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  • 1
    UID:
    gbv_1822226635
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 1 hr., 20 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies no. 9, op. 125 D minor
    Content: Brilliant, Otto Klemperer in a piece that matches his artistry, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Otto Klemperer is not only a huge conductor because of his height (two metres ten!) but also, and above all, because of the importance of his contribution to the history of music. An essential link between the 19th and 20th centuries (he was born in 1885 and died in 1973), in 1907 he met Gustav Mahler to whom he owed his debut at the German Opera in Prague. From the Hamburg Opera where he made his German debut to his exile in 1933 in the United States, he constantly put himself at the service of the music of his period by performing many premieres: the The Dead City by Korngold, Œdipus Rex by Stravinsky, Erwartung by Schoenberg, From the House of the Dead by Janacek. In the United States, he took the direction of the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra which, for a period, he conducted at the same time as the Pittsburgh Philharmonic. In 1939, a very serious health problem left him paralysed after an operation. From then on, he only conducted seated. In 1955, the producer Walter Legge appointed him for life as the conductor of the Philharmonia Orchestra, a formation Legge founded in London just after the war. But ten years later, Legge decided to dissolve the Philharmonia. The musicians, who refused this decision, asked Klemperer, this authoritarian man with a sharp tongue but whom they had learnt to like, to come and conduct Beethoven's Ninth Symphony to collect the funds needed to resuscitate a New Philharmonia Orchestra. Klemperer agreed to let this concert at the Albert Hall be filmed by the BBC. That evening in 1964, the German conductor, in brilliant form, conducted a Ninth Symphony impressive by its grandeur and power with a cast of top soloists
    Note: Sung in German
    Language: German
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_1822226643
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 55 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Oberon piano no. 3, op. 28 Overture A minor
    Content: Stuck behind the iron curtain, Mravinsky, Richter and Gilels were legends, and rightly so. "Russian passion locked up," Yehudi Menuhin sums it up perfectly in these words when talking about Evgeny Mravinsky. He never said 'Hello, Ladies and Gentlemen', according to a violinist in his orchestra. Upon his arrival a crushing silence would hang over everyone, to be interrupted after three or four minutes with 'four measures before measure 64' & that was all." "He was extremely strict," confirms Menuhin. An autocrat venerated and feared by his orchestra, the Saint Petersburg Philharmonic which he conducted for fifty years from 1931 till his death in 1988 and from which, thanks to hard work, Mravinsky obtained extraordinary perfection. "Before a concert, he would make us rehearse several times Tchaikovsky's Fifth Symphony although we knew it by heart. But it was fascinating; we were at the heart of the creative process." However, Mravinsky didn't like recording, he even stopped frequenting studios from 1961. Yet he left at least five versions of the overture of the Oberon by Weber, a piece he felt in perfect harmony with. This version recorded in 1978 is the last. Another favorite work of his was Francesca da Rimini, the symphonic poem by Tchaikovsky: it was the piece he conducted when in 1938 in Moscow, he won the Competition for Best Conductor in the USSR in front of Kirill Kondrashin. In 1983, he renewed the feat once again by winning the audience over with his extraordinary mix of contained passion and haughty nobility. Titans! That is the first word that comes to mind when thinking of the pianists Sviatoslav Richter and Emil Gilels. Not only for their imposing physical presence (Richter frightened the orchestra conductor, Rozhdestvensky) but also because of the way they grasped the keyboard. Was it because they had the same professor at the Moscow