The world première recording of Dureys LOffrande lyrique (Op. 4), six songs set to texts by Rabindranath Tagore (recipient of the 1913 Nobel Prize for Literature) in French translation by André Gide, is a highlight of this collection. Musically inspired by the atonality of Arnold Schoenbergs The Book of Hanging Gardens, and often credited as the first piece of free twelve-note technique in French music, LOffrande lyrique navigates a harmonic language which can hold clarity and vivid colour in Lumière! ma lumière!, or blur into dark, heavy clouded gesture in Les nuages sentassent, effectively supporting Tagores language. At times, the words seem to muse over seemingly unconnected piano motifs, before meetingsometimes harmonically, sometimes notsometimes walking the same path, other times meandering separately again. For Paris 1913 to include a world première recording of such important music, written over a century ago, is thrilling, and places Durey firmly alongside his contemporaries in the cafés and salons of pre-war Paris. Far from being overshadowed by the better-known composers in this anthology, these songs stand as a testament to the strength of French mélodies of the era. © Andrew Matthews - Owen & Claire Booth