Erik Satie (1866 - 1925) Piano Works (Complete) Vol. 4 The French composer Erik Satie earned himself a contemporary reputation as an eccentric. Stravinsky...
Erik Satie
(1866 - 1925)
Piano
Works (Complete) Vol. 4
The French composer Erik Satie earned himself a contemporary
reputation as an eccentric. Stravinsky later described him as the oddest person he had
ever known and at the same time the most rare and constantly witty. His musical
innovations proved immensely influential on his nearer contemporaries Debussy and Ravel
and on a younger generation of composers and artists in the years after the war of 1914.
Satie was born in 1866 at Honfleur, on the coast of Normandy.
His father was at the time a ship's broker, while his mother was of Scottish origin.
Something of his later eccentricity seems to have been acquired from his paternal uncle,
Adrien Satie, known in Honfleur as a character. The family moved to Paris, but on the
death of Satie's mother in 1872 he was sent back to Honfleur to the house of his
grandparents. Six years later he returned to Paris, where in 1879 he entered the
Conservatoire. There he proved an undistinguished and unsatisfactory pupil, lingering on,
according to one friend, in order to avoid the obligatory five years of military service.
His status as a student allowed him a period of one year in the 33rd Infantry, cut short
by a severe attack of bronchitis that he had deliberately courted.
Satie's few months of soldiering were followed by the first
publications of his music, two piano pieces, and then a set of five songs, settings of
poems by his friend Contamine de Latour, published by his father, who now had a
stationer's shop and small publishing business. Inspired by his reading, in the early
1890s Satie came for a time under the influence of the extraordinary Josephin Peladan,
self-styled Sâr Merodack of the Rose + Croix, an eccentric exponent of Rosicrucianism
with whom he had broken by 1892. Eclectic medieval preoccupations led him to establish his
own mock religion, the Metropolitan Church of the Art of Jesus the Conductor. Of this he
described himself fancifully as Parcier et Maître de Chapelle, the first title sheer
invention, issuing his publication Le cartulaire,
in which critical enemies were attacked in appropriate style. At the same time,
paradoxically, he was involved with Rudolf Salis and his bohemian cabaret, the Chat Noir.
The same years brought contact with Dubussy, with whom he remained on good terms in the
years that followed, in spite of the latter's tendency to patronise him.
In 1905, after a period in which he
had been compelled to earn his living as a cafe pianist and a composer of appropriate
music, Satie enrolled as a student at the Schola cantorum, where his teachers included
Vincent d'Indy and Roussel. Here he attempted to make up for his technical deficiencies as
a composer by a concentration on traditional counterpoint. He completed his studies in
1908, but only began to win some success through the agency of Ravel, who in 1911
performed the three Sarabandes that Satie had written in 1887, establishing the
originality of Satie's early work. The following years brought his compositions before a
wider public, but it was through the advocacy of Jean Cocteau that Satie's fame was more
firmly established, particularly with collaboration in the Dyagilev ballet Parade, with choreography by Massin and decor by
Picasso. The scandal of the first performance, in May 1917, made Satie a hero to a younger
group of composers, to be known as Les Six. In 1923, under the inspiration of Darius
Milhaud, his collaborator in musique d'ameublement, furniture music, that was not supposed
to be listened to, he became the centre of another group of younger composers, the Ecole
d' Arceuil, its name derived from the poor and relatively remote district of Paris where
Satie lived a life of the utmost simplicity, his room furnished with a chair, a table and
a hammock, the last heated in winter by bottles filled with hot water placed below and
looking, according to Stravinsky, like some strange kind of marimba. He died on 1st July
1925, after an illness of some six months.
Satie's Le Piccadilly, described as a march, belongs to the
group of works intended for the music-hall. Like La
Diva de l'Empire, with its allusion to London's Leicester Square, described as
an American intermezzo, an arrangement of a cafe- concert song, it falls among the works
Satie himself described as rudes saloperies. The
sketch The Dreamy Fish, written in 1901,
marked a new stage in the composer's work and was the result of much revision, as Satie's
editor Robert Caby, who prepared the solo piano version, informs us.
