Los Angeles Times

Charles Dutoit digs deep into the Ravel archive

The conductor and L.A. Philharmon­ic impress with hits and a rare one-act opera.

- By Richard S. Ginell calendar@latimes.com

The Los Angeles Philharmon­ic raised a few staid eyebrows around the orchestral world this fall with a streak of four out of five weeks of subscripti­on concerts conducted by women. It wasn’t deliberate­ly planned that way, former L.A. Phil President Deborah Borda said; that’s just how it worked out due to the availabili­ty of the artists.

This was the week of the outlier program: Charles Dutoit interrupte­d the streak with an all-Ravel lineup at Walt Disney Concert Hall on Thursday night. (The program repeats Saturday.) Dutoit has long been and continues to be one of the best Ravel conductors on the planet. And there was one major novelty in his selection.

Dutoit seemingly had covered the slim Ravel orchestral archive during his epic tenure as music director for the Montreal Symphony Orchestra — available in a four-CD Decca box. But he pulled out something Thursday that he has not recorded yet, the one-act opera “L’heure espagnole.” The L.A. Phil had not played it before either.

The 50-minute opera dates from 1911, uses a monster orchestra, and contains an encycloped­ia of Ravel’s inimitably sumptuous orchestrat­ions, kicking up its heels in the last half with a jota, a habanera and other Spanish dances. The story line takes place in a Spanish clock shop, so Ravel subtly integrates various clockwork noises into his score such as a metronome simulating the ticking of a clock. (This is a half-century before Ligeti’s notorious Poème Symphoniqu­e for 100 metronomes.)

Yet Ravel seemed to have invested a tremendous amount of craftsmans­hip and care upon a silly little farce involving a clockmaker’s promiscuou­s wife whose lovers have to hide in the cases of her husband’s grandfathe­r clocks. Occasional­ly the libretto tries to give a touch of depth to these characters, but what I really look forward to are Ravel’s orchestral brainstorm­s, separated as they are by a lot of not-as-interestin­g underscori­ng. Maybe the above partly explains why this work by a popular composer isn’t better known.

There was virtually no attempt at semi-staging in this concert performanc­e, but the excellent cast could do plenty of characteri­zing with just the voice. Mezzosopra­no Isabel Leonard conveyed the cynical, coquettish nature of Concepción with a Carmen-like tone. François Piolino displayed a saucy tenor voice as her husband Torquemada with Benjamin Hulett sporting a more convention­ally ardent tenor as the would-be poet Gonzalve.

Jean-Luc Ballestra lent his imposing bass-baritone to the shy, clueless muscleman Ramiro, and veteran baritone David WilsonJohn­son portrayed the banker Don Inigo. Dutoit did his best to illuminate Ravel’s orchestral colors in the transparen­t Disney acoustic, giving a good snap to the dance rhythms.

Earlier in standard Ravel, Dutoit produced a peaceful, exquisitel­y phrased performanc­e of “Pavane for a Dead Princess,” with infinite nuances in every note.

Pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet, like Dutoit, was right at the core of his repertoire in the Piano Concerto in G, delicately rippling away with occasional stabs of power, easily riding the crests of the slow movement’s climaxes, and having a ball in the sharply pointed finale with touches of jazz feeling.

We expected top-notch Ravel from this team, and they delivered.

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