Francis Poulenc (1899-1963) Piano Music, Volume 2 Francis Poulenc was born on 7th January 1899 in Paris into a well-to-do family. His father and two of his...
Francis Poulenc
(1899-1963)
Piano Music, Volume 2
Francis Poulenc was born on 7th January 1899 in Paris into a well-to-do
family. His father and two of his brothers were successful businessmen in the
well-known Poulenc pharmaceutical company. His mother was a skilled amateur
pianist and her son's first piano teacher. While his father insisted on a sound
classical education for his son, the boy's obvious musical talent could not be
ignored. Reminiscing many years later, Poulenc recalled his one childhood passion,
to play the piano, and the present of a child's piano when he was five. By 1915
he determined to undertake serious study of the instrument and began lessons
with the eccentric virtuoso and family friend Ricardo Vines. It was the latter
who introduced him, about a year later, to Erik Satie and it was through Vines
that he met a composer of his own age, Georges Auric, who became his life-long
friend. Vines's ideas about the use of the piano pedals made a strong
impression on Poulenc, who later gave forthright expression to his opinions on
the matter: "The use of the pedals is the great secret of my piano music
(and the lack of it often its downfall). They will never use enough pedal!
Never enough!" Many years later Poulenc wrote: "I owe him everything...
It is really to Vines that I owe my first flights in music and everything I
know about the piano". He quickly became an excellent pianist, a virtuoso
with a highly personal technique, often performing his own compositions, both
as a soloist and accompanist, and as late as 1957 his recordings of Satie's
piano music were awarded a prize by the Academie Charles Cross.
Poulenc wrote his first piano compositions in early 1917. After World
War I he returned to the study of music, although he remained in the French
army until after the Armistice. In 1919 concert audiences first heard his
quickly popular three Mouvements perpetuels. Around the year 1920 the
critic Henri Collet grouped together Auric and Poulenc, with Milhaud, Honegger,
Durey and Tailleferre, as Les Six. It was soon after this that Poulenc
sought further instruction and in 1921 he became a pupil of the composer
Charles Koechlin, an excellent teacher, who well understood how to develop the
particular qualities of a student, advising his pupils to avoid the
exaggeration of romanticism without sacrificing depth of feeling.
In 1924 Sergey Dyagilev commissioned from Poulenc the score Les
biches ('The Does') for the Ballets russes. The work was a great
success, praised by one critic for its exquisite score, ironic twists and
traditional elegance of thought. Many works followed, the Concert champêtre,
the Concerto for two pianos, the Mass in G major, songs,
chamber music and, of course, more piano pieces. During World War II, after his
discharge from the army to which he had again been conscripted, Poulenc chose
to identify himself with resistance to the German occupation by musical means.
His compositions from this period include a violin sonata dedicated to the
memory of the Spanish poet Lorca and his eloquent Figure humaine, a
setting of a poem by Paul Eluard for unaccompanied double chorus, a musical
protest against the Occupation. 1947 brought the opera-burlesque Les
mamelles de Tiresias ('The Breasts of Tiresias') and 1957 the major opera Dialogues
des carmelites ('Dialogues of the Carmelites'). In 1959 he wrote La voix
humaine ('The Human Voice') to a text by Cocteau and in 1961 his six-part Gloria
for soprano, chorus and orchestra Poulenc died at his home in Paris on 30th
January 1963.
The earliest of the works included in the second volume of Poulenc's
piano music, the Trois mouvements perpetuels, was written in Paris in
December 1918. Dedicated to the painter / designer / illustrator Valentine Hugo
(nee Gross), these three spare, graceful, fluently charming pieces won
immediate favour with the public and with performers. Pouleuc himself described
them as 'ultra-easy', comparing them to a brisk stroll by the Seine. Each of
the three pieces ends inconclusively, leaving the music unresolved, to linger in
our minds.
The Cinq impromptus (Five Impromptus) actually began life as six
pieces, composed between September 1920 and March 1921. Poulenc published all
six in 1922, but in 1924 his publisher, J. & W. Chester, issued the revised
set as Cinq impromptus pour le piono. That new edition, revised and
corrected by the composer, was issued again in 1939. The original six pieces
were first performed on 22nd February 1922 by the pianist Marcelle Meyer, to
whom they were dedicated. They show a more experimental and perhaps less
instantly likeable side of Poulenc. Like the Promenades of 1921, they
toy with bitonality, yet also provide a glimpse of the composer's well-known
lyricism.
