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Nocturnes (Debussy)

Nocturnes, L 98 (also known as Trois Nocturnes or Three Nocturnes) is an impressionist orchestral composition in three movements by the French composer Claude Debussy, who wrote it between 1892 and 1899. It is based on poems from Poèmes anciens et romanesques (Henri de Régnier, 1890).

Nocturnes
Orchestral music by Claude Debussy
Original manuscript of the orchestral arrangement
CatalogueL 98
Based on
Composed1892 (1892)–1899
DedicationGeorges Hartmann (publisher)
Performed
  • 9 December 1900 (mvts 1 & 2)
  • 27 October 1901 (all 3 mvts)
Published
  • 1900
  • 1930 (revised version)
Durationabout 25 minutes
Movements
  • I. Nuages ("Clouds")
  • II. Fêtes ("Festivals")
  • III. Sirènes ("Sirens")
Scoring
  • Orchestra
  • women's chorus

Composition edit

"Three Scenes at Twilight" edit

 
Debussy at the piano in the summer of 1893

Based on comments in various Debussy letters and in Léon Vallas's biography,[1] it has generally been assumed that composition of the Nocturnes began in 1892 under the title Trois Scènes au Crépuscule ("Three Scenes at Twilight"),[2] an orchestral triptych.[3][1] However, the lack of actual manuscripts makes it impossible to determine whether such works were truly related to the Nocturnes.[1]

Trois Scènes au Crépuscule was inspired by ten poems by Henri de Régnier entitled Poèmes anciens et romanesques (published in 1890).[4] Régnier was a symbolist poet, and his poems contain vivid imagery and dreamlike associations of ideas. In a letter to Jacques Durand on 3 September 1907, Debussy writes "I am more and more convinced that music, by its very nature, is something that cannot be cast into a traditional and fixed form. It is made up of colors and rhythms";[5] he found suitable material in the imagery of these poems.[6]: 127 

Debussy may have begun creating the work for an intended performance in New York City, promoted and sponsored by Prince André Poniatowski, a banker and writer, and a confidant to whom Debussy frequently expressed himself in long letters.[7][6]: 168–169 [8] The New York performance was to consist of the premiere of Debussy's Fantaisie for piano and orchestra completed two years earlier, a rather traditional work in classical form but a tradition which Debussy in the next two years would reject and musically move away from (resulting in the Fantaisie never being performed or published in his lifetime); his experimental oratorio La Damoiselle élue, from four years prior, also still unperformed as yet; and the Twilight Scenes, which Debussy told the prince were "pretty much finished" even though he hadn't put anything on paper yet.[7][6]: 168–169  The American concert deal fell through.[7]

Debussy was already working with difficulty on his opera Rodrigue et Chimène, a biography of El Cid; it has been said that he eventually destroyed its complete score because he felt he could no longer write "that kind of music" to "that kind of literature",[9] but his biographer says he merely concealed them and they remained in private collections.[10]

He was also working on another orchestral triptych after a cycle of three poems by another symbolist poet, Stéphane Mallarmé, called L'après-midi d'un faune, that was more in keeping with the new style of music and inspiration Debussy was seeking. He had in fact asked Henri de Régnier, a close associate of Mallarmé, to inform the latter of his interest in setting the poems to a new kind of musical impression.[2] Mallarmé was vehemently opposed to juxtaposing poetry and music and was strongly against Debussy's compositional idea.[11] After Mallarmé heard the completed Prélude based on his first poem, however, Debussy had evidently caused him to completely reverse his belief, as he expressed his astonishment in lavishing praise and admiration in a personal letter to the composer.[12]

Three Nocturnes for solo violin and partitioned orchestra edit

 
Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket from a series of impressionist paintings by Whistler

Meanwhile, Debussy's Scènes au Crépuscule, after Régnier's poetry, were completed in piano score in 1893, but before Debussy had a chance to orchestrate them he attended the premiere performance of his String Quartet in G minor in December, given by the Ysaÿe Quartet led by Belgian violin virtuoso Eugène Ysaÿe.[13] Debussy was impressed and flattered by Ysaÿe's interest in his music and decided to rewrite his Twilight Scenes into a piece for solo violin and orchestra.[2]

In 1894, after completing the first movement of his Mallarmé triptych entitled Prélude (to "The Afternoon of a Faun"), he began the recomposition of the Twilight Scenes in a new inspired style, retitling the new version Nocturnes after a series of paintings of the same name by James Abbott McNeill Whistler, who was living in Paris at the time.[14][2]