Conservatory, the famous Heinrich Neuhaus? When we evoke Richter's repertoire, the name of Mendelssohn does not immediately spring to mind. Yet, in Moscow in 1966, he gave a powerful yet delicate interpretation of the Variations sérieuses. However, the name of Prokofiev immediately springs to mind when one thinks of Emil Gilels. They became friends in Odessa, where the pianist was born in 1916. The composer entrusted him with the premiere of the Eighth Sonata in 1944. But the Third Sonata, which he played in the studios of the BBC in 1959, was also part of his repertoire. Gilels will, however, only leave two recordings twenty years apart, as well as this version that is all the more precious that his television appearances were rare. In this compact work in a single movement, he unleashes all of his power, with an infallible sense of rhythm
    Note: Oberon. Ouverture / , Francesca da Rimini, op. 32 / , Variations sérieuses, op. 54 / , Piano sonata no. 3 in A minor, op. 28 /
    Language: Undetermined
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1822226899
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 55 min.) , sound, color
    Content: Key witnesses shed light on an essential part of the history of music. "In the Soviet Union, from 1917 to 1990, in an extremely difficult context, one of terror even, there developed one of the most intense and richest musical environments of the 20th century ...," writes Bruno Monsaingeon. A fascinating mystery that Monsaingeon attempts to elucidate in his film. This essential period of music history is recounted through conductor Guennadi Rojdestvenski, the last remaining representative of these fabulous performers of the Soviet era (he was born in 1931). He is full of humour and it is a treat to watch him explain why there are two page-295's in the biography of Prokofiev published in 1957 and to hear him talk about Tikhon Khrenikov, the terrifying secretary general of the Union of Composers who was in office for forty years ... Other witnesses include the conductor Rudolf Barshai "One day, I said to myself, enough is enough, and I decided to leave", the pianist Viktoria Postnikova: "Even seated in the plane, they could come and fetch you and say, Out!" and the central figure of composer, Dimitri Shostakovich: "If I look back, I only see ashes and bodies."
    Note: In Russian, with English subtitles
    Language: Russian
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1822227313
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 55 min.) , sound, color
    Content: Exceptional documents bring to us Ferenc Fricsay, the legendary Hungarian conductor who died too soon. "My name is Ferenc Fricsay, I was born in Budapest in 1914, that tragic day the war started ..." This presentation is typical of the manner of the Hungarian conductor Ferenc Fricsay, simple, direct and devoid of boastfulness. His father was the head of a brass band in the army, he was trained as a pianist and a composer at the Franz Liszt Academy in Budapest with Bartok and Kodaly as teachers, he held a first position from the age of 19 playing military music like his father and Ferenc Fricsay made his first steps towards becoming a legend among conductors by replacing Otto Klemperer at the Salzburg Festival in 1947. This film presents exceptional documents showing him working with his orchestra on The Moldau by Smetana and The Sorcerer's Apprentice by Paul Dukas or answering with humour and wit to the questions of journalists. The conductor Antonio Pappano provides insightful comments on the way he conducted and the baritone Dietrich Fischer Dieskau evokes his memories of him. & lt;.p & gt; A charismatic conductor, full of spirit and strength, Ferenc Fricsay endured from a very young age the illness he died of at 49. An early end that deprived the world of music of the masterpieces of his interpretations. "If he had lived longer, Fricsay would have been the first to be able to challenge Karajan's supremacy," claims Yehudi Menuhin, whom we see playing with the Hungarian conductor the Brahms Violin Concerto, "He was a brilliant mind and no one, neither the audience nor the musicians, could resist the strength of his conviction."
