BERLIOZ: Nuits d'ete (Les) / CHAUSSON: Poeme de l'amour et de la mer / DUKAS: La peri
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Ernest Chausson (1855-1899): Poème de l'amour et de la mer Paul Dukas (1865-1935): La peri Hector Berlioz (1803-1869): Les nuits d'ete Brought up in...
Ernest Chausson (1855-1899): Poème de l'amour et de la mer
Paul Dukas (1865-1935): La peri
Hector Berlioz (1803-1869): Les nuits d'ete
Brought up in cultured adult surroundings, Ernest
Chausson acquired wide artistic interests. He was
induced by his family to study and qualify as a lawyer,
although he never practised as an advocate, instead
turning his attention to music. He joined Massenet's
class in orchestration at the Conservatoire in 1879, while
informally attending the influential classes of Cesar
Franck. Failure to win the Prix de Rome in 1881 led him
to discontinue formal instruction, while the influence of
Wagner exercised a further influence on his work as a
composer. With a private income, he was able to lead a
life that allowed travel, and association with leading
writers, musicians and artists of the time, after his
marriage in 1882 and honeymoon at Bayreuth. He died
in 1899 as the result of a cycling accident.
Chausson's Poème de l'amour et de la mer (Poem
of Love and of the Sea) was written during the years
from 1882 to 1890 and revised in 1893. It is a dramatic
setting of poems by Maurice Bouchor, whose verses had
provided texts for a number of songs by Chausson,
including a group of translations by Bouchor from
Shakespeare. The work opens with La fleur des eaux
(The flower of the waters), with music that reflects the
tranquil romantic mood of the poem, the air filled by the
scent of lilacs. The music mounts to a rhapsodic climax,
before tranquillity intervenes, and the strings introduce
the simplicity of Et mon coeur s'est leve par ce matin
d'ete. A transition leads to a slower passage, Quel son
lamentable et sauvage, as the mood changes, reaching a
further climax, before a rhapsodic conclusion. The
Interlude is marked Lent et triste (Slow and sad),
opening with a bassoon melody, continued briefly by a
solo cello, before the mood lightens, to end, as it began,
in C minor. La mort de l'amour (The Death of Love) is
first marked Vif et joyeux (Lively and joyful), as the
singer greets the approach to the island. This leads, with
passing ecstasy, to a passage marked Sombre et
solennel, now in G minor, the memory of love now
dead. The movement ends with Le temps des lilas (The
time of lilacs), a section to be published separately,
mourning for the death of love.
A friend of Debussy and pupil of Bizet's friend
Guiraud, Paul Dukas came very near to winning the
important Prix de Rome, but left the Paris Conservatoire
to embark on an early career as a critic and orchestrator.
His acute critical sense led him to destroy many of his
own compositions, but he remained an important figure
in French musical life and a highly respected teacher. He
is popularly known for his symphonic scherzo after
Goethe, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, choreographed as a
ballet in 1916 in Petrograd by Fokine.
La peri (The Fairy), a poème danse, was written in
1911 and 1912, choreographed by the Russian dancer
Ivan Clustine, ballet-master at the Paris Opera, before he
joined Pavlova's company in 1914. The work was
dedicated to Natalia Trouhanova, who danced the first
performance in 1912, a dancer influenced by the free
dance style of Isadora Duncan. A Fanfare precedes the
poème itself, and its music, with themes identified with
Iskender and with the Fairy, follows the scenario:
It happened that, as his youth came to an end, the
Magi having observed that his star was growing pale,
Iskender travelled through Iran, seeking the Flower of
Immortality. The sun dwelt three times in its twelve
houses without him finding it, until he came finally to
the ends of the Earth, to the point where it joined the sea
and the clouds. And there, on the steps that lead to the
court of Ormuzd, a Fairy lay, sleeping in her jewelled
robe. A star shone above her head, her lute rested on her
bosom and in her hand the Flower shone. And it was a
lotus like the emerald, undulating like the sea in the
morning sun. Iskender leant noiselessly over the
Sleeper, and, without waking her, stole the Flower,
which suddenly became, in his fingers, like the noonday
sun on the forests of Ghilan. But the Fairy, opening her
eyes, clapped her hands together and cried out, for she
could not now mount again to the light of Ormuzd.
Meanwhile Iskender, looking at her, admired her face
that surpassed in delight even that of Gurdaferrid. And
he desired her in his heart, so that the Fairy knew the
King's thought, for in the hand of Iskender the lotus
grew purple and became like the face of desire. Thus the
servant of the Pure knew that this flower of Life was not
destined for him, and she leapt forward to take it back, as
light as a bee, while the Invincible Lord drew the Lotus
away from her, divided between his thirst for
immortality and the delight of his eyes. But the Fairy
danced the dance of the Fairies, always coming nearer,
until her face touched Iskender's, and finally he gave it
to her, without regret. Then the lotus seemed of snow
and of gold like the height of Elbourz in the evening sun.