In September he described the music to Ysaÿe as "an experiment in the different combinations that can be achieved with one colour—what a study in grey would be in painting".[10][13] Whistler's most famous painting was a portrait of his mother called Arrangement in Grey and Black No. 1.[2] Debussy scored the orchestral part of the first of the three pieces for strings alone; the second for three flutes, four horns, three trumpets, and two harps; and the third for the two groupings together.[13][2] The first version of the Nocturnes seems to be the one described; he later abandoned the idea of the solo violin arrangement when he was unable to get Ysaÿe to undertake the performance.[10]

Following the abandonment of Rodrigue et Chimène in 1893, Debussy had immediately begun work on an opera more to his liking, Pelléas et Mélisande, which occupied him with no small measure of trouble over the next nine years, until it premiered on 30 April 1902.[15] Thus it wasn't until 1896 that he informed Ysaÿe that the music for the Nocturnes had pretty much been completed and he still wanted Ysaÿe to perform the solo violin part.[2][13]

By 1897, Debussy had decided to dispense with a solo violin part and the orchestral groupings, and simply write all three movements for a full orchestra. He worked for the next two years on the Nocturnes, and once confessed to his friend and benefactor, the publisher Georges Hartmann,[16] that he was finding it more difficult to compose these three orchestral nocturnes than a five-act opera.[2] Wanting to equal the sensation caused by the success of "The Afternoon of a Faun" piece,[2] he drove himself toward an over-perfectionism with the Nocturnes. Having worked on the composition for as long as seven years, constantly revising it and changing its very structure several times, he expected it to live up to his own grand, avant-garde views:

I myself love music passionately; and because I love it, I try to set it free from barren traditions that stifle it. It is a free art, gushing forth, an [open-]air art, an art boundless as the elements, the wind, the sky, the sea! It must never be shut in and become an academic art.

— Debussy, in an interview in Comœdia, 1910[17][2]

Completion and further revision edit

A full score of the manuscript of the Nocturnes was signed with the completion date of 15 December 1899.[3] The manuscript bears a dedication to Georges Hartmann, who helped to support Debussy financially beginning in 1894. It was published under contract to Hartmann's publisher, under the Eugène Fromont imprint in 1900. This printed score contained dozens of errors.[1]

The first two movements, Nuages and Fêtes, received their premiere on 9 December 1900 in Paris by the Lamoureux Orchestra conducted by Camille Chevillard. The third movement Sirènes could not be staged because the female choir needed for it was unavailable.[13] The complete work was premiered by the same orchestra and conductor on 27 October 1901. Though these initial performances received a cool response from the public, they were more positively hailed by fellow musicians. A review by Pierre de Bréville in the Mercure de France has been translated as saying: "It is pure music, conceived beyond the limits of reality, in the world of dreams, among the ever-moving architecture that God builds with mists, the marvelous creations of the impalpable realms."[2][18]

For several years after its publication, almost until the day he died, Debussy continued to tinker with the composition, at first making corrections to dozens of errors in his copy of the published score, then moving on to adjusting small passages and fundamentally revising the orchestration.[1][2] Debussy made many subtle changes to Sirènes to integrate the wordless singing of the women's chorus with the orchestra.[14] Two of these scores exist with Debussy's changes in different colors of pencils and inks, and often these changes are contradictory or simply alternate versions.[1] As Debussy told conductor Ernest Ansermet when the latter asked which were the right ones: "I'm not really sure; they are all possibilities. Take this score with you and use whatever you like from it."[19][1]

Debussy continued to modify the composition just as he had for the seven years prior to its publication, sometimes just not satisfied or sometimes thinking of a new experiment in sound, a new color combination of instrumental timbres he hadn't heard yet.[20] Many of these changes were finally incorporated into a "definitive version" published in 1930 by Jobert.[20][1][2] This version continues to be performed today.

A comprehensive version addressing many more of Debussy's "possibilities" was published in 1999 by Durand, edited and annotated by Denis Herlin.[21] One reviewer states "in this new critical edition for the Debussy oeuvres complètes, all of the most important questions concerning the establishment of a text of the Nocturnes for practical performance have been confidently answered."[1] Herlin has carefully traced and analyzed four printings of the Nocturnes by Fromont, ending in 1922; multiple scores by Jean Jobert between 1922 and 1930; multiple versions of a heavily revised Jobert score appearing between 1930 and 1964; a 1977 edition by Peters of Leipzig; and a study score from Durand.[1]

The Nocturnes were performed as a ballet in May 1913, with Loie Fuller dancing.[10] The Nocturnes are considered one of Debussy's most accessible and popular works, admired for their beauty and for holding new possibilities and wonder upon repeated hearings.[14]

Instrumentation edit

The piece has the following instrumentation.[22]

Music edit

There are three movements, each with a descriptive title.

