Flute Concerto No. 1 (Jolivet)


wrote his first Flute Concerto in 1949. It is scored for solo flute and strings and was premièred on 24 January 1950 by soloist Jean-Pierre Rampal.
The work lasts about 13 minutes. It is now part of the standard flute repertoire and several prominent flautists have recorded it.

Background

Jolivet associated the sound of the flute with "the breath of life" and was particularly fascinated by its "primitive" connotations.
In 1944, he wrote Chant de Linos for a competition at the Paris Conservatoire. Jean-Pierre Rampal won the First Prize and he and Jolivet became close friends. Five years later, the composer wrote the Flute Concerto for Rampal.

Overview

The concerto is cast in four short movements that follow a slow-fast-slow-fast structure reminiscent of the 17th-century Italian sonata da chiesa. Although tonally adventurous, the work is notable for its melodic simplicity and lack of gratuitous virtuosity, which sets it apart from the Romantic tradition of showy concertos.
The piece starts with a soft, melancholy melody but gets more and more agitated and dissonant as the strings enter, although some brighter passages still appear occasionally. After the dark slow movement the work ends with an Allegro risoluto and a propulsive, thrilling finale.
As critic Antoine Goléa remarked:

Movements

  1. Andante cantabile
  2. Allegro scherzando
  3. Largo
  4. Allegro risoluto

    Recordings