Tag: Claude Debussy

  • Marlboro Music Lives On WWFM

    Marlboro Music Lives On WWFM

    Just because the summer festival is over doesn’t mean that the music goes away. Representative musicians from Marlboro tour throughout the year.

    This week on “Music from Marlboro” we’ll hear performances from two concerts given at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston. Jennifer Johnson Cano, Mezzo Soprano, will appear in Ottorino Respighi’s “Il Tramonto” (“The Sunset”) for vocalist and string quartet, on a text of Shelley, recorded in 2010. Then violinists Joseph Lin and Judy Kang, violist Richard O’Neill, and cellist David Soyer will perform Claude Debussy’s String Quartet in G Minor, from 2002.

    The program will open with Maurice Ravel’s “Introduction and Allegro” for harp, flute, clarinet and string quartet, captured at the Marlboro Music Festival’s Persons Auditorium in July of 2010.

    I hope you’ll join me for another “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page

  • Fanelli The Mummy & Debussy’s Debt

    Fanelli The Mummy & Debussy’s Debt

    Ernest Fanelli is one of those poor, unsung prophets of music history who wrote works brimming with colorful ideas, expressed well ahead of their time, but were unappreciated, unnoticed, or fell short of their potential, only to have later masters capitalize, either wittingly or unwittingly, on their innovations.

    In the case of Fanelli, there is a very good chance his unpublished manuscripts fueled the imagination of Claude Debussy, who in turn influenced the course of not only French music but of broader musical thinking. That’s not to say that Fanelli was of the same caliber of Debussy, but like Hans Rott, whose lone symphony clearly influenced Mahler, he is a forgotten, though essential footnote in the history of a new kind of music.

    In particular, episodes from “The Romance of the Mummy” anticipate not only Debussy and Ravel, but also Paul Dukas and Florent Schmitt, Holst, Sibelius, Respighi, Richard Strauss and even Stravinsky, a figure Fanelli would not have known. That’s not to say all of these composers were familiar with Fanelli’s work – in many cases, it’s simply a matter of music history finally catching up – but Debussy most probably was. Once his music was finally given a public hearing, Debussy did his best to distance himself from Fanelli. Debussy was even known to have done an about-face if he happened to walk into a café and saw Fanelli sitting at the piano.

    Fanelli lived from 1860 to 1917. A French composer of Italian descent, he studied at the Paris Conservatory for a stint – allegedly under Charles-Valentin Alkan (although it’s unlikely, since Alkan had already quit the Conservatory by the time he entered). Later, he returned to study under Léo Delibes. Fanelli was unable to complete either course, due to lack of funds. In the meantime, he eked out a career as a percussionist.

    He was seeking employment as a copyist in 1912, when he showed Gabriel Pierné an example of his handwriting from one of his unpublished manuscripts, written some 30 years earlier. Pierné was so taken by the music itself that he arranged for its belated premiere.

    “The Romance of the Mummy,” based on a novel by Théophile Gautier, tells the tale of an English archaeologist, who exhumes and falls in love with – well, a mummy. Papyrus roles in her mausoleum reveal her back-story and fate. She is Tahoser, who falls in love of Poeri, a handsome Hebrew. The Pharaoh (unnamed, though it would have been Ramses II) has his sights set on Tahoser himself. However, the lovely young woman falls ill when she finds Poeri is in love with Rachel. She is healed by the prophet Moses, who initiates her into the cult of Jehovah. Pharaoh becomes an enemy of the Jewish people. He abducts Tahoser. When he dies in the Red Sea, in circumstances described in the Book of Exodus, Tahoser is crowned Queen of Egypt. Hence, her presence in the pharaoh’s tomb.

    The first set of tableaux is titled “Thebes,” and is made up of the subsections “Before Tehoser’s Palace,” “On the Nile,” and “Triumphal Return of the Pharaoh.”