  1. Nuages ("Clouds")
  2. Fêtes ("Festivals")
  3. Sirènes ("Sirens")

The entire work lasts approximately 25 minutes.[14]

Debussy wrote an "introductory note" to the Nocturnes and each of the individual movements, printed in the programme for the first complete performance in 1901:[23] "The title 'Nocturnes' is to be interpreted here in a general and, more particularly, in a decorative sense. Therefore, it is not meant to designate the usual form of the Nocturne, but rather all the various impressions and the special effects of light that the word suggests."[10]

I. Nuages edit

 
Theme
 
Parallel seventh chords

The tempo markings are "Modéré – Un peu animé – Tempo I – Plus lent – Encore plus lent."[24]

According to Debussy, "'Nuages' renders the immutable aspect of the sky and the slow, solemn motion of the clouds, fading away in grey tones lightly tinged with white."[10] Biographer Léon Vallas recorded Debussy's comments on the genesis of this piece:

One day, in stormy weather, as Debussy was crossing the Pont de la Concorde in Paris with his friend Paul Poujaud, he told him that on a similar kind of day the idea of the symphonic work "Clouds" had occurred to him: he had visualized those very thunderclouds swept along by a stormy wind; a boat passing, with its horn sounding. These two impressions are recalled in the languorous succession of chords and by the short chromatic theme on the English horn.[23][25][26][27]

II. Fêtes edit

 
Fêtes uses 15
8
time (shown subdivided into 9
8
and 6
8
)

The tempo markings are "Animé et très rythmé – Un peu plus animé – Modéré mais toujours très rythmé – Tempo I – De plus en plus sonore et en serrant le mouvement – Même Mouvement."[24]

According to Debussy:

"Fêtes" gives the vibrating, dancing rhythm of the atmosphere with sudden flashes of light. There is also the episode of the procession (a dazzling fantastic vision), which passes through the festive scene and becomes merged in it. But the background remains resistantly the same: the festival with its blending of music and luminous dust participating in the cosmic rhythm.[10]

Léon Vallas, in his biography, continues:

Debussy went on to explain to Poujaud that "Festivals" had been inspired by a recollection of merry-making in the Bois de Boulogne, with noisy crowds watching the drum and bugle corps of the Garde Nationale pass in parade.[23]

III. Sirènes edit

The tempo markings are "Modérément animé – Un peu plus lent – En animant surtout dans l'expression – Revenir progressivement au Tempo I – En augmentant peu à peu – Tempo I – Plus lent et en retenant jusqu'à la fin."[24]

According to Debussy, "'Sirènes' depicts the sea and its countless rhythms and presently, amongst the waves silvered by the moonlight, is heard the mysterious song of the Sirens as they laugh and pass on.[10]

Whistler and Debussy edit

The title, Nocturnes, refers not to the musical tradition of the same name but to the "nocturne" paintings of Whistler, who in turn had borrowed the term from music.[28]: 133  Debussy's description of the Sirens movement reminded his biographer Léon Vallas of Whistler's "Harmonies in blue and silver". Vallas noted that Whistler "was a favourite with Debussy, and their art has often been compared."[23] The two were mutual influences, with Whistler borrowing from musical vocabulary to name his pictures, while Debussy did something similar in reverse.[10]