Satie's comedie lyrique, Le piège de Meduse (The Trap of
Medusa), was written in 1913 but not staged until 1921, when it was mounted by Pierre
Bertin at the Theatre Michel, an anticipation of Dadaism and the more recent theatre of
the absurd. The characters in the piece include Jonas, a dancing monkey, stuffed by a
master hand, Baron Meduse and his fille de lait Frisette
and manservant Polycarpe, with Frisette's lover Astolfo. The seven piano pieces derived
from the score start with a Quadrille for
the stuffed monkey Jonas, who provides an interlude between the scenes. The monkey dances
tenderly and then seems to go mad: Do not leave your shadow: behave, please: a monkey is
watching you. The second dance is a Valse: Silence,
please: hard as the Devil, and the monkey cannot go on dancing. The third dance is a Pas vite, followed by a Mazurka, with the postscript: Laugh without anyone
noticing: the monkey is thinking of something else. The fifth piece is marked Un peu vif with the added rubric: Do not look out of
temper. The following Polka, to be danced
internally, leads to the monkey tapping his thighs and scratching himself with a potato.
The sequence ends with a brief Quadrille.
Jack-in-the-Box, described by Satie as a cloonerie in a letter to his younger brother Conrad
in 1899, was intended as a pantomime, in collaboration with Jules Depaquit, to be staged
at the Comedie Parisienne. The project came to nothing, and the music survived in
manuscript, to be orchestrated in 1926 by Darius Milhaud for a ballet produced by
Dyagilev.
Vieux sequins et
vieilles cuirasses (Old Sequins
and Old Breastplates), written in 1914, contains allusions to Gounod, to le Roi Dagobert
and to the well known Malbrouk se va-t-en guerre, while the Heures seculaires et instantanees (Secular and
Instantaneous Hours), composed shortly afterwards, has a text with it. Satie had added
often irrelevant comments, asides to the performer, on a number of pieces. With the Heures seculaires the words, not to be read aloud,
form part of each of the three pieces. The work opens with a mysterious and presumably
bogus dedication: To Sir William Grant-Plumot I dedicate this work agreeably. Until now
two characters have surprised me, Louis XI and Sir William, the first by his strange good
humour and the second by his continuing immobility. It is an honour for me to offer here
the names of Louis XI and of Sir William Grant-Plumot. The first piece, Obstacles venimeux (Poisonous Obstacles), has the
following text: This great portion of the earth has only one inhabitant, a negro. He is so
fed up he is ready to die of laughter. The shadow of the thousand-year-old trees shows
that it is 9:17 a.m. The toads call each other by their family names. To think better the
negro holds his brain with his right hand, his fingers extended. From a distance he looks
like a distinguished physiologist. Four anonymous snakes fascinate him, hanging to the
edges of his uniform which is shapeless from a combination of sadness and solitude. By the
side of the river an old mangrove-tree slowly washes its roots, which are disgustingly
dirty. This is not the right time for shepherd lovers. Crepuscule
matinal (de midi) (Morning Twilight at Noon) runs as follows: The sun rose
betimes and in a good temper. The heat will
be more than normal because the weather is prehistoric and inclined to thunder. The sun is
high in the sky - he seems a decent fellow...But do not trust him. Perhaps he is going to
scorch the crops or deliver a great stroke,
sun-stroke. Behind the shed an ox is eating itself sick. Affolements granitiques (Granite Panics) has the
enigmatic text: The clock in the deserted village is about to strike hard, striking
thirteen. An ancient rain-storm comes from the clouds of dust. The great mocking trees
pull at each other's branches, while the rough granite stones push one another about and
do not know where to settle to be a nuisance. Thirteen is about to strike as 1:0 p.m.
Alas! This is not the legal time. The penultimate fortissimo chord is characteristically
marked gaiement, given in obscure enharmonic notation, finally translated into its real
simple form.
