Poulenc – La Voix Humaine
Felicity Lott; Graham Johnson
Champs Hill Records CHRBR045
La Voix Humaine, the third and last opera written by Francis Poulenc, is based on the play by Jean Cocteau and well known as the solitary “tour-de-force” for any soprano gifted with an acting ability. The piece is a bit of a curiosity, as Poulenc apparently detested all “mechanical” forms of communication, preferring face-to-face encounters. The lonely voice of a woman, whose lover’s cruel comments we can only imagine, is a surprisingly relevant tale now, in the age of text-message and Facebook breakups. The inherent inability (as Cocteau insisted) of two human beings to fully communicate causes the piece to be touching, irritating and sorrowful in parts.
The novelty of this recording is that it eschews the traditional Poulenc orchestration in favour of solo piano accompaniment. It is the first time (since Poulenc’s own performances, accompanying Denise Duval over 50 years ago) that permission has been given for La Voix Humaine to be recorded with piano accompaniment. Rosine Seringe, the composer’s niece, has granted a special dispensation to Felicity Lott and Graham Johnson — as a token of decades of special friendship between the artists and the Poulenc Estate — for this work to be produced (according to Champs Hill Records).
Does it change the work significantly? I would insist that yes, it is a different La Voix Humaine — a lonelier, sadder, but by no means less satisfying experience.