Arrangements edit

The complete work was transcribed in 1910 for two pianos by Maurice Ravel and Raoul Bardac (Debussy's pupil and stepson), and was first performed in 1911.[13] Fêtes was arranged for solo piano by the English pianist Leonard Borwick, and the arrangement has been recorded by Emil Gilels, among others.[29] Fêtes has also been transcribed for large symphonic wind ensemble by Merlin Patterson and William Schaefer.[30]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j DeVoto, Mark (16 May 2018) [Revised from Notes September 2001]. "Claude Debussy: Nocturnes. Édition de Denis Herlin. Paris: Durand, 1999 & Paris: Durand (T. Presser), 2000. Reviewed" (PDF). Tufts University. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Rodda, Richard E. (2019). "Nocturnes Nos. 1 and 2. About the Work. Composer: Claude Debussy". The Kennedy Center. Article also at Santa Barbara Symphony website. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  3. ^ a b Kuenning, Geoff (14 December 1996). "Debussy: Nocturnes". Program notes for Concerts by the Symphony of the Canyons. UCLA. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  4. ^ Jensen, Eric Frederick (2014). Debussy. Oxford University Press. pp. 176–178. ISBN 978-0199730056.
  5. ^ Morgenstern, Sam (1997) [1956]. Fisk, Josiah (ed.). Composers on Music: Eight Centuries of Writings: A New and Expanded Revision of Morgenstern's Classic Anthology (2nd ed.). Boston: Northeastern University Press. p. 207. ISBN 978-1555532796. Retrieved 7 January 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Lockspeiser, Edward (1978) [reprint of 1966 Second ed. (1st ed. 1962)]. Debussy: His Life and Mind, Volume 1 : 1862–1902. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-521-29341-9.
  7. ^ a b c Snyder, Harvey Lee (2015). Afternoon of a Faun: How Debussy Created a New Music for the Modern World. Milwaukee: Amadeus Press. pp. 117–120. ISBN 978-1-574-67482-8.
  8. ^ Orledge, Robert (2003). "Debussy the Man". In Simon Trezise (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Debussy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65478-4.
  9. ^ Samuel, Claude (1995). Rodrigue et Chimène, notes (Media notes). Erato Disques. pp. 12–13. Debussy: Rodrigue et Chimène (Kent Nagano, conductor), Erato 98508 (CD), 1995.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vallas, Leon (1933). Claude Debussy His Life And Works. Translated by O'Brien, Maire; O'Brien, Grace. London: Oxford University Press; Humphrey Milford.
  11. ^ Valéry, Paul (1933). "Stephane Mallarmé". Collected Works of Paul Valéry, Volume 8: Leonardo, Poe, Mallarmé. Translated by Malcolm Cowley; James R. Lawler. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul (published 1972). p. 263. ISBN 0-7100-7148-5.
  12. ^ Dumesnil, Maurice (1979) [1940]. Claude Debussy : Master of Dreams. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-313-20775-4.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Avis, Peter (1999). Trois Nocturnes, L98. composer: Claude Debussy (Media notes). Hyperion Records. Liner notes to Debussy : The complete music for two pianos (Stephen Coombs and Christian Scott, 2p), Helios CDH55014 (CD), May 1999 [1991 Hyperion]. Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  14. ^ a b c d "Nocturnes". Los Angeles Philharmonic. Retrieved 11 October 2012.
  15. ^ Nichols, Roger; Smith, Richard Langham (1989). Claude Debussy, Pelléas et Mélisande. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31446-1.
  16. ^ IMSLP. "G. Hartmann". Petrucci Music Library. Retrieved 29 October 2019.
  17. ^ Woodwind Anthology: A Compendium of Woodwind Articles from the Instrumentalist. Vol. 1. Northfield, IL: Instrumentalist Company. 1992. p. 599. Retrieved 8 January 2020. In an interview in Comœdia on January 31, 1910, he said...
  18. ^ Daitz, Mimi Segal (July 1981). "Pierre de Bréville (1861–1949)". 19th-Century Music. 5 (1): 24–37. doi:10.2307/746557. JSTOR 746557. Daitz suggests a date for the original article, but does not give the quote. More details may be available in her Ph.D. thesis. She writes: 'Breville's longest series of articles was written for the Mercure de France. Missing only a few months, he wrote the "Revue du Mois-Musique" from February 1898 through July 1901. It was in one of these articles (January 1901) that he reviewed the premiere of Debussy's Nocturnes.'
  19. ^ Herlin, Denis (1997). "Sirens in the Labyrinth: Amendments in Debussy's Nocturnes". In Smith, Richard Langham (ed.). Debussy Studies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 51–77.
  20. ^ a b DeVoto, Mark (2004). Debussy and the veil of tonality : essays on his music. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-1576470909. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
  21. ^ Herlin, Denis (2000). Claude Debussy: Nocturnes. Paris: Durand (T. Presser).
  22. ^ "Nocturnes (Claude Debussy)". LA Phil. Retrieved 2022-11-23.
  23. ^ a b c d Brook, Donald (1971) [1946]. Five great French composers: Berlioz, César Franck, Saint-Saëns, Debussy, Ravel: Their Lives and Works. Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press. p. 168.
  24. ^ a b c "Nocturnes" (PDF). IMSLP. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  25. ^ A very similar translation is given by Cox, David (1974). Debussy orchestral music. British Broadcasting Corporation. p. 20.
  26. ^ A similar translation is given by DeVoto, Mark (2004). Debussy and the veil of tonality : essays on his music. Hillsdale, NY: Pendragon Press. p. 99. ISBN 978-1576470909. Retrieved 8 January 2020., which credits the original text to Léon Vallas, Claude Debussy et son temps. Paris: Albin Michel, 1958.
  27. ^ Vallas, Léon (1958). Claude Debussy et son temps. Paris: Albin Michel.
  28. ^ Walsh, Stephen (2018). Debussy: A Painter in Sound. London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-571-33016-4.
  29. ^ Tanin, Ates (1 August 2005). . Doremi. Archived from the original on 2006-04-14.
  30. ^ "Fêtes : from Three nocturnes". OCLC 16400183. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)

