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Ravel : Œuvres pour piano. Hotz.
Diapason from December 2025
Review de Bertrand Boissard
Page No. 89
Format : 1 CD Digipack
Total Time : 01:00:51

Recording : 01/08/2024
Location : Neumarkt
Country : Allemagne
Sound : Stereo

Label : Claves
Catalog No. : CLA3136
EAN : 7619931313627
Price Code : DM020A

Publishing Year : 2025
Release Date : 29/10/2025

Genre : Classical
Maurice Ravel (1875-1937)
Pavane pour une infante défunte, M 19
Gaspard de la nuit, M 55
Ondine
Le Gibet
Scarbo
Jeux d'eau, M 30
Miroirs, M 43
Noctuelles
Oiseaux tristes
Une barque sur l'océan
Alborada del gracioso
La Vallée des cloches

Tanja Hotz, piano

La pianiste Tanja Hotz, en plus de la musique, aime photographier, peindre et dessiner les couleurs et formes qu’elle observe dans la nature. Cela contribue à son approche de l'œuvre de Ravel qui lui-même faisait preuve d’un talent de coloriste sonore associé à une expressivité emplie de poésie et de rêve. C’est ainsi que la “Pavane pour une Infante Défunte” (1899) nous touche de sa mélancolie gracieuse, d’une élégante et fluide simplicité mélodique apparente exerçant son charme poignant. Chaque tableau du “Gaspard de la Nuit” (1908) prend vie sous les doigts agiles de Tanja Hotz, de la limpidité lumineuse d’”Ondine” à la frénétique et chaotique évocation du gnome “Scarbo” en passant par l’ambiance épurée et plaintive dominée par l’implacable glas du “Gibet”. Les éclaboussants “Jeux d’eau” (1901) bénéficient de la vélocité allègre de la pianiste exprimant avec clarté la virtuosité de la fine dentelle de l'œuvre. Les cinq pièces constituant la suite des “Miroirs” (1904-05) terminent en apothéose ce programme merveilleusement imagé en évoquant le nerveux vol erratique des “Noctuelles”, l’aspect mystérieux et mélancolique des “Oiseaux tristes”, les mouvements miroitants ou houleux d’”Une Barque sur l’Océan”, la danse hispanisante d’”Aloborada del Gracioso” et le balancement contemplatif de “La Vallée des cloches”. Tanja Hotz nous offre là une interprétation remarquable de ces pièces d’une exigence redoutable tant pianistique que expressive. (Laurent Mineau)

The piano music of Maurice Ravel (1875-1937) is often upheld alongside that of his contemporary Claude Debussy as quintessentially French and Impression¬ist. The reality is more complicated. Neither he nor Debussy were fond of the term ‘Impressionist’ at all, and although born in southern France, there wasn’t really much that was ‘French’ about Ravel. His father was Swiss (not for nothing did Stravinsky nickname Ravel a ‘Swiss clockmaker’) and his mother was Span¬ish Basque. If he’d been born eight kilometres further south, Spain could have claimed Ravel as her own. But the family moved to Paris just a few months after Mau¬rice was born, which meant his musical upbringing benefited from everything that the capital could offer. Ravel’s early teachers were all trained at the Paris Conservatoire – long one of Europe’s most august such institutions – and he himself was accepted into its ranks in November 1889. After initial successes, however, his results dwindled and he left in 1895; he returned two years later, but his problematic relation¬ship with the institution did not improve. From 1900 to 1905 he failed five times to win the Prix de Rome that so many illustrious predecessors had won before him, from Hector Berlioz to Debussy. By the time of his final failure, however, he had already established such a reputation outside the Conservatoire that his elimination caused a major scandal, forcing the resignation of its Director. Ravel’s Pavane for a dead infanta of 1899 is his earliest work to enter the repertoire, and it became so popular that he later claimed to dislike it. But it well deserves its fame, and in its apparent simplicity it foreshadows many aspects of the later Ravel, from its semi-modal air that keeps us guessing just which key we’re in, to its firm foundation in the bass – not to mention the manner in which Ravel can shift the meaning of a passage by repeating it with different harmony for the upper line.

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ClicMag n°143 - 12/2025
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