BBC Music Magazine

Poulenc • Saint-saëns

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Poulenc: Double Piano Concerto; Saint-saëns: Carnival of the Animals; Danse macabre

Duo Jatekok; Orchestre National de Lille/lucie Leguay

Alpha Classics ALPHA 749 57:02 mins Alex Vizorek is a Belgian media personalit­y who has written a new narration for Saint-saëns’s Le Carnaval des Animaux, a work the composer did not envisage being narrated. The texts preceding each movement are in French, and for all their charm and erudite child-friendline­ss, they won’t hold much attraction for Englishspe­aking listeners.

That said, the performanc­e itself is excellent, not least due to the Duo Jatekok (pianists Adélaïde Panaget and Naïri Badal). They roar threatenin­gly in ‘Marche royal du lion’ and hop about athletical­ly in ‘Kangourous’, but have all the crystallin­e delicacy needed in ‘Aquarium’. Conductor Lucie Leguay favours a sharp, incisive approach, and gets a colourful response from the Lille players.

That carries over into a spiky account of the opening movement of Poulenc’s Concerto for Two Pianos, where the whirligig faster sections take on an almost manic quality. Panaget and Badal mesh together magically in the ethereal coda, where Poulenc imitates a Javanese gamelan. The unusual mix of Mozart and modernism in the Larghetto is seamlessly integrated, and the repeated piano notes launching the Allego molto finale ping out energising­ly.

Panaget and Badal close the disc with a two-piano version of SaintSaëns’s Danse macabre, preceded by Alex Vizorek reading the poem on which the orchestral piece is based. Etched with subtle detail, it’s a fine performanc­e musically, but for French-speaking buyers Vizorek’s Carnaval narration will probably be the main point of interest.

Terry Blain

PERFORMANC­E ★★★★

RECORDING ★★★★

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