywood we have one called "Vasaline Way."
    Hurry up and onleve sue pantalones,
    Three inspired works, lights, shadows, time and place.
    Thank you Francis. And for only a thousand francs.

    • @treesny
      @treesny Před 2 lety +2

      I would be the last person to criticise someone who called attention to a genuine sexual subtext in a work (musical or otherwise), but really! This is Poulenc's tribute to another great composer, and is filled with melancholy, even desolation, amid the lyricism and manic gaiety. There are plenty of earlier works by Poulenc that evoke carnal desire and the more shadowy and enticing parts of his beloved Paris, but it's a some weird sort of reverse homophobia to hear overt sex in this piece shadowed by death and loss, and filled with a tender sadness. Difficult enough to get people to stop (lazily) using Les Six as the default reference point for the composer of Dialogues of the Carmelites and his great choral music and song cycles... As with Liszt - not coincidentally, another Catholic composer - it seems we must constantly be fighting to have people see and hear Poulenc as a WHOLE artist.

  • @whyeven3722
    @whyeven3722 Před rokem

    The Waffle House has found its new host.

  • @solomonal-harbi8788
    @solomonal-harbi8788 Před 7 lety +2

    In my opinion lots of the music works from 1900s and forward is tasteless.

    • @aurelbarre95
      @aurelbarre95 Před 7 lety +6

      Your opinion is shitty

    • @solomonal-harbi8788
      @solomonal-harbi8788 Před 7 lety

      Jean dylan how so ?

    • @elliotmadethis
      @elliotmadethis Před 7 lety +1

      Solomon Al-Harbi *cough* Igor Stravinsky *cough*

    • @annfenchlokentaz8592
      @annfenchlokentaz8592 Před 5 lety +1

      in my opinion we don't care much about your tastes... and opinions

    • @andrewpearson1903
      @andrewpearson1903 Před 4 lety

      I find myself thinking the same of writing-craft. Most likely it's because the lesser works (and there are an unprecedented number) from the 20th century haven't sloughed off and left a proper canon