External links edit

  • Nocturnes: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project
  • YouTube - Pierre Boulez, Vienna Philharmonic, Vienna State Opera Chorus (Salzburg Festival, August 30, 1992)
  • YouTube - Mikko Franck, Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France, Chœur de Radio France, Maîtrise de Radio France (September 15, 2017)

nocturnes, debussy, trois, nocturnes, redirects, here, other, uses, three, nocturnes, disambiguation, nocturnes, also, known, trois, nocturnes, three, nocturnes, impressionist, orchestral, composition, three, movements, french, composer, claude, debussy, wrote. Trois Nocturnes redirects here For other uses see Three Nocturnes disambiguation Nocturnes L 98 also known as Trois Nocturnes or Three Nocturnes is an impressionist orchestral composition in three movements by the French composer Claude Debussy who wrote it between 1892 and 1899 It is based on poems from Poemes anciens et romanesques Henri de Regnier 1890 NocturnesOrchestral music by Claude DebussyOriginal manuscript of the orchestral arrangementCatalogueL 98Based onPoemes anciens et romanesques by Henri de Regnier Nocturnes by James McNeill WhistlerComposed1892 1892 1899DedicationGeorges Hartmann publisher Performed9 December 1900 mvts 1 amp 2 27 October 1901 all 3 mvts Published1900 1930 revised version Durationabout 25 minutesMovementsI Nuages Clouds II Fetes Festivals III Sirenes Sirens ScoringOrchestrawomen s chorus Contents 1 Composition 1 1 Three Scenes at Twilight 1 2 Three Nocturnes for solo violin and partitioned orchestra 1 3 Completion and further revision 2 Instrumentation 3 Music 3 1 I Nuages 3 2 II Fetes 3 3 III Sirenes 4 Whistler and Debussy 5 Arrangements 6 References 7 External linksComposition edit Three Scenes at Twilight edit nbsp Debussy at the piano in the summer of 1893 Based on comments in various Debussy letters and in Leon Vallas s biography 1 it has generally been assumed that composition of the Nocturnes began in 1892 under the title Trois Scenes au Crepuscule Three Scenes at Twilight 2 an orchestral triptych 3 1 However the lack of actual manuscripts makes it impossible to determine whether such works were truly related to the Nocturnes 1 Trois Scenes au Crepuscule was inspired by ten poems by Henri de Regnier entitled Poemes anciens et romanesques published in 1890 4 Regnier was a symbolist poet and his poems contain vivid imagery and dreamlike associations of ideas In a letter to Jacques Durand on 3 September 1907 Debussy writes I am more and more convinced that music by its very nature is something that cannot be cast into a traditional and fixed form It is made up of colors and rhythms 5 he found suitable material in the imagery of these poems 6 127 Debussy may have begun creating the work for an intended performance in New York City promoted and sponsored by Prince Andre Poniatowski a banker and writer and a confidant to whom Debussy frequently expressed himself in long letters 7 6 168 169 8 The New York performance was to consist of the premiere of Debussy s Fantaisie for piano and orchestra completed two years earlier a rather traditional work in classical form but a tradition which Debussy in the next two years would reject and musically move away from resulting in the Fantaisie never being performed or published in his lifetime his experimental oratorio La Damoiselle elue from four years prior also still unperformed as yet and the Twilight Scenes which Debussy told the prince were pretty much finished even though he hadn t put anything on paper yet 7 6 168 169 The American concert deal fell through 7 Debussy was already working with difficulty on his opera Rodrigue et Chimene a biography of El Cid it has been said that he eventually destroyed its complete score because he felt he could no longer write that kind of music to that kind of literature 9 but his biographer says he merely concealed them and they remained in private collections 10 He was also working on another orchestral triptych after a cycle of three poems by another symbolist poet Stephane Mallarme called L apres midi d un faune that was more in keeping with the new style of music and inspiration Debussy was seeking He had in fact asked Henri de Regnier a close associate of Mallarme to inform the latter of his interest in setting the poems to a new kind of musical impression 2 Mallarme was vehemently opposed to juxtaposing poetry and music and was strongly against Debussy s compositional idea 11 After Mallarme heard the completed Prelude based on his first poem however Debussy had evidently caused him to completely reverse his belief as he expressed his astonishment in lavishing praise and admiration in a personal letter to the composer 12 Three Nocturnes for solo violin and partitioned orchestra edit nbsp Nocturne in Black and Gold The Falling Rocket from a series of impressionist paintings by Whistler Meanwhile Debussy s Scenes au Crepuscule after Regnier s poetry were completed in piano score in 1893 but before Debussy had a chance to orchestrate them he attended the premiere performance of his String Quartet in G minor in December given by the Ysaye Quartet