Greeting from Amazon.com Delivers Classical 101: Claude Debussy

Editor, Ted Libbey

With Classical 101, Amazon.com's expert editors introduce
music fans to key composers and performers, important
stylistic movements, and milestone recordings in the history
of classical music. In this mailing, contributor Ted Libbey
introduces the tone poetry and painting of Claude Debussy
(1862-1918), perhaps the first great musical modernist.

You can find key works by Debussy at
Classical

And an audio tour and essay on Debussy's preludes and
orchestral works at
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/redirect?tag=entertainmentsit&path=ts/feature/17084

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Poet and Painter in Tones

Throughout his life, Claude Debussy was deeply influenced by
art and literature. He had a remarkable ability to achieve
in music the same richness of emotional sensation, and
ambivalence, that poetic imagery can produce in a sensitive
reader--a skill he showed not only in the opera "Pelleas et
Melisande" but in the first of his orchestral masterpieces,
the "Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun." Indeed, Debussy's
evocative genius was recognized by Stephane Mallarme
himself, the author of the poem, "L'Apres-midi d'un faune,"
on which this extraordinary orchestral paraphrase is
based. "I had not expected anything like that," the poet
remarked. "The music prolongs the emotion of the poem and
fixes the scene more vividly than colors could have done."

Debussy's orchestral palette is indeed more subtle and vivid
than any painter's. The drowsy, suffocating warmth alluded
to early in the poem is superbly rendered by a languorous
flute solo as it unfolds against a dappled background of
muted strings and feathery tremolos, and by the near absence
of pulse through the early pages of the score. The feeling
of passion barely suppressed, which marks the climax of the
poem, finds an echo in the music's gradually intensifying
lyricism, while the dreamy oblivion into which the faun
sinks at the poem's end is suggested by the gradual
fragmentation of overlapping of melodic motifs from earlier
in the piece. The result is a score of haunting beauty in
which, just as in Mallarme's poem, time seems to stand still
and the senses take on an animation of their own.

"L'Apres-midi d'un faune," conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000029R5/entertainmentsit

"L'Apres-midi d'un faune," conducted by Jean Martinon
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000009OQW/entertainmentsit

"Pelleas et Melisande," conducted by Herbert von Karajan
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000K4FN/entertainmentsit


Love of the Sea

It's been called one of the most perfect symphonies ever
written. Debussy's "La mer" is that and more, for like much
of Debussy's music, "La mer" combines formal elegance and
discipline with an extraordinarily vivid sense of imagery,
verging at times on outright sensuality. Rarely has a
composer been so at one with the orchestra as Debussy was,
so adept at moving between pastel suggestiveness and raw
displays of power. Thanks to that, "La mer," like the sea
itself, is alive, complex, ever changing, and breathtakingly
beautiful.

Debussy found the sea an attractive subject for a number of
reasons. "You may not know that I was destined for a
sailor's life," he told a friend in 1903, the year he
started work on the piece. "It was only quite by chance that
fate led me in another direction. But I have always held a
passionate love for the sea."

Debussy's personal experiences of the sea--childhood visits
to Cannes on the Mediterranean, and a perilous afternoon in
the spring of 1889 when he and some friends were tossed
around in a boat during a storm off the coast of Brittany--
undoubtedly played a part in the genesis of "La mer."


Artistic Stimulus

So did visual and emotional stimuli from the world of
art. The paintings of J.M.W. Turner, which Debussy had seen
in London just before beginning work on "La mer," had a
profound effect on him--their mysterious, atmospheric
depiction of the sea took hold in his imagination and
certainly influenced his choice of palette. But the image
that may have exercised the greatest influence on Debussy as
he sought, in the third movement of "La mer," to convey the
sheer, awesome power of the sea came from a contemporary of
Turner, the Japanese printmaker Katsushika Hokusai. "The
Great Wave off Kanagawa," from Hokusai's "The 36 Views of
Mount Fuji," shows a wave that seems about to swallow up a
boat and the men who are in it. The height of the wave
dwarfs Mount Fuji itself, seen in the distance, and the
wave's crest divides into numerous sprays of foam, each of
which is rendered in the shape of a claw. Debussy was so
captivated by this evocation of the life-threatening aspect
of the sea that he had the design printed on the cover of
the original score to "La mer."


