Alain Lefèvre and Walter Boudreau Shake the Earth
A performance
of indescribable brilliance
Maison Symphonique
de Montréal, January 15th, 2013
Alain Lefèvre |
On Tuesday evening January 15th, pianist Alain Lefèvre
performed the astonishing Concerto
“l’Asile (Création Mondiale) with the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal
under the baton of Ludovic Morlot. It was composed by Walter Boudreau. The
unforgettable concert took place inside the gloriously new Maison Symphonique
de Montréal.
Geniuses – mad geniuses – that is what this concert was about. It took
Mr. Boudreau about three years to compose the work whose three movements embody
the tortuous life of the late Claude Gavreau, a visionary who inspired the
creation of Mr. Boudreau’s concerto. Collaborating intensively with Mr. Lefèvre
on the superhuman endeavour, Mr. Boudreau knew that it would take one of the
world’s greatest pianists - also a world-class composer - to achieve the final
rendering and performance of his massively difficult masterpiece. He knew he
wanted to create alongside Alain Lefèvre.
Mr. Boudreau wrote the work in four years “in and out” as a tribute to
the avant-garde Quebec
poet and author Claude Gauvreau (1925-1971).
Claude Gauvreau |
During his short life the poet
experimented heavily with LSD, modified the French language turning into a new
form of incomprehensible poetic communication. He never achieved the
recognition or the support which he so wished for. This tragic figure may have
ended his life, but his ideas lived on - championed by another mad genius, Mr.
Boudreau who is very much alive; he is also the director and conductor of the SMCQ.
The twelve-tone composition he composed demanded the most prolific piano
playing through the 45 minute-long work. Mr. Lefèvre’s herculean technique
combined with his immeasurable passion was breathtaking. Hands crossing over
hands, non-stop lightning speed cadenzas up and down the keys, octaves, and
trills and syncopated lines whose first beats had to join up with the percussive section, then the flutes,
sometimes the horns and strings. Nothing seemed or was written to magically
connect together, and yet it all did, in a way that was more fantastic than one
could believe possible. In fact, Mr.Boudreau explained that he created this
work so that the piano – represented the poet Gauvreau who was off on its own
trying to connect to the orchestra which more or less represented the
indifference of society. Rhythmically unpredictable is the composition; both
protagonists (piano and orchestra symbolizing Gauvreau and society
respectively) seemed to embody the pain and punishment endured by Gauvreau
himself. Orchestra and piano had a challenging task keeping up with the other.
In fact, six minutes into the work, Maestro
Morlot stopped it all, and started the performance again – having left
out an entire page! Was it any wonder Mr. Lefèvre kept a handkerchief atop the piano.
I felt Mr.Lefèvre carried the lion’s share of élan for the entire
performance. His extraordinary understanding of the concerto combined with his
earth-shattering technique marvelously communicated the dramatic intensity in
this exciting work.
I began to feel that he knew the night had to lie with him. At times,
the percussion was a nano-second off the timing of the piano punctuating
entrances and final notes, but it was explained to me, that orchestra and
pianist had four hours of rehearsal to pull it all together.
As for the composition itself, the first movement burst into our ears
like a tsunami. It rarely let up. The second movement resembled a slow macabre
dance. There were heart-breaking moments of utter beauty in melody line but
that did not last for long. A sudden interjection of horn would break it all
and then the intentional chaos would once again commence. Prokofiev, Schoenberg
and Rachmaninov rolled into one is what I could hear; Scriabin, Stravinsky and
Liszt as well. Now take the hardest most prodigiously taxing bars to play in
all these composers and know that such rigorous demands constitute the entire
concerto. Rarely was Mr. Lefèvre allowed to rest. Like the tormented soul of
Mr. Gauvreau himself, this great pianist – a world treasure - personified this
poet’s genius. He did so with relentless passion and pianistic perfection. This
trio of mad geniuses enthralled me!
This concert was recorded by Radio-Canada’s Espace Musique and
will be broadcast coast to coast next January 22nd at the
“Soirees Classiques” hosted by Mario Paquet. Alain will present the Concerto
de l’Asile again this Season with the Orchestre Symphonique de Québec and
its conductor Fabien Gabel on
May 29th and 30th.
CD now on Anelekta Label.
May 29th and 30th.
CD now on Anelekta Label.