led by Belgian violin virtuoso Eugene Ysaye 13 Debussy was impressed and flattered by Ysaye s interest in his music and decided to rewrite his Twilight Scenes into a piece for solo violin and orchestra 2 In 1894 after completing the first movement of his Mallarme triptych entitled Prelude to The Afternoon of a Faun he began the recomposition of the Twilight Scenes in a new inspired style retitling the new version Nocturnes after a series of paintings of the same name by James Abbott McNeill Whistler who was living in Paris at the time 14 2 In September he described the music to Ysaye as an experiment in the different combinations that can be achieved with one colour what a study in grey would be in painting 10 13 Whistler s most famous painting was a portrait of his mother called Arrangement in Grey and Black No 1 2 Debussy scored the orchestral part of the first of the three pieces for strings alone the second for three flutes four horns three trumpets and two harps and the third for the two groupings together 13 2 The first version of the Nocturnes seems to be the one described he later abandoned the idea of the solo violin arrangement when he was unable to get Ysaye to undertake the performance 10 Following the abandonment of Rodrigue et Chimene in 1893 Debussy had immediately begun work on an opera more to his liking Pelleas et Melisande which occupied him with no small measure of trouble over the next nine years until it premiered on 30 April 1902 15 Thus it wasn t until 1896 that he informed Ysaye that the music for the Nocturnes had pretty much been completed and he still wanted Ysaye to perform the solo violin part 2 13 By 1897 Debussy had decided to dispense with a solo violin part and the orchestral groupings and simply write all three movements for a full orchestra He worked for the next two years on the Nocturnes and once confessed to his friend and benefactor the publisher Georges Hartmann 16 that he was finding it more difficult to compose these three orchestral nocturnes than a five act opera 2 Wanting to equal the sensation caused by the success of The Afternoon of a Faun piece 2 he drove himself toward an over perfectionism with the Nocturnes Having worked on the composition for as long as seven years constantly revising it and changing its very structure several times he expected it to live up to his own grand avant garde views I myself love music passionately and because I love it I try to set it free from barren traditions that stifle it It is a free art gushing forth an open air art an art boundless as the elements the wind the sky the sea It must never be shut in and become an academic art Debussy in an interview in Comœdia 1910 17 2 Completion and further revision edit A full score of the manuscript of the Nocturnes was signed with the completion date of 15 December 1899 3 The manuscript bears a dedication to Georges Hartmann who helped to support Debussy financially beginning in 1894 It was published under contract to Hartmann s publisher under the Eugene Fromont imprint in 1900 This printed score contained dozens of errors 1 The first two movements Nuages and Fetes received their premiere on 9 December 1900 in Paris by the Lamoureux Orchestra conducted by Camille Chevillard The third movement Sirenes could not be staged because the female choir needed for it was unavailable 13 The complete work was premiered by the same orchestra and conductor on 27 October 1901 Though these initial performances received a cool response from the public they were more positively hailed by fellow musicians A review by Pierre de Breville in the Mercure de France has been translated as saying It is pure music conceived beyond the limits of reality in the world of dreams among the ever moving architecture that God builds with mists the marvelous creations of the impalpable realms 2 18 For several years after its publication almost until the day he died Debussy continued to tinker with the composition at first making corrections to dozens of errors in his copy of the published score then moving on to adjusting small passages and fundamentally revising the orchestration 1 2 Debussy made many subtle changes to Sirenes to integrate the wordless singing of the women s chorus with the orchestra 14 Two of these scores exist with Debussy s changes in different colors of pencils and inks and often these changes are contradictory or simply alternate versions 1 As Debussy told conductor Ernest Ansermet when the latter asked which were the right ones I m not really sure they are all possibilities Take this score with you and use whatever you like from it 19 1 Debussy continued to modify the composition just as he had for the seven years prior to its publication sometimes just not satisfied or sometimes thinking of a new experiment in sound a new color combination of instrumental timbres he hadn t heard yet 20 Many of these changes were finally incorporated into a definitive version published in 1930 by Jobert 20 1 2 This version continues to be performed today A comprehensive version addressing many more of Debussy s possibilities was published in 1999 by Durand edited and annotated by