Melancholy Island Maxence Cyrin

Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
04.02.2022

Label: Warner Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Instrumental

Artist: Maxence Cyrin

Composer: Maxence Cyrin

Album including Album cover

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  • Maxence Cyrin (b. 1971):
  • 1 Faro Bay 02:49
  • 2 Soft Skin 02:11
  • 3 Seasons 03:36
  • 4 Rivages 02:56
  • 5 Antica 01:59
  • 6 Salon musique 02:00
  • 7 Dust 03:10
  • 8 As the Darkness Falls 01:40
  • 9 Voyage 02:01
  • Gabriel Delgado-López (1958 - 2020), Robert Görl (b. 1955):
  • 10 Delgado-López / Görl: Der Rauber und der Prinz 04:01
  • Brendan Perry (b. 1959), Lisa Gerrard (b. 1961):
  • 11 Gerrard / Perry: The Carnival is Over 03:01
  • Total Runtime 29:24

Info for Melancholy Island



In Praise of Escape: There’s a special vibe of freedom tinged with regret running through Maxence Cyrin’s new album, Melancholy Island. The title draws its inspiration from two works – “Éloge de la fuite” (In praise of Escape) by Henri Laborit and “La Possibilité d’un île” (The Possibility of an Island) by Michel Houellebecq – an essay and a novel whose discovery unleashed a powerful yearning for other places in the French composer’s imagination. “I love the idea of islands, evoking as they do a feeling of sanctuary”, he says. It’s an idea that’s present form the album’s opening track, the intensely luminous “Faro Bay”, whose essence the pianist sums up as “the idea of departure, of breaking free, of escape”, which is also a kind of “interior voyage” allowing you to “escape yourself and your own time”. With its 11 compositions variously inhabiting moods of gentle melancholy, Baudelairean spleen, stillness and languor as well as more luminous moments of meditation and contemplation, the album opens in the blazing light of Faro and southern Portugal, gradually clouding over and darkening before a brighter outlook returns at the end. Composed over a period of nearly two years, the tracks on this album can be understood as a kind of intimate journal or series of communiqués documenting the moods and feelings as well as the places, towns and landscapes the pianist experienced, from Burgundy to Montmartre (where he lives), by way of the coasts and islands of the Algarve region. For he has often felt the need to escape Paris to recharge his batteries by way of sun and sea and to regain his inspiration : a feeling he describes as a “longed-for sense of who-leness” and wich he gives expression to not only in “Faro Bay” but in several other tracks, for example “Rivages” (Coastlines) and “Voyage”. Seasons, Voyages and Dust

Recorded on a Steinway Model D concert grand at the studios of the Orchestre National d’Île-de-France, the 11 compositions featured on this new and relatively short album (the second to be released by Warner Classics) attest to the pianist’s love of formal concision, firmly linked in his mind to the format and duration of the pop song. Each of the tracks is also produced and sculpted with a specific recording technique, combining the piano sound with effects and at times augmenting it with sober bass lines and synth pads. The hazy tones of “Soft Skin”, for example – a piece evoking the memory (or the regret) of past caresses – were achieved by means of a strip of felt placed over the piano strings. The same idea of sensual recollection recurs later in “Antica”, the most feminine of the album’s pieces, a subtly flowing composition in triple time, expressing, in the pianist’s words, “the ripple of unsated desire”. “Seasons” is a light and free-flowing evocation of the passing of time, an idea inspired by Cyrin’s encounter with the writer Maurice Pons, author of the cult novel Les Saisons (The Seasons, 1965). Sharing a similar theme, “As the Darkness Falls”, the most contemplative of the pieces, is a haunting depiction of dusk, that brief moment when day gives way to nightfall. More intense in mood, “Dust” is about time weighing down on us and our nearest and dearest, while the more relaxed “Voyage” brings a welcome feeling of clarity to the part of the album. The collection concludes with two covers, allowing Maxence Cyrin a return to his formative musical passions. First up is “Der Räuber und der Prinz” (The Robber and the Prince), a disquietingly perverse electropop ballad which came out in 1981 and was the biggest hit of D.A.F., the flagship band of the Neue Deutsche Welle or New German Wave. The final track is a toned-down version of “The Carnival Is Over” by Dead Can Dance, another influential band from the New Wave and Gothic scenes.

Maxence Cyrin, piano


Maxence Cyrin
is a french pianist and composer. After training at the conservatory, he moved on to electronic music and new-wave and made several records during the 90s.

In 2005, he released “Modern Rhapsodies” on FCom, the label founded by DJ Laurent Garnier, where he reinterprets the iconic themes of electronic music from artistes like Massive Attack, Depeche Mode and Aphex Twin as a solo pianist.

In 2010, Maxence made a second album in a similar vein, entitled Novö Piano, in wich he adapted pop, rock and electro tracks from artists as The Pixies, Daft Punk and Arcade Fire.

He also works regularly for the fashion industry for brands like Lanvin, Chanel or Margiela, and has participated in projects in the contemporary art world.

Maxence released and album of original material, “The Fantasist”, in 2012, wich is described as a “fantasized self-portrait”, an imaginary soundtrack combining a strings, piano and vintage synthesizers.

He works actually on a new piano solo album with his own compositions and collaborates with other artists such Miss Kittin and Jay-Jay Johanson.

This album contains no booklet.

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