Structure of "La mer"

Not surprisingly, for one so visually inclined, Debussy
subtitled "La mer" "Three symphonic sketches." The titles of
the three movements reveal those particular aspects of the
sea on which Debussy chose to concentrate, and provide the
listener with verbal suggestions to stimulate his or her own
sense of imagery.

"From Dawn to Midday on the Sea," the first movement,
explores the sometimes subtle, sometimes dramatic changes of
lighting and intensity that accompany the progress of day on
the water. The music suggests a gradual coming to life, from
calm grayness to almost blinding brilliance, ending in a
blaze of brass and percussion breaking over the full
sonority of the orchestra.

"Play of Waves," the second movement, draws the listener's
imagination equally to the spheres of light and motion. One
senses the rocking of the waves, the unexpected shifts of
current, the dappled glint of sunlight on the surface of the
water, and the mysterious depths half-lit and teeming with
life.

The final movement is entitled "Dialogue of the Wind and the
Sea." Here one feels close to the elemental aspect of the
sea, and to danger, as the orchestra heaves and subsides in
great washes of sound. A moment of suspenseful calm is
reached, before a last great buildup shows the sea in
triumph, dazzling and full of elemental force.

"La mer," conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000029R5/entertainmentsit

"La mer," conducted by Charles Munch
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000003FEG/entertainmentsit

"La mer," conducted by Herbert von Karajan
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001GA8/entertainmentsit


Imagist

Imagery was such an essential part of Debussy's approach to
composing that he gave the title "Images" to several of his
works. He completed three sets of "Images" for the piano,
and he named a collection of three descriptive orchestral
pieces "Images pour orchestre." One of these, "Iberia" (in
three movements like "La mer"), is a colorful portrait of
Spain scored with castanets, flashing tambourines, bells,
and violins strumming pizzicato chords as if they were
guitars. It is flanked by "Gigues," a melancholy tribute to
England, and "Rondes de printemps," which affectionately
recalls the magical French countryside.

"Images," performed by Paul Jacobs, piano
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000005IW0/entertainmentsit

"Images," conducted by Esa-Pekka Salonen
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0000029R5/entertainmentsit

"Images," conducted by Pierre Boulez
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001GGI/entertainmentsit

"Images," conducted by Charles Dutoit
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00002MXMY/entertainmentsit


Studies in Color

Like "La mer," Debussy's "Three Nocturnes" were inspired at
least in part by the work of a great painter--in this case,
the American artist James McNeill Whistler. Whistler painted
a series of canvasses he called nocturnes, and it was these
Debussy had in mind when he described his own set of three
orchestral tone pictures as "an experiment in the different
arrangements of a single color, like a study in gray in
painting."

Certainly the first of the nocturnes, entitled "Nuages"
("Clouds"), fits with that description. Wispy chords in the
strings oscillate without going anywhere, and fragments of a
melancholy solo in the English horn are aimlessly repeated
against the vague background. The music seems to float
somewhere outside the realm of time--just as clouds at dusk
seem to pass without moving, eventually vanishing into the
darkness. Similarly, the music of the third nocturne,
"Sirens," suggests a dream-like vision in which water and
sky merge into nothingness. The wordless vocalizing of
Debussy's sirens--a small, eight-part women's choir behind
the scene--and the shimmering music that surrounds their
calls are among the composer's most masterful examples of
tone painting.

"Nocturnes," conducted by Jean-Claude Casadesus
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00000ADZG/entertainmentsit

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You'll find more great music, articles, and interviews in
Amazon.com's Classical Music section at
Classical

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