    Note: In German and English; the German with English subtitles
    Language: German
    Keywords: Webcast ; Biography
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_1822228174
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 50 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Concertos violin, cello, orchestra op. 102 Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo vivace A minor
    Content: Rostropovich and Oistrakh: The War of the Titans in the Double Concerto by Brahms. These legends of Russian music, that the Soviet regime jealously kept prisoner for so long, are brought together for a legendary concert: Mstislav Rostropovich and David Oistrakh play the Double Concerto for Violin and Cello by Brahms under the direction of Kirill Kondrashin, another legend. Although the cellist and violinist both feature in the pantheon of musicians, their paths crossed before separating again when Rostropovich left the USSR in 1974. David Oistrakh, unlike his friend Rostropovich, remained in his country at the cost of much harassment. Mstislav Rostropovich was born in Azerbaijan, in 1927. His mother taught him the piano and his father the cello. At the Moscow Conservatory he studies the piano, the cello, conducting and composition (his teacher is Shostakovich). He plays his first concert at fifteen, wins First Prize at the Moscow General competition and in the Prague and Budapest competitions in 1947 and 1949. In 1955, he marries Galina Vishnyevskaya, a soprano at the Bolshoi. He embarks on a dazzling career until it was halted by his death in 2007. The most fabulous violinist of the 20th century was born in Odessa in 1908. He started to work on the violin with Piotr Stolyarski, who also taught Nathan Milstein and later Oistrakh's own son Igor. From his first recital, at sixteen in Odessa, a rumor spreads throughout the USSR and beyond, that there is a violinist who plays like no one else, whose name is David Oistrakh... In 1937, he won the First Prize at the Eugène Ysaÿe competition in Belgium, which opened many doors for him. Then began a splendid career which is confined to the USSR for a long time: taken hostage, he will be authorized to travel abroad only after the death of Stalin. David Oistrakh's lived until 1974, when he died while in Amsterdam. For these two artists, brought together in 1965 at the Royal Albert Hall in London with the Moscow Philharmonic, Brahms is more than just a common language. All three have already played his music elsewhere. As for Rostropovich and Oistrakh, they recorded the Double Concerto, but with another conductor, George Szell and another orchestra, the Cleveland Orchestra (EMI). Thanks to their unfaltering virtuosity and the prodigious intensity of their sonority, the two performers who are playing as equals give a thrilling rendition of this score. We then hear King David in Brahms' Violin Concerto which he recorded many times, and namely with Kondrashin. But here in London in 1958, it is with the BBC Symphonic Orchestra under the direction of Rudolf Schwartz, that we hear him in the finale, playing an allegro giocoso performed at an amazing tempo. "Like father like son." It is easy to believe when listening to the second movement of Prokofiev's Sonata for Two Violins recorded in a studio of Le Chant du Monde in Paris in 1961 by David and Igor Oistrakh. Working closely together, the soloists' virtuosity triumphs in this perilous allegro
    Note: Double concerto for violin and cello in A minor, op. 102 ; Violin concerto in D major, op. 77. Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo vivace / Johannes Brahms -- Sonata for two violins in C major, op. 56. Allegro. , Narration in French
    Language: French
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1822228263
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 55 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Zhar-ptit︠s︡a (1945) Suite
    Content: During a memorable farewell concert in London in 1965, Stravinsky the orchestra conductor conducts Stravinsky the composer. This film invites us to relive an historical concert: Igor Stravinsky's farewell performance at the Royal Festival Hall of London in 1965, at the age of eighty-three. To stop the recalls and applause, the composer-conductor finally comes back on stage wearing his coat and hat. Born in Russia, in 1882, where he spends the first twenty-seven years of his life, he then goes to France and Switzerland where he lives twenty-nine years before leaving Europe for the United States where he dies in 1971. As Milan Kundera rightly says in Testaments Betrayed, "his only native land, his only home, was music, all music and all musicians." Without a home, therefore at home everywhere, constantly changing musical