You've got to really be into any composer to sit through a recital of works by them and only them. I couldn't hack an all Mozart recital, for example. I think Debussy is wonderful so naturally I'd love go to this gig, but yeah. Most people aren't me.
____, ekirth, desordre, pianowolfi and pianowelsh, thanks a lot for your insight. I am very interested in what you have to say, so feel free to elaborate.
It is incredible to me that anyone would have the confidence to tell Zimerman what to play. Freedom for the artists!
As I am exploring and experimenting and discovering and learning, I am developing a concept of this repertoire that requires (or uses) much more time that, say Gieseking's recordings. Certainly some slashing is in order, so perhaps at some other time there will be a Debussy II program.
First to go is Pour le Piano. I love it, but it is not as pretty as the rest of the program.
I feel strongly about not having an intermission. So strongly, in fact, that I would rather shave the program to 45 minutes, so that we don't get a break. I feel that it is like turning the heat off half way boiling the water.
The reason I have the preludes separately, rather than as a group, is because I think of them as independent pieces, plus Bruyeres and La Fille aux Cheveux de Lin are somewhat similar. I think they don't follow each other well.
L'Isle Joyeuse is such an emphatic piece, I don't feel is has enough room to explode at the beginning of the program. It appears to me that anywhere other than near the end, it comes too soon in the program. On the other hand, I like the concept of having something else after its climax, not to let my poor audience leave rattled, but instead rather sated.
Which is why I like Children's Corner at the end. Yet, it is a little too long a program with it, and I wouldn't play just a few pieces out of it. Plus, after L'Isle Joyeuse, I think I want something even lighter than Doctor Gradus ad Parnassum.
I don't know. Also it appeals to me to finish with a late rather than an early work.
What about either General Lavine, Minstrels or Feux d'Artifice? Or perhaps Etude 11? (I would need to learn those). I would take D'un cahier d'esquisses over la plus que lent, just in case this occurs to you.
Like this:
Arabesques 1 & 2
La Fille...
Suite Bergamasque
Bruyeres
Danse
La Cathedral Engloutie
L'Isle Joyeuse
a softie to close
This is basically the program I played this past July (sans la Cathedrale Engloutie and the softie close).
An unusual idea would be to close with the two arabesques again, in reverse order. Too much of a Cesar Franck gesture?
