Claude Debussy
(1862 -1918) (orch. by Caplet)
Children's
Corner Suite Clair de lune
Pagodes from Estampes
Andre Caplet
(1878 -1925)
Nihavend from Suite
Persane Legende pour orchestre
Marche triomphale et pompiere
Servant of music
in the highest sense of the word, Andre Caplet made the sole error of keeping
precious time for the music of others at the expense of his own. This, with his
premature death, explains the small number of his compositions, a handful of
works, but of an originality and quality that reaches the rank of masterpiece
and that brings regret at the unfinished achievement of a career so rich in
promise and so soon cut short.
Born at Le Havre on 27th
November 1878, Caplet began
his studies with a fine musician of English origin who had settled in the town,
Henry Woollett (1864 -1936). He continued at the Paris Conservatoire under
Xavier Leroux, Paul Vidal and Charles Lenepveu. The profound impression made by
the young musician can be measured by the fact that he won the Premier Grand
Prix de Rome in 1901, ahead of Maurice Ravel and Gabriel Dupont, with his
cantata Myrrha, which, like many of his works, remained unpublished. He
spent only a short time at the Villa Medici. Doubtless the principal advantage
of his stay was the lasting friendship of Florent Scmitt. He came to notice in
1897 for the ease with which he stood in for Xavier Leroux to conduct the
orchestra of the Theatre de la Porte-Saint-Martin. His return to Paris confirmed his natural gifts as a conductor and he won
important engagements abroad. Notably he directed major operatic works in Boston from 1910 to 1914 and it was he who brought about in
1913 the triumphant first performance of Louis Aubert's La foret bleue. He
was also on the podium at the Chatelet on 12th May 1911 to conduct the first performance of the Martyre de
Saint sebastien, the result of the collaboration of d' Annunzio and
Debussy. The participation of Caplet in this performance was not limited to
conducting: short of time, Debussy had entrusted to him the harmonic
realisation and orchestration of whole sections of the work.
It is true that
the young musician entertained a boundless admiration for the older mall. In
some respects Caplet remains the only real disciple of the composer of Pelleas.
He had a miraculous insight into his music and knew in his work how to
bypass the cliches of Debussyism and retain only the spirit - and above all
that of freedom and independence. Caplet pushed to the extreme the care that
Debussy had for economy of means, sharing with him an insistence on absolute
perfection. The agnostic pantheism of Debussy, however, was opposed to his
character: the burning and sincere faith of Caplet was, on the contrary, the
essential source of his inspiration. He also cultivated as a matter of
preference the Gregorian modal vein that is only one aspect of Debussy's
genius. The depth and sincerity of religious feeling found its most natural
form in the spirit of Gregorian chant. Caplet was thus above all a religious
composer, making use of the human voice for the most instinctive expression. In
this way his Prieres, his Messe tl trois voix (1919) and his
admirable Miroir de Jesus renew in a modem musical language the
luminous, fresh and joyful character of Gregorian chant.
Serving in the
infantry, Caplet fought bravely in the 1914 war and was seriously wounded. He
died in 1925 of pleurisy, the delayed result of sufferings endured during the
course of the conflict.
In spite of his
preference for the voice, Caplet displayed a remarkable talent for orchestral
writing, at its height in the admirable Epiphanie of 1923 for cello and
orchestra. This gift is evident in the music here recorded, where he shows a
preference for reduced effects and in particular for the strings. His ability
to lead several vocal lines in harmonious counterpoint gives his instrumental
music a unique flavour, with its singing contrapuntallines. Caplet remains
above all a polyphonic composer, something that distinguishes him, moreover,
from the essentially harmonic language of Debussy.
Spurred on by the
encouragement lavished on him by the societe de Musique Contemporaine in favour
of the enrichment of the wind repertoire, Caplet, who had already written a Quintet
for piano and woodwind, composed in 1901 his Suite persane for double
wind quintet, pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons and horns. This
triptych, using three authentic Persian melodies, sharki, Nihavend and Iskia
samasi, was greeted with enthusiasm in an article by Woollett after its
first performance in Le Havre. The composer soon afterwards arranged
aversion of Nihavend for an orchestra of modest dimensions, double
woodwind with piccolo, four horns, triangle, tambourine, cymbals, harp and
strings. The melody announced by the flute and clarinet in exposed fifths has
the character of a melody hesitating between Dorian and AeoIian (in E). This
piece proceeds in the manner of a passacaglia: repetition of the opening melody
accompanied by rhythmic modifications and associated from the third variation
with a motif based on the descending scale, which serves as a countersubject.
The feeling grows gradually more intense, from the mysterious sweetness of the
beginning to the animation of the fifth variation, with sustained contrapuntal
activity. A major place is given to the arabesque, in which the embroidery of
the clarinet gives the eighth variation the spirit of a varied chorale. The
piece ends dreamily with the echo of the opening melody in the flute and
clarinet in the Aeolian mode on B. The dreaming beauty of this very poetic
piece owes much to the use of modal scales of imprecise tonal identity.
Legende exists at the same time in aversion for
chamber ensemble, with oboe, clarinet, saxophone, bassoon and string quintet
and in aversion for orchestra with double woodwind and piccolo, four horns, two
trumpets, three trombones, tuba, percussion, harp and strings. Composed in
1905, it was first performed on 19th
January 1905 in Boston. The mysterious atmosphere of the introduction gives
way to a breathless motif of ascending triplet crotchets, broken by
syncopations, establishing a dark and anguished atmosphere: even if this
material shows some relationship with the central part of the Masque de la
mort rouge (Masque of the Red Death) (Conte fantastique) for harp
and strings inspired by the well-known story by Edgar Allan Poe, the two works
are very different and the LegelIde cannot at all be considered a first
version of the Conte fantastique of 1923. At least the tragic atmosphere
suggests rather a nightmare than fairyland: in that respect this work can be
considered a premonition of the masterpiece to come.
A far remove from
the boldness of writing of Legende, the Marche triompha[e et pompiere, dedicated to members of the Institute, was written for
the centenary of the Villa Medici and uses the same orchestral forces. Caplet
exploits humorously the resources of ceremonial splendour latent in modal
style: the fanfare of the overture is in the Dorian mode on B.
After the Martyre
de Saint Sebastien the high esteem in which Debussy held his younger
colleague is behind several other collaborations. In this way he entrusted to
Caplet the orchestration of several piano pieces, Clair de lune from the
Suite bergamasque, Children's Corner and Pagodes from Estampes.
The beauty of this last arrangement bears witness to the perfect
understanding he had of the music of the composer he so much admired. The
pentatonic oriental atmosphere involved, of course, the use of the celesta,
triangle, cymbals and gong. This is in fact a re-composition of the Debussy
score: pentatonic arpeggios reflect all the colours of the rainbow, emphasized
by Caplet's use of contrary motion between harp and celesta. Towards the end,
the trills of violins and violas, the tremolos of the celesta and the glissandi
of harps in contrary motion contribute to a halo of sound that is ecstatic in
beauty.
Michel Fleury
(English translation by Keith Anderson)