L’éventail de Jeanne (ballet).
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Descripción del producto La Suite très appréciée de Ravel Ma Mère l'Oye illustre parfaitement des contes de fées familiers tels que La Belle au bois dormant ou Le Petit Poucet et peut être écoutée ici dans sa version de ballet avec un Prélude. Paris, dans les années 1920, était un foyer de collaboration créative et le ballet pour enfants L'Éventail de Jeanne rassemble divers compositeurs dont le Groupe des Six, ce qui crée un joyeux mélange d'influences et d'individualités de la Marche de Ferroud inspirée de Stravinsky à l'entraînante Pastourelle de Poulenc, et de la splendide Fanfare d'ouverture de Ravel à la grandiose Valse de Carnaval de Schmitt. C'est le premier enregistrement de la version intégrale de L'Éventail de Jeanne réalisé avec un orchestre français. Opinión Ravel's charming Mother Goose Suite (Ma mère l'Oye) delicately and imaginatively portrays familiar fairy tales such as Sleeping Beauty and Hop-o'-my-Thumb. Originally written as a piano duet for two young children, the work is heard here in Ravel's expanded ballet version with a scene-setting Prélude. The ballet premiered in 1912 at the Théâtre des Arts in Paris. In the 1920s, Paris became a hotbed of creative collaboration, and the children's ballet L'Éventail de Jeanne (Jean's Fan) brought together composers including members of Les Six. Jeanne was the Parisian hostess and patroness of the arts Jeanne Dubost, who ran a children's ballet school. In 1927 she presented ten of her composer friends with leaves from her fan, asking each of them to write a little dance for her pupils. The children were dressed in fairytale costumes and the décor was enlivened by a set designed with mirrors. It was first produced in private at Jeanne Dubost's Paris salon, with Maurice Ravel playing a piano transcription of the music, and had its public premiere at the Paris Opera in 1929. LEventail De Jeanne is a joyous mélange of influence and individuality, from Ferroud's Stravinsky-tinted Marche to Poulenc's catchy Pastourelle, and from Ravel's glorious opening Fanfare and Darius Milhaud's Polka to Florent Schmitt's truly grand Carnival Waltz finale. On this recording, the Orchestre National des Pays de la Loire is spiritedly conducted by John Axelrod --New Classics, Oct'16 We know L'Éventail de Jeanne (Jeannes's Fan), a collaborative ballet in ten movements by ten composers, primarily from Ravel's opening Fanfare and Poulenc's Pastourelle, but the other numbers have plenty of appeal. Roussel's bittersweet Sarabande adds weight to an otherwise frothy brew. --Classics Today, Dec'16