The Peccadilles importunes of 1913 are children's pieces, like the Menus
propos enfantins and Enfantillages
pittoresques. The simple music describes infant peccadillos, as the child is
jealous of his friend with a big head, takes his bread and butter from him and takes
advantage of his corns to snatch his hoop.
Satie's
works familiar as piano duets include the well known Trois
morceaux en forme de poire (Three Pieces
in the Form of a Pear). The title is a satirical allusion to Impressionist theories and to
alleged advice from Debussy that he should pay more attention to form. The facetiously
academic structure is clearly announced in the title: Trois
Morceaux en forme de Poire à quatre mains avec une Manière de Commencement, une
Prolongation du même, et un En Plus, suivi d'une Redite (Three Pieces in the
Form of a Pear for Four Hands with a Beginning, an Extension of the Same and a Development
Followed by a Recapitulation). It was a performance of this work by the composer and Ricardo Vines that led Cocteau to
conceive his ballet Parade.
En habit de cheval, originally for orchestra, was written in 1911. Its title refers, as Satie
pointed out, to the dress of the horse, not that of the rider, and may, therefore, be
taken as a reference to the impediment of academic rules, here exemplified in two fugues
and two chorales. In his Memoires d'un amnesiaque (Memories
of an Amnesiac), a title that contains a typical Satie paradox, he claims that the Morceaux en forme de poire and En habit de cheval are, with other pieces, an example
of his work as a phonometrician: not the result of any musical idea, but dominated by
scientific thought. He goes on to explain the science of measuring and weighing music,
with a phonoscope, and the importance of the science of philophonie.
The Trois petites pieces montees (Three Little Mounted
Pieces), arranged for piano duet from the original instrumental version, were written
about the year 1920 and illustrate the childhood of Pantagruel, the monstrous creation of
Rabelais, in a popular style similar to that used by Satie's younger contemporaries in
this period. The childhood of Pantagruel is followed by the Cockaigne March and a polka
for Gargantua's games.
Satie's Aperçus desagreables (Disagreeable Perceptions)
belong to earlier years, written between 1908 and 1912. At the request of his publishers
Satie provided a biographical sketch and a facetious account of some of his works. Of the Aperçus he
wrote: The beautiful and limpid Aperçus desagreables
are written in a most superior style and help us to understand why this subtle
composer is right to say "Before composing a work, I go round it several times,
accompanied by myself'. This catalogue apologia is of little help in listening to the
particularly agreeable Pastorale, Choral and Fugue.
La belle excentrique
(The Fair Eccentric), written in
1920, but including earlier work, is in the style of the music-hall, familiar to Satie at
the beginning of the century. Described as a fantasie
serieuse for dance, it was composed for the pseudonymous dancer Caryathis,
Elisabeth Toulemon, later known as Elise Jouhandeau. Cocteau devised a masked ball as a
way of introducing Caryathis to polite society and Satie entered fully into plans for the
event, writing music and advising Caryathis on her dress and on other relevant matters. It
was five years later, as Caryathis was burning the relics of her stage career in her
garden and the flames had just reached her belle
excentrique costume, that a telegram from Georges Auric brought the news of
Satie's illness, allowing her to visit him once more, as he lay dying. The Franco-Lunary
March is followed by an Eye-Kissing Waltz and a final high society Can-Can.
Klara
Kormendi
The
Hungarian pianist Klara Kormendi was born in Budapest and studied under Kornel Zempleni
at the Bartok Conservatory, later becoming a student of Peter Solymos at the Liszt
Academy, where she received her diploma with distinction in 1967. She enjoyed early
success in a number of international competitions, before embarking on a career that has
taken her to the major musical centres of Europe, with broadcasts in Vienna, Paris and
London, as well as Basle, Cologne, Lausanne and Ljubljana. Klara Kormendi has a wide
repertoire, and has always shown particular interest in contemporary repertoire, both
Hungarian and foreign. Her recordings for Hungaroton include music by Pierre Boulez,
Olivier Messiaen, Luciano Berio and Heinz Holliger. For Naxos she has recorded works by
Debussy and Ravel and the complete piano music of Erik Satie.