Unsung Composers

The Music => Composers & Music => Topic started by: Alan Howe on Tuesday 09 July 2013, 23:08

Title: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: Alan Howe on Tuesday 09 July 2013, 23:08
Well, I haven't had so much sheer fun in ages (musically speaking, that is!) Paul Gilson's Symphonic Sketches La Mer for orchestra, saxhorns and men's chorus from 1892 is just the sort of late-romantic riot of piece that I didn't think was out there waiting to be discovered. I know the work's been mentioned before here, but I must recommend the stupendous CD which contains it on the Et'cetera/Klara label, with the Flemish Radio Orchestra under that intrepid explorer of unsung music, Martyn Brabbins.
Excerpts here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Gilson-Orchestral-Works-Paul/dp/B000K4X9AO/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1373407575&sr=8-2&keywords=gilson (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Gilson-Orchestral-Works-Paul/dp/B000K4X9AO/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1373407575&sr=8-2&keywords=gilson)
Apologies if you already know the piece (there's a download available in our archive). Oh yes, the idiom? Wagner/Dukas via Rimsky-Korsakov about covers it. Superlative stuff!
Title: Re: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: ewk on Tuesday 09 July 2013, 23:44
Hi Alan,

The link in the Downloads archive seems broken, anyone who could re-upload the work?

ewk
Title: Re: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: motiaan on Wednesday 10 July 2013, 01:13
Hi,

there is a YT-upload http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6RLeU1cfKE (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6RLeU1cfKE)
Title: Re: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: Alan Howe on Wednesday 10 July 2013, 07:37
Quote from: ewk on Tuesday 09 July 2013, 23:44
The link in the Downloads archive seems broken, anyone who could re-upload the work?

Any offers?
Title: Re: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: eschiss1 on Thursday 11 July 2013, 03:05
motiaan- that's a video, not an audio upload, but thanks. (and no, I don't have software to convert one to the other :) )
Title: Re: Paul Gilson La Mer
Post by: Delicious Manager on Wednesday 17 July 2013, 13:08
Something of an aside: does anyone know for sure if he was a French-speaking Belgian (in which case his name would be pronounced 'zheel-son(g)' (nasal 'on' in the French way) or a Flemish-speaking one (in which case it would be 'hil-sohn' (with a gutteral 'h' as in Dutch)? He was born in Brussels (officially bi-lingual, but predominantly French), but lived and worked in both French- and Flemish-speaking regions and also named his pieces in both languages. It would be nice (for pedantic people like me) to know for sure.