Denis Herlin 21 One reviewer states in this new critical edition for the Debussy oeuvres completes all of the most important questions concerning the establishment of a text of the Nocturnes for practical performance have been confidently answered 1 Herlin has carefully traced and analyzed four printings of the Nocturnes by Fromont ending in 1922 multiple scores by Jean Jobert between 1922 and 1930 multiple versions of a heavily revised Jobert score appearing between 1930 and 1964 a 1977 edition by Peters of Leipzig and a study score from Durand 1 The Nocturnes were performed as a ballet in May 1913 with Loie Fuller dancing 10 The Nocturnes are considered one of Debussy s most accessible and popular works admired for their beauty and for holding new possibilities and wonder upon repeated hearings 14 Instrumentation editThe piece has the following instrumentation 22 Woodwinds 3 flutes 3rd doubling piccolo 2 oboes 1 cor anglais 2 clarinets 3 bassoons Brass 4 horns in F 3 trumpets in F 3 trombones 1 tuba Percussion timpani cymbals snare drum Voices women s chorus 3rd movement only Strings 2 harps 1st violins 2nd violins violas cellos double bassesMusic edit nbsp I Nuages source source A computer generated soundfile of the first movement Problems playing this file See media help There are three movements each with a descriptive title Nuages Clouds Fetes Festivals Sirenes Sirens The entire work lasts approximately 25 minutes 14 Debussy wrote an introductory note to the Nocturnes and each of the individual movements printed in the programme for the first complete performance in 1901 23 The title Nocturnes is to be interpreted here in a general and more particularly in a decorative sense Therefore it is not meant to designate the usual form of the Nocturne but rather all the various impressions and the special effects of light that the word suggests 10 I Nuages edit nbsp Theme nbsp Parallel seventh chords The tempo markings are Modere Un peu anime Tempo I Plus lent Encore plus lent 24 According to Debussy Nuages renders the immutable aspect of the sky and the slow solemn motion of the clouds fading away in grey tones lightly tinged with white 10 Biographer Leon Vallas recorded Debussy s comments on the genesis of this piece One day in stormy weather as Debussy was crossing the Pont de la Concorde in Paris with his friend Paul Poujaud he told him that on a similar kind of day the idea of the symphonic work Clouds had occurred to him he had visualized those very thunderclouds swept along by a stormy wind a boat passing with its horn sounding These two impressions are recalled in the languorous succession of chords and by the short chromatic theme on the English horn 23 25 26 27 II Fetes edit nbsp Fetes uses 158 time shown subdivided into 98 and 68 The tempo markings are Anime et tres rythme Un peu plus anime Modere mais toujours tres rythme Tempo I De plus en plus sonore et en serrant le mouvement Meme Mouvement 24 According to Debussy Fetes gives the vibrating dancing rhythm of the atmosphere with sudden flashes of light There is also the episode of the procession a dazzling fantastic vision which passes through the festive scene and becomes merged in it But the background remains resistantly the same the festival with its blending of music and luminous dust participating in the cosmic rhythm 10 Leon Vallas in his biography continues Debussy went on to explain to Poujaud that Festivals had been inspired by a recollection of merry making in the Bois de Boulogne with noisy crowds watching the drum and bugle corps of the Garde Nationale pass in parade 23 III Sirenes edit The tempo markings are Moderement anime Un peu plus lent En animant surtout dans l expression Revenir progressivement au Tempo I En augmentant peu a peu Tempo I Plus lent et en retenant jusqu a la fin 24 According to Debussy Sirenes depicts the sea and its countless rhythms and presently amongst the waves silvered by the moonlight is heard the mysterious song of the Sirens as they laugh and pass on 10 Whistler and Debussy editThe title Nocturnes refers not to the musical tradition of the same name but to the nocturne paintings of Whistler who in turn had borrowed the term from music 28 133 Debussy s description of the Sirens movement reminded his biographer Leon Vallas of Whistler s Harmonies in blue and silver Vallas noted that Whistler was a favourite with Debussy and their art has often been compared 23 The two were mutual influences with Whistler borrowing from musical vocabulary to name his pictures while Debussy did something similar in reverse 10 nbsp Harmony in blue and silver Trouville nbsp Nocturne Blue and Silver nbsp Nocturne Blue and Silver Chelsea nbsp Nocturne Blue and Silver Battersea Reach nbsp Nocturne Blue and Silver Bognor nbsp Nocturne Blue and Silver The Lagoon Venice nbsp Nocturne Blue and SilverArrangements editThe complete work was transcribed in 1910 for two pianos by Maurice Ravel and Raoul Bardac Debussy s pupil and stepson and was first performed in 1911 13 Fetes was arranged for solo piano by the English pianist Leonard Borwick and the arrangement has been recorded by Emil Gilels among others 