Les Chants de l'Amour, premiered in 1985 after a commission by the French Ministry of Culture, is a work for twelve human voices—and a thirteenth electronic "voice" created by Grisey himself, which envelops the human voices in a sort of "amniotic liquid," in the composer's words. We witness a dialogue between different vocal registers and this thirteenth voice which, little by little, learns to sing words of love in every language, taken from Julio Cortázar's Rayuela.
The piece is demanding: the tonal range is expansive, the singers execute quarter-tone shifts, and the tempo and intonation vary in order to express the vast spectrum and changing temperaments of human love. To meet these challenges, Maxime Pascal knows he can rely on the excellent ensemble (which he co-founded in 2008) as well as on Augustin Muller, an expert computer music designer. Don't miss this musical experience unlike any other!