Tag: Gustave Charpentier

  • Gance’s Louise Film Charpentier’s Opera on YouTube

    Gance’s Louise Film Charpentier’s Opera on YouTube

    Having featured highlights from the composer-supervised recording of Gustave Charpentier’s opera, “Louise,” today on my radio show, “The Lost Chord,” I was moved to search for the Abel Gance-directed film version that came out a few years later, in 1939. Gance is probably best known for his silent masterpiece, “Napoleon” (1927; once running close to 9-and-a-half hours; the latest restoration puts it at 7). And what do you know? I found it on YouTube, clocking in at a comparatively lean 1 hour and 25 minutes.

    American soprano Grace Moore, nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance in “One Night of Love” (1934), sings the lead. (“One Night of Love” was the first recipient of an Academy Award for Best Original Score, even though much of the soundtrack is devoted to opera arias and traditional songs.) Tenor Georges Thill and bass André Pernet recreate their stage roles as Julien and Louise’s father, respectively.

    Charpentier was very hands-on throughout the production, as he was with the 1935 recording, making cuts and alterations, coaching Moore, and advising Gance. At the time, the composer would have been about 79 years-old.

    Charpentier died in 1956 at the age of 95. Until then, he lived pretty much as he always had, since at least 1885 (the year “Louise” is set) – an eternal bohemian in an artist’s garret in Montmartre.

    Take a gander at Gance’s “Louise” here:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uBLMfLyaSQ

    The opera’s biggest hit, the aria “Depuis le jour,” begins at 49:41. Here, I cued it up or you.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2uBLMfLyaSQ&t=2981s

    Vive Louise!

  • Louise Opera Parisian Garret Lost Chord

    Louise Opera Parisian Garret Lost Chord

    “La bohème” – all those artists, creating and loving and freezing in their Parisian garrets. Thanks, but no thanks. I’ll take Paris in the spring!

    This week on “The Lost Chord,” we’ll hear highlights from Gustave Charpentier’s operatic masterpiece, “Louise.”

    Charpentier himself was an inveterate Bohemian. Intoxicated by the artist’s life of Montmartre, he remained virtually suspended in time – the time, as a matter of fact, that is the setting of his most famous work.

    Although “Louise” was not given its premiere until 1900, Charpentier had read an early draft of the libretto to a group of friends in the early 1890s. The action is set in 1885, the year Charpentier, like the poet Julien in the opera, fell profoundly in love with a seamstress. It was also the year he entered the composition class of Jules Massenet at the Paris Conservatory.

    Charpentier was a surprise choice to win the Prix de Rome in 1887. He achieved several high-profile successes throughout the 1890s. “Louise” was finally completed in 1897. The composer’s fame, and the anticipated notoriety of the opera, with its independent heroine who follows her heart in defiance of convention, made “Louise” a box office smash.

    The opera is touching in its conviction, and – although already a period piece at the time of its premiere – a prime example of Romantic subjective realism, actually conceived in advance of its verismo cousins by Mascagni, Leoncavallo, and Puccini. (Puccini composed “La bohème,” based on Henri Murger’s 1851 novel “Scènes de la vie de bohème,” between 1893 and 1895.)

    Charpentier revised his libretto and music incessantly. We’ll enjoy selections from a 1935 recording, tailored specifically to the needs of the gramophone by the composer, who arranged and abridged the work in a manner he thought most conducive to listening at home. Soprano Ninon Vallin is Louise; tenor Georges Thill is Julien; bass André Pernet is Louise’s father; and mezzo-soprano Aimée Lecouvreur, her mother. The Raugel Orchestra is conducted by Eugene Bigot.

    The enterprise was so highly regarded, both as an artistic and as a technical achievement, that it was awarded the Grand Prix du Disque in 1936. Charpentier was 75 at the time of the recording, and still living in his garret.

    An abridged film version of “Louise” was made four years later, in 1939, again under the supervision of the composer. The esteemed Abel Gance directed, with Thill and Pernet again in the cast.

    After “Louise,” Charpentier took one more stab at the theatre with his opera “Julien,” a sequel describing the artistic aspirations of Louise’s suitor, but thereafter he fell virtually silent as a composer, as if in acknowledgment that his earlier blockbuster success was a matter of luck, of his being perfectly in tune, for but a moment, with the spirit of the times. He lived out the remainder of his days in Montmartre, sporadically feted for his most popular achievement. Charpentier died in 1956, at the age of 95.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Jeez, Louise” – highlights from Gustave Charpentier’s operatic masterwork, in an historic 1935 recording – on “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


    Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:

    PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EDT/5:00 PM PDT

    SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday at 11:00 AM EDT/8:00 AM PDT

    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

    https://kwax.uoregon.edu/

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