    It was the conductor Adriano who discovered a second set of tableaux in the music library of Radio France, titled “Festivities in the Pharaoh’s Palace.” The three subsections of the second set are called “In a Room in the Palace – The Naked Jugglers,” “Grotesque Dance of the Egyptian Jesters,” and “Triumphant Hymns – Orgy.” The music received its first performance in the recording we’ll hear tonight, on “The Lost Chord,” a 2002 release, on the Marco Polo label.

    By the time the first set was performed publicly, the composer had already stopped writing music for 18 years. Poor Ernest Fanelli. He is a forgotten pioneer – though undoubtedly others took his innovations to greater heights.

    I hope you’ll join me for “Mummy Dearest” – Ernest Fanelli’s “The Romance of the Mummy” – this Sunday night at 10 EDT, on WWFM – The Classical Network and at wwfm.org.

  • Wagner’s Lost Symphonies Hear Early Works

    Wagner’s Lost Symphonies Hear Early Works

    If you’ve passed a good deal of your Sunday enjoying Wagner’s “Die Meistersinger” on WWFM, perhaps you would be interested to drop back before bedtime to hear one of his symphonies.

    What? Wagner wrote symphonies? That’s right. He took a crack at writing two of them, in a Beethovenian style, before finding his niche as a revolutionary composer of opera.

    Wagner’s Symphony in E will be featured tonight on “The Lost Chord,” alongside early attempts at symphonies by Gustav Holst and Claude Debussy – judging from their mature works, three figures perhaps least likely to attempt sonata form. Impetuous youth!

    Tune in, if you’re still up for it, this Sunday night at 11:00 EDT – one hour later than usual, thanks to the outrageous length of the opera – for “Bold Heads on Young Shoulders,” on WWFM – The Classical Network and on wwfm.org.


    IMAGES: Symphonies by the young (clockwise from left) Wagner, Holst and Debussy will be heard tonight on “The Lost Chord”

  • Spring Music Playlist on WPRB

    Spring Music Playlist on WPRB

    Right now we’re listening to Claude Debussy’s “Printemps,” our latest offering on a playlist designed to appease the elements and bring stability to wildly mercurial spring. Yet to come this morning, music by Jean Sibelius, Lodewijk Mortelmans, Joachim Raff, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, and Joseph Marx. If the timings are right, that is. I’m as flighty as a cuckoo, drunk on too much pollen. We’re celebrating spring until 11:00 EDT, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com.

  • Debussy 20th Century Music Dark Horse?

    Debussy 20th Century Music Dark Horse?

    Is Claude Debussy the dark horse of 20th century music? While seemingly the entire musical world was polarized between Stravinsky and Schoenberg, no one seemed to care that 20th century music never would have happened without Debussy.

    Debussy saw to it that music could be as diffuse as the light in an impressionist painting. He swirled his brush in the harmonic procedures of the 19th century and devised a 21-note scale to obscure the conventional sense of tonality. True to form, Debussy played fast and loose even with his own system.

    He also challenged the traditional use of instruments, using strings, winds and brass for coloristic ends as opposed to pushing lyricism for lyricism’s sake. The layout of an orchestra is undermined, with each instrument instead frequently treated as a soloist in a great chamber ensemble.

    He also stretched the concept of piano music, so that eighth notes, quarter notes, and half notes are as illusive as objects viewed through a heat shimmer. His chords seem to have no resolution (the composer referred to them himself as “floating chords”) and whole tone scales abound.

    Had he not died of cancer in 1918, at the age of 55, who knows how far he would have gone?

    Happy birthday, Claude Debussy!


    “Feux d’artifice” (“Fireworks,” 1913), from the second book of Preludes, played by Marc-André Hamelin:

    While not my favorite Debussy piece, “Jeux” (“Games,” 1912) is really out there:

    From much earlier, the chromatic flute and recurring tritone in a work everyone can enjoy, “Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune” (“Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun,” 1894), danced here by Nureyev:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zzzF21CFJFE

    PHOTO: Fauning over Debussy

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