At the highest level of quality

05/10/2023
Classica - Jacques Bonaure
Le Moine et le Voyou

Carried away by the baton of Léo Warynski, the liturgical word confronts the absurd. The Poulenc-Cavanna face to face creates a shock.

By distinguishing two contradictory tendencies in Poulenc, the monk and the thug, Claude Rostand formulated a lasting, if somewhat exaggerated, witticism. Here from Poulenc, we will only have the monk aspect, the thug being played by Bernard Cavanna. The program may seem strange; what is the relationship between Poulenc's polyphonies, secular (Un soir de neige, on poems by Éluard) or sacred (Motets pour un temps de penitence, Exultate Deo) and Mass on an Ordinary Day (1994)? This is because these works were born from a shock. For Poulenc, it is the return to the faith of his fathers, following the death of his friend Pierre-Octave Ferroud (Motets) or that of the painful period which followed the end of the occupation and preceded the end of the war (A snowy evening). In Bernard Cavanna, the confrontation between the ritual discourse, grandiose and haughty typical of the mass, and the humble words of Laurence, a young homeless woman released from prison and suffering from AIDS, whose words were transcribed without filter. The liturgical word, whose trimophalism gets carried away to the point of absurdity, seems in the end to crash against that of Laurence, between sprechgesang, broken declamation and acrobatic vocalization. At the end the sweetness of a brief poem by Nathalie Mécano, composed a few days before her death, brings a pathetic reassurance. Mass on an Ordinary Day is a work of striking originality which creates a terribly effective dramaturgy. The present version differs from the original by the addition of an introductory toccata and the rewriting of numerous details. This first version was recorded in 1998 by the Vocal Ensemble of the Poitou-Charentes region and Art nova, under the direction of Philippe Nahon (MFA-Radio France)

To date, Léo Warynski and Les Métabolise have produced 6 CDs, and worked in very different directions, but always at the highest level of quality, whatever the nature of the music - and there is a long way between the luminous polyphonies of Poulenc and the aggressive sound material of Cavanna. But always the implementation is infinitely precise, the intonations, even on very high notes, always clear. The same goes for the instrumental ensemble Multilaterale, in the Mass where we will hear the moving violin of Noemi Schindler and the marvelous Isa keeps as brilliant as in the previous version, in the “role” of Laurence.