Benoît MERNIER (°Brussels, 1964)
Jean Tubéry, directeur artistique CHOEUR DE CHAMBRE DE NAMUR Capella Sancti Michaelis Olivier Opdebeeck conductor Xavier Deprez organ Benoît MERNIER organ
If many consider Benoît Mernier (°1964) as the major Belgian composer of the young generation, it is not without arguments. His aesthetics, influenced as well by Philippe Boesmans as by his stay at IRCAM in Paris, reminds slightly of Magnus Lindberg's style, which Mernier admirese sincerely. But above all, he has a style of his own, and that is precisely what a wide an enthusiastic public discovered when Mernier's Mass for mixt choir and great organ, commissioned by the Brussels Cathedral to celebrate Brussels as European City of Culture in 2000, was created by first-rate interpreters. Joined are also the five organ Inventions, his last work, played by himself on the extraordinary new Grenzing-builded instrument of the Cathedral. A second Cypres CD (CYP 4613) shows another face of Mernier's talent with four tremendous concert works.
DDD | Digipak Text by Olivier Opdebeeck in French, Deutch, English and German Recorded on 30 November & 2 December 2000 and 10-11 July 2001 at the brussels cathedral Producer: Michel Stockhem Editing: Emmanuelle Bailliet (Musica Numeris)
You may also be interested in this/these product(s):
|
|

Benoît Mernier | Les Idées Heureuses (Ref.: CYP4613)
Jean-Michel Charlier clarinet - Quatuor Danel - Ensemble Musiques Nouvelles - Fabian Panisello conductor - Ensemble Ictus - Georges-Elie Octors conductor - Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio-France - Michaël Schonwandt conductor (CD - 2001)
» more info... |  |
 |
|  |
|
|

Debussy's Corner (Ref.: CYP1637)
Trio Medicis - Bernard Pierreuse flute - Ning Shi viola - Francette Bartholomée diatonic harp (CD - 2003)
» more info... |  |

|
|  |
|
|

Benoît Mernier | An die Nacht (Ref.: CYP4624)
Here we have a composer of impeccable, rock solid craftsmanship, a Romantic-inspired musician-poet with an instantly recognisable style. The programme for this CD, directly inspired in poems by Novalis and William Blake, includes two major works for voice and orchestra, punctuated by an interval of remarkable chamber music.
» more info... |  |
 |
|  |
|