29 Fetes has also been transcribed for large symphonic wind ensemble by Merlin Patterson and William Schaefer 30 References edit a b c d e f g h i j DeVoto Mark 16 May 2018 Revised from Notes September 2001 Claude Debussy Nocturnes Edition de Denis Herlin Paris Durand 1999 amp Paris Durand T Presser 2000 Reviewed PDF Tufts University Retrieved 27 October 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Rodda Richard E 2019 Nocturnes Nos 1 and 2 About the Work Composer Claude Debussy The Kennedy Center Article also at Santa Barbara Symphony website Retrieved 27 October 2019 a b Kuenning Geoff 14 December 1996 Debussy Nocturnes Program notes for Concerts by the Symphony of the Canyons UCLA Retrieved 27 October 2019 Jensen Eric Frederick 2014 Debussy Oxford University Press pp 176 178 ISBN 978 0199730056 Morgenstern Sam 1997 1956 Fisk Josiah ed Composers on Music Eight Centuries of Writings A New and Expanded Revision of Morgenstern s Classic Anthology 2nd ed Boston Northeastern University Press p 207 ISBN 978 1555532796 Retrieved 7 January 2020 a b c Lockspeiser Edward 1978 reprint of 1966 Second ed 1st ed 1962 Debussy His Life and Mind Volume 1 1862 1902 Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 521 29341 9 a b c Snyder Harvey Lee 2015 Afternoon of a Faun How Debussy Created a New Music for the Modern World Milwaukee Amadeus Press pp 117 120 ISBN 978 1 574 67482 8 Orledge Robert 2003 Debussy the Man In Simon Trezise ed The Cambridge Companion to Debussy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65478 4 Samuel Claude 1995 Rodrigue et Chimene notes Media notes Erato Disques pp 12 13 Debussy Rodrigue et Chimene Kent Nagano conductor Erato 98508 CD 1995 a b c d e f g h i Vallas Leon 1933 Claude Debussy His Life And Works Translated by O Brien Maire O Brien Grace London Oxford University Press Humphrey Milford Valery Paul 1933 Stephane Mallarme Collected Works of Paul Valery Volume 8 Leonardo Poe Mallarme Translated by Malcolm Cowley James R Lawler London Routledge amp Kegan Paul published 1972 p 263 ISBN 0 7100 7148 5 Dumesnil Maurice 1979 1940 Claude Debussy Master of Dreams Westport CT Greenwood Press p 181 ISBN 978 0 313 20775 4 a b c d e f Avis Peter 1999 Trois Nocturnes L98 composer Claude Debussy Media notes Hyperion Records Liner notes to Debussy The complete music for two pianos Stephen Coombs and Christian Scott 2p Helios CDH55014 CD May 1999 1991 Hyperion Retrieved 27 October 2019 a b c d Nocturnes Los Angeles Philharmonic Retrieved 11 October 2012 Nichols Roger Smith Richard Langham 1989 Claude Debussy Pelleas et Melisande Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 31446 1 IMSLP G Hartmann Petrucci Music Library Retrieved 29 October 2019 Woodwind Anthology A Compendium of Woodwind Articles from the Instrumentalist Vol 1 Northfield IL Instrumentalist Company 1992 p 599 Retrieved 8 January 2020 In an interview in Comœdia on January 31 1910 he said Daitz Mimi Segal July 1981 Pierre de Breville 1861 1949 19th Century Music 5 1 24 37 doi 10 2307 746557 JSTOR 746557 Daitz suggests a date for the original article but does not give the quote More details may be available in her Ph D thesis She writes Breville s longest series of articles was written for the Mercure de France Missing only a few months he wrote the Revue du Mois Musique from February 1898 through July 1901 It was in one of these articles January 1901 that he reviewed the premiere of Debussy s Nocturnes Herlin Denis 1997 Sirens in the Labyrinth Amendments in Debussy s Nocturnes In Smith Richard Langham ed Debussy Studies Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 51 77 a b DeVoto Mark 2004 Debussy and the veil of tonality essays on his music Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press p 99 ISBN 978 1576470909 Retrieved 8 January 2020 Herlin Denis 2000 Claude Debussy Nocturnes Paris Durand T Presser Nocturnes Claude Debussy LA Phil Retrieved 2022 11 23 a b c d Brook Donald 1971 1946 Five great French composers Berlioz Cesar Franck Saint Saens Debussy Ravel Their Lives and Works Freeport NY Books for Libraries Press p 168 a b c Nocturnes PDF IMSLP Retrieved 3 February 2020 A very similar translation is given by Cox David 1974 Debussy orchestral music British Broadcasting Corporation p 20 A similar translation is given by DeVoto Mark 2004 Debussy and the veil of tonality essays on his music Hillsdale NY Pendragon Press p 99 ISBN 978 1576470909 Retrieved 8 January 2020 which credits the original text to Leon Vallas Claude Debussy et son temps Paris Albin Michel 1958 Vallas Leon 1958 Claude Debussy et son temps Paris Albin Michel Walsh Stephen 2018 Debussy A Painter in Sound London Faber amp Faber ISBN 978 0 571 33016 4 Tanin Ates 1 August 2005 Recorded Gilels Doremi Archived from the original on 2006 04 14 Fetes from Three nocturnes OCLC 16400183 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nocturnes Debussy Nocturnes Scores at the International Music Score Library Project YouTube Pierre Boulez Vienna Philharmonic Vienna State Opera Chorus Salzburg Festival August 30 1992 YouTube Mikko Franck Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France Chœur