MILHAUD: La Creation du monde / Le Boeuf sur le toit / Suite provencale
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Darius Milhaud (1892-1974) La Creation du monde Le Boeuf sur le toit Suite provençale Few twentieth century composers were anywhere nearly as prolific as...
Darius Milhaud (1892-1974)
La Creation du monde Le Boeuf sur le toit Suite provençale
Few twentieth century composers were anywhere
nearly as prolific as Darius Milhaud, whose listed works
stretch to 443 opus numbers produced over a period of
63 years. Yet despite this lifelong activity, Milhaud's
posthumous reputation rests largely on those works
written at the end of the First World War and during the
early 1920s, when his imaginative and undogmatic
approach to composition resulted in music exemplified
by three of the pieces included here.
It was while serving as secretary to Paul Claudel at
the French legation in Rio de Janeiro that Milhaud came
into contact with the Brazilian popular music that was to
inform many of his works over the next decade. A
prime example is Le Boeuf sur le toit, composed in 1919
as background music for a silent film, but which found
success as a ballet to a scenario by Jean Cocteau with
decor by Raoul Dufy. Not that 'a bull on the roof'
features in the ballet: indeed, there is no narrative action
as such, rather a diverse sequence of episodes, given an
over-all structure by the Brazilian tune that functions as
a refrain during an ingenious traversal of all twelve
major keys and several minor keys too. The lively
opening theme thus recurs at regular intervals, between
which emerge various subsidiary ideas, including a
syncopated melody for strings, an elegant one for
woodwind and a gaudy one for trumpets, such as go on
to become lengthier episodes. Chief among these are a
rhapsodic passage for strings, and one with evident
Latin-American overtones. Near the close of the ballet,
the salient ideas are drawn together in a boisterous coda.
The music is permeated by polytonal inflections that are
a common feature of Milhaud's music in this period,
giving it unexpected harmonic twists, while ensuring
that the work's melodic and rhythmic appeal are never
in doubt.
A tour by Dyagilev's Ballets Russes to Brazil,
during the course of which Nijinsky danced in public
for the last time, was the catalyst towards Milhaud
composing the music for the ballet L'Homme et son
desir during 1917 and 1918. The allegorical scenario,
derived from a story by Paul Claudel, takes place in a
primeval Amazonian forest and draws on such
symbolism as a Janus-faced Moon, the creatures of the
forest and the liberation of Man by a phantom Woman
representing Love and Death. As choreographed by
Jean Borlin, the piece left a mixed impression at its
Paris première by the Ballets Suedois on 6th June 1921,
but the music, with four wordless singers, solo wind and
strings, and a vast percussion section, won praise for its
polytonal and polyrhythmic subtlety, as well as its
spatial ingenuity, and for a time was seen as the
composer's most radical and influential work. Over
pulsating percussion, strings and woodwind build a
dense polyphony, the four solo voices adding a haunting
layer of their own. Next comes a ritualistic section for
harp and drums, then a ruminative passage for strings
and a fleet, Stravinskian scherzo. Unaccompanied
percussion, including a whip and whistle, take the
foreground in a threatening crescendo, curtailed by an
insouciant flute melody. The work reaches a central
stasis, from where harp and percussion lead off with
livelier music. A raucous passage with trumpets
precedes one where ostinati on woodwind and strings
are pitted against vocal chanting which, interrupted by
double bass, effects the main climax. A calmer section
evolves almost as a 'slow blues', the voices dropping
out until only the soprano remains. The brief percussive
coda refers to the opening music and, in so doing, brings
the work full circle.
A not dissimilar scenario is employed in the ballet
that Milhaud composed after his return to France at the
end of the decade. Jazz as an idiom had been coming
into its own in classical music as part of a reaction
against German culture in general, and when Milhaud
heard an American big-band in London during 1920, he
had the idea of transferring its rhythms and timbres to a
chamber context. A subsequent visit to New York's
Harlem district provided him with an African myth as
the basis for a ballet depicting the creation of the world,
scored for seventeen players, with a solo rôle for alto
saxophone. Given a rough ride at its 1923 Paris
première by the Ballets Suedois, La Creation du monde
was soon regarded as a seminal musical and cultural
synthesis, and has long been the composer's most
played work. The moody opening highlights saxophone
against modally-inflected strings, in a soulful melody
which will influence the course of the work. Lively
outbursts on brass and percussion presage a section
where wind and brass engage in syncopated discourse
over percussion, then, over pulsating basses, clarinets
return to the opening music, now on flutes with the
syncopated idea on cello. This blossoms into a lyrical
woodwind melody, before strings lead off with a
boisterous idea which takes hold of the whole ensemble.
The lyrical melody resumes in more elaborate scoring,
before the clarinet enters with a perky theme answered
by the plaintive strains of oboe. A solo horn adds its
contribution as the main ideas are superimposed in a riot
of rhythmic energy, then the oboe enters to bring about
a quiet and tranquil coda, the creation of the world
having been achieved.
Although he wrote a sequence of six 'little
symphonies' during 1917-22, Milhaud did not attempt a
symphony proper until 1939. Much of his orchestral
work from the era comprises suites from incidental and
film music. One of these is the Suite provençale, drawn
from music to Valmy-Baisse's 1936 play Bertran de
Born, which makes extensive use of old Provençal
melodies. After a brief, celebratory Anime, the Très
modere sounds a more reflective note. A folksy Modere
follows, its rhapsodic gait contrasted with a
rumbustious Vif. A further Modere has an ominous
quality, then, after a lively Vif, the Lent brings an
expressive climax in its languorous melancholy. A final
Vif features a 'fife and drum' idea, taken up by various
sections of the orchestra in a rondo which reaches a
vigorous conclusion.
Richard Whitehouse
La Creation du monde, Op. 81 (more info)
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La Creation du monde, Op. 81 - 16:49
Le Boeuf sur le toit, Op. 58 (more info)
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Le Boeuf sur le toit, Op. 58 - 15:14
Suite provencale, Op. 152b (more info)
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I. Anime - 1:53
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II. Tres modere - 1:33
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III. Modere - 1:51
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IV. Vif - 1:08
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V. Modere - 1:57
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VI. Vif - 1:00
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VII. Lent - 2:07
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VIII. Vif - 3:46
L’Homme et son desir, Op. 48 (more info)
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I. Scene I - 1:27
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II. Apparition de la Lune - 1:01
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III. L?omme endormi et le fantome de la Femme morte - 3:19
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IV. L?omme qui dort debout, oscillant comme dans un courant d?au et comme sans aucun poids - 0:44
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V. Toutes les choses de la foret qui viennent voir l'Homme endormi - 5:21
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VI. Danse de la passion - 3:15
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VII. Reapparition del la Femme qui entraine l'Homme peu a peu en tournant lentement devant lui sur elle-meme - 3:51
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VIII. La lune I a disparu la premiere, la lune II disparait a son tour... - 1:10