style and method, he remains the same in all of his experiments. That is the wonderful paradox of the person who provoked the greatest shock in the history of music with the premiere of The Rite of Spring in 1913. Three years before, on June 25th, 1910, the ballet The Firebird was premiered at the Paris Opera under the direction of Gabriel Pierné during the second season of the Ballets Russes. Stravinsky chooses Suite No.3 taken from The Firebird to say farewell to the London audience. It is a sight to see him bent over, hobbling along and then fill with energy before the musicians of the New Philharmonia Orchestra and transform himself, as if under the effect of a magic wand, to conduct his music. His native land, his home. Another Igor, whose name is Markevitch, is also a Russian emigrant, a partner of the Ballets Russes, a composer and an orchestra conductor. How could the two of them not become friends? But contrary to Stravinsky, Igor Markevitch finally dedicated himself solely to the orchestra, while putting himself at the service of contemporary composers. That evening in 1967, he conducts the Philharmonic Orchestra and the Chorus of the ORTF in the Symphony of Psalms by the other Igor, a symphonic and choral work which has the beauty of a cathedral. This cathedral, which Stravinsky wrote for the fiftieth anniversary of the Boston Symphony Orchestra is based on words in Latin from the Bible. Under the impulse of Markevitch, the orchestra, completely electrified, constructs before us this monument of sound. Archives: Stravinsky, The Firebird, Suite No. 3. Filmed by Brian Large, at the Royal Festival Hall, London, 14 September 1965, BBC archive. Stravinsky, Symphony of Psalms. Filmed by Denise Billon, at the Royal Festival Hall, London, 14 September 1965, INA archive
    Note: The firebird ballet suite (1945) -- Symphony of Psalms. , Introduction in French; sung in Latin
    Language: French
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_1822228360
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 54 min., 16 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Symphonies no. 7, op. 92 A major
    Content: In their twilight years, Ansermet and Monteux set their orchestras on fire. The Art of the Great. On the one side, we have the mathematician, keen on theory, who came late to music and who writes erudite articles and long books (Les Fondements de la musique dans la conscience humaine); on the other side, the musician who started his career as a violinist at the Folies Bergères and whose bushy moustache is his trademark: he is debonair. Ernest Ansermet and Pierre Monteux have nothing in common, it seems. In fact, they have a great deal in common! They both began their careers thanks to Serge de Diaghilev who hired them as conductors for the Russian Ballets, only a few years apart. For both of them, it was Igor Stravinsky who was to mark a decisive step in their lives as musicians: Ansermet meets Stravinsky in 1913 and becomes his friend. He premiered the Russian composer's A Soldier's Tale, The Song of the Nightingale, Pulcinella, The Fox and The Wedding. That same year of 1913 in Paris, on May 29, Pierre Monteux conducted the premiere of The Rite of Spring at the Théâtre des Champs Elysées, provoking one of the greatest scandals in the history of music. He also premiered Stravinsky's Petrushka and The Nightingale. Finally, in this game of similarities, another one is obvious: they both played important creative roles not only with Stravinsky's work, but also by conducting the "premieres" of Major works by Debussy, Ravel, de Falla, Saint-Saëns, Prokofiev, Britten & For both men this taste for adventure is combined with an insatiable appetite for conducting orchestras and all repertoires. Ernest Ansermet founded in 1918 the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande which he conducted until his death in 1969. Whereas Pierre Monteux conducted many prestigious formations in the United States, including the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra and the NBC Symphony Orchestra. In 1961, he was appointed principal conductor of the London Symphony Orchestra where he remained until the end of his life in 1964. The film shows Ansermet in 1967 in Paris conducting the Orchestra of the ORTF in a tense, incandescent Beethoven's Seventh Symphony of exemplary precision. Two years before his death, the Swiss conductor corrects all those who considered him not to be at his best in the Romantic repertoire. They should listen to this version of Beethoven's Seventh. And one should also listen to how Monteux, at eighty-four, conducts the London Symphony Orchestra in Dukas' Sorcerer's Apprentice. He is the sorcerer, and he literally sets the place on fire. A pure delight!