The form of the Fairy seemed to melt into the light from
the calyx and soon nothing could be seen except a hand,
lifting up the flower of flame that vanished into the sky
above. Iskender saw her disappear, and understanding
that this signified his coming end, he felt the shadow
encircle him.
Hector Berlioz was born in the French province of
Isère, the son of a doctor, in a family of some local
substance. As a child he was taught principally by his
father, and was swayed by various enthusiasms,
including an overwhelming urge towards music that led
him to compose. In Paris he eventually abandoned his
medical studies, undertaken at his father's insistence,
turning, instead, to music. He had not been idle as a
composer, but he prudently took lessons from Lesueur,
whose Conservatoire class he entered in 1826.
In 1829 Berlioz saw Shakespeare's Hamlet for the
first time, with Charles Kemble as the Prince and the
Irish actress Harriet Smithson as Ophelia. The
experience was overwhelming and in the season he had
the opportunity to see much more, sharing in the popular
adulation of Harriet Smithson, with whom he fell
violently in love, at first to be rejected, leading to his
autobiographical Symphonie Fantastique. It was only
after his return from Rome, where final victory in the
Prix de Rome had allowed him to spend two years, and
when her popularity began to wane, that she agreed to be
his wife, a match that brought neither of them much
happiness.
In the following years Berlioz remained an outsider
to the French musical establishment. He earned a living
as a critic, while as a composer and conductor he won
more distinction abroad. Both then and in later years he
was seen as the very type of an individual genius, the
romantic artist, driven to excess by enthusiasms and
paranoid in reaction to criticism or opposition, as his
Memoires show. After the death of his wife in 1854 he
was able to marry the singer Marie Recio, with whom he
had enjoyed a relationship already of some twelve years.
Her sudden death in 1862 and that of his son Louis, a
naval officer, in 1867, saddened his final years. He died
in 1869.
Berlioz's literary interests are apparent in his songs
and choral works. For Les nuits d'ete (The Nights of
Summer), a group of songs rather than a unified cycle,
he chose to set verses by the romantic poet and writer
Theophile Gautier, a near neighbour in Paris, whose
poems La comedie de la mort (The Comedy of Death)
were published in 1838, although it is said that Berlioz
may have read some of these in manuscript and set them
before the completion of the set of songs in 1841.
Written for mezzo-soprano or tenor and piano the
original songs were dedicated to Louise Bertin, daughter
of Louis Bertin, editor of the Journal des debats, to
which Berlioz was a contributor, and composer of four
operas of romantic ambition but varied success. It was in
1843 that Berlioz orchestrated the fourth song, Absence,
for his mistress Marie Recio, his marriage now at an end,
and the other songs, on the suggestion of a publisher,
were orchestrated for publication in 1856, now variously
dedicated.
The first of the set, Villanelle, a celebration of
spring and love, was dedicated to Louise Wolf, Chamber
Singer to the Archduchy of Weimar, where Liszt had
seen to the performance of music by Berlioz. It reflects
the spirit of the poem. Le spectre de la rose (The Spectre
of the Rose) was dedicated to the Gotha contralto Anna-
Rose Falconi, whom he had heard in London,
specifically for a concert of his music in Gotha. The
poem, later the inspiration for Fokine's ballet, danced,
famously, by Karsavina and Nijinsky, tells of a girl's
dreams of the ghost of the rose she had worn to the ball
the previous evening. For the orchestral version Berlioz
added an introduction for muted solo cello, flute and
clarinet, including a harp in the orchestration. Sur les
lagunes: Lamento (On the Lagoons: Lament), with its
dark-coloured textures, imbued with melancholy, was
dedicated to the Weimar singer Feodor von Milde.
Gautier's original title was Lamento: La chanson du
pêcheur (Lament: The Fisherman's Song), and there is a
suggestion in the accompaniment of the movement of
the waves. The rhetorical Absence, dedicated to the
Hanover singer Madeleine Nottès, who had sung
Marguerite in his Faust there in 1853, pleads for the
return of the beloved. Dedicated to the tenor Caspari in
Weimar, Au cimetière: Clair de lune (At the Cemetery:
Moonlight), is a further lament, its intense sadness
dispelled by L'île inconnue (The Unknown Island),
dedicated to Rosa von Milde of Weimar, setting a poem
with the original title Barcarolle. The song suggests the
unattainable, a place where love might be eternal.
Keith Anderson
Poeme de l’amour et de la mer (Poem of Love and of the Sea), Op. 19 (more info)
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La fleur des eaux (The Flower of the Waters) - 10:48
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Interlude - 2:14
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La mort de l'amour (The Death of Love) - 12:24
La peri (The Fairy) (more info)
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Fanfare - 2:09
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La peri (The Fairy) - 17:00
Les nuits d'ete (The Nights of Summer), Op. 7 (more info)
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Villanelle - 2:27
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Le spectre de la rose (The Spectre of the Rose) - 6:17
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Sur les lagunes: Lamento (On the Lagoons: Lamento) - 5:56
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Absence - 5:11
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Au cimetiere: Clair de lune (At the Cemetery: Moonlight) - 5:15
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L'ile inconnue (The Unknown Island) - 3:28