The Pièce brève sur le nom d'Albert Roussel ('Short Piece on the
Name of Albert Roussel') was composed at Noizay in March 1929. It was published
in a collected volume entitled Hommage à Albert Roussel, as a supplement
to La Revue musicale. Eight composers contributed to his sixtieth
birthday tribute: Delage, Honegger, Poulenc, Tansman, Ibert, Beck, Hoeree and
Milhaud. Here Poulenc was able to show his admiration for the older composer.
Poulenc began sketching Les soirees de Nazelles in 1930 and
completed the score on 1st October 1936. The music was written 'in memory of
Aunt Lienard, as a souvenir of Nazelles', as the composer expressed it in the
score of the piano suite. It was through this 'aunt', Virginie Lienard, no
relation but a family friend, that Poulenc had come to love the countryside of
Touraine, where he wrote the Promenades. Nazelles lies not far from
Amboise, with its fifteenth-century castle where Leonardo da Vinci is said to
have died. The variations at the heart of this work were improvised at Nazelles
in the course of long evenings in the country, where the composer would create
at the piano portraits of or tributes to his friends or acquaintances.
Presented here between a Preambule and a Final, they evoke
piano-playing in the salon of a country-house in Touraine, with a window open
on the night. With social grace, pathos and charm each section recasts waltzes
of Faure, Chabrier and Saint-Saëns and there are even glances at Offenbach, for
good measure, all offered in good humour.
The Suite française occupies a very important place in Poulenc's
piano music. He completed the work in October 1935, scored originally for
brass, woodwind, percussion and harpsichord and dedicated to the dramatist
Edouard Bourdet, for whose historical play La reine Margot ('Queen
Margot') it was intended. The piano version was published first in 1935,
followed by the orchestral version in 1948 and in 1953 a transcription for
cello and piano dedicated to Pierre Fournier. The suite is a transcription of
seven dances by Claude Gervaise, whose work appeared in the sets of danceries
published in sixteenth-century Paris by Attaignant. The opening movement is
a vigorous Bransle de Bourgogne. Next comes a solemn Pavane, modal
in its outer framework but with a dissonant central episode. The third movement
is a pert trumpet-style Petite marche militaire. This is followed by a
haunting, lullaby-like Complainte. There is a suggestion of the tambour
in Bransle de Champagne and towards the end a momentary evocation of
carillon figures. The sixth movement is a gentle, melancholy Sicilienne and
the final movement a spirited Carillon. In 1939 Poulenc added a Française,
dedicated to the critic and musicologist Luigi Rognoni. In some editions
this has been entitled Allemande.
The Valse-improvisatian sur le nom de Bach ('Waltz Improvisation
on the Name of Each') was completed on 8th October 1932 and dedicated to
Vladimir Horowitz. Like the earlier Pièce brève, it was published as a
supplement to La Revue musicale, together with other tributes to Bach by
Roussel, Casella, Malipiero and Honegger. Making use of the notes formed from
the letters of Bach's name in German notation, E flat - A - C - B natural,
Poulenc created a whimsical caricature, perhaps of Horowitz, where the music
grows gradually faster and louder. At the end of the piece, in what is almost a
gesture of defiance and frustration, the pianist punches several chords on the
keyboard and leaves the instrument. Poulenc also dedicated his Presto in
B flat major to Horowitz, a musician for whose playing and technique he
had the greatest admiration. "When Horowitz plays the piano, I lose my
head", he remarked in 1950. Horowitz often used the Presta as an
encore.
Poulenc composed two other short piano pieces in 1934, Humoresque and
Bodinage. The first was dedicated to the pianist Walter Gieseking, who
made the first recording of the Mouvements perpetuels. Badinage ('Playfulness
or Trifling') is, as the name implies, frivolous and whimsical. Above the score
Poulenc quotes lines by the poet and novelist Raymond Radiguet, Cocteau's
lover, who had died in 1923 of typhoid fever at the age of twenty:
Dans les verres tiedit l'orangeade
Un soir d'Août
N'importe lequel.
(In the glasses the orangeade grows warm
One August evening
No matter which.)
Written in 1940, Melancolie is one of Poulenc's most nostalgic
pieces. Dedicated to his driver and friend Raymond Destouches, it is a dreamy,
sensuous, impassioned piano work that lies graciously beneath the fingers.
Wilfrid Mellers has compared the work to the perfumed utterances of Faure, but
more "unreal, and with dreams that are much more elusive". Others
have found in it a luminous quality, akin to the paintings of Bonnard, Vuillard
and Dufy. Music of deep yearning and nostalgia, whatever its inspiration, it
unquestionably haunts us with its mystery and beauty.