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: Webcast
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_182222814X
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 54 min., 50 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Sonatas cello, piano no. 4, op. 102, no. 1 C major
    Content: Richter and Rostropovich, the meeting of two legends around Beethoven and Prokofiev. Beethoven first: on August 30th 1964, at the Edinburgh Festival, Mstislav Rostropovich and Sviatoslav Richter played the complete Sonatas for Cello and Piano by Beethoven for the one and only time in concert . The cameras of the BBC that were there allow us to hear these two legends in the Fourth Sonata Opus 102 No. 1, a bold work typical of the last period of Beethoven's life. A version which is hard to surpass. To measure the importance of the event, one must refer to the stature of the musicians on stage who dominate the whole history of 20th century music. Mstislav Rostropovich was born in Baku, Azerbaijan in 1927. His mother taught him the piano and his father the cello. At the Moscow Conservatory he studies the piano, the cello, conducting and composition (he has Shostakovich and Prokofiev as teachers!). He played his first concert at fifteen, won First Prize at the Moscow General competition and at the Prague and Budapest competitions in 1947 and 1949. In 1955 he married Galina Vishnevskaya, a soprano singer at the Bolshoi. Once he becomes famous he resists the Soviet regime, comes out in support of Solzhenitsyn and is subjected to much harassment. In 1974, his wife and he are authorized to leave the USSR. He is deprived of his nationality four years later. Although Sviatoslav Richter was born in 1915 in Ukraine, it was in Odessa that he spent his childhood and adolescence. His father, a pianist, introduces him very young to the instrument. He doesn't have any special tuition and learns by reading opera scores. "I had three teachers, my father, Wagner and Heinrich Neuhaus." Neuhaus - whom he joins at the Moscow Conservatory at the age of twenty-two - says of him, "That's the student I have been waiting for all my life. For me, he is a genius." But it is to Prokofiev that we owe this meeting between these two legends: in 1949 they premiered the Sonata for Cello and Piano. They also premiered another Prokofiev piece in 1952, the Sinfonia Concertante, written for Rostropovich, conducted by Richter (a broken finger prevented him from playing the piano). It is this score, later forbidden by the Soviet authorities, that Rostropovich plays for us in 1970 with the Monte Carlo Orchestra under the direction of Okko Kamu. A score of which he knows all the secrets
    Note: Sonata for cello and piano no. 4 in C major, op. 102, no. 1 / Ludwig van Beethoven -- Sinfonia concertante in E minor for cello and orchestra, op. 125 / Sergei Prokofiev. , Introduction in French
    Language: French
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  • 9
    UID:
    gbv_1822228387
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 55 min., 15 sec.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Sonatas piano D. 664 A major
    Content: Two Legends: Wilhelm Kempff in his prime performing Schubert and Schumann, and Maurizio Pollini at eighteen performing Chopin. At the end of his life, Wilhelm Kempff retired to Casa Orfeo, his summer residence in Positano, a fisherman's village on the coast of Amalfi where on May 23, 1991, at the age of ninety-five he expired like a candle in the wind, a fortnight after Rudolf Serkin who died on May 9th and a fortnight before Claudio Arrau died on June 9th. It would seem these three legends who illuminated the 20th century with their singular genius wanted to leave together for the pantheon of pianists. Wilhelm Kempff was a child prodigy. For this son of an organ player in Jüterborg, born on November 25th, 1895, it seemed perfectly natural at the age of ten to play by heart and to transpose into any key, the forty-eight preludes and fugues of the Well-Tempered Clavier by Jan Sebastian Bach. Admitted at nine to the Hochschule für Musik in Berlin, he studied the piano with Heinrich Barth, but he also took lessons in composition and later in philosophy and music history. In 1918, Arthur Nikisch takes him on to play with the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra the Concerto No. 4 in G Major by Beethoven, the composer that was to accompany him his whole life. He records his complete sonatas three times and plays them in concert as well as the Five Concertos. And each summer in Positano, he gives lessons on interpretation based on Beethoven. Bach and Beethoven are the pillars on which Kempff builds "his home," Schubert and Schumann are a natural extension to his repertoire. Of Schubert, in a performance filmed in Paris in 1968, Kempff translates all the interiority and depth of the first movement of Sonata No. 22 in A Major D 664, a piece written by the composer in September 1828 two months before his death. Schumann's language seems to have been invented for Kempff, a chaman in direct contact with the composers. This attitude is something he shares with the conductor Furtwängler (with whom he has often played four-handed at the piano) and combines his worship of the musicians he is interpreting and his spontaneity based on exacerbated individuality. His playing style which is completely spontaneous seems as light as air, as in Arabesque in 1961 and the Davidsbündlertänze he plays in 1963, during the Besançon Festival, which vanish as if in a dream. A phantasmagorical vision, music in pure form. After the artist in his prime comes the very young Maurizio Pollini, at eighteen after winning the First Prise at the Warsaw Chopin Competition. Instead of launching out on a career that beckons him, he withdraws and works with Michelangeli. But the day after his triumph, he is invited in 1960 by Bernard Gavoty and Magda Tagliaferro to play three preludes by Frédéric Chopin in front of the cameras. Beyond his astounding virtuosity, there is already the presence of a complex personality who knows how to combine, as few others do, lyricism and a scrupulous respect of the score
    Note: Piano sonata no. 13 in A major, D. 664. Allegro moderato / , Arabesque, op. 18 ; , Davidsbündlertänze, op. 6 / , 24 preludes, op. 28. No. 8 in F-sharp minor ; , No. 6 in B minor ; , No. 24 in D minor / , Commentary in French
    Language: French
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_1822228190
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (1 video file 53 min.) , sound, color
    Uniform Title: Mamelles de Tirésias pianos (2), orchestra Non monsieur mon mari D minor
    Content: Immersion into the works of Francis Poulenc with his musician friends, Denise Duval, Jean-Pierre Rampal and Jacques Février. On the stage of the Salle Gaveau in Paris, one evening of 1959, before a well-heeled audience, Francis Poulenc at the piano, accompanies his musician friends who interpret his works. This film provides the best possible portrait of the composer. Trained as a pianist, born in 1899 in Paris, Poulenc never studied composition at the conservatory, but took lessons with Charles Koechlin. He obtained his first successes with Rhapsodie Nègre and Le Bestiaire (based on poems by Apollinaire) which already suggests the originality of his music. At the beginning of the twenties, he was a member of the Group of Six, composed of composers whose taste for jazz, the music-hall, popular melodies and humour was brought together under the influence of Jean Cocteau. In Francis Poulenc's life friendship plays a Major role. First of all his friendship with Denise Duval, the soprano he discovered, with Cocteau, at the Folies Bergères. She will be his muse and he will write for her his most beautiful lyrical pieces: The Breasts of Tiresias, Dialogues of the Carmelites and The Human Voice. Accompanied by Poulenc at the piano, with her fluty voice, she sings excerpts of these three works. She then offers us two melodies from La courte paille, a delightful anthologuy of short pieces written for her by Poulenc to sing to her little boy. The pianist Jacques Février is his childhood friend. The Concerto for Two Pianos, which he premieres with the composer in 1932 at the Venice Biennial, is dedicated to him. The piece is just as charming three decades later, in 1962, played by the same performers accompanied by the National Orchestra of the RTF under the direction of Georges Prêtre. A year later, Francis Poulenc dies. A concert in homage to him is organised by his friends for French television. Among them is Jacques Février, of course, but also Gabriel Bacquier who offers us a selection of his melodies: Hôtel, Voyage à Paris, Les gars qui vont à la fête, L'offrande, Invocation aux Parques, La belle jeunesse... We find ourselves once again on the stage of the Salle Gaveau in 1959, with the cantilena of the Sonata for flute and piano, one of the most beautiful works written by the composer "in good humour, at the Majestic Hotel in Cannes." The person to whom the piece is dedicated and premieres it, his flautist Jean-Pierre Rampal, confides that it is "an appropriately difficult piece." Pure melodic feeling
    Note: The breasts of Tiresias. Non, monsieur mon mari -- Dialogues of the Carmelites. Oh! Mon père, cessons ce jeu, par pitié -- La voix humaine. Tu as raison... Si, je t'écoute -- The short straw. Les Anges musiciens ; Quelle aventure -- Concerto for two pianos in D minor -- Banalités. Hôtel ; Voyage à Paris -- Chansons villageoises. Les gars qui vont à la fête -- Chansons gaillardes. L'Offrande ; Invocation aux Parques ; La belle jeunesse -- Sonata for flute and piano. Cantilena : assez lent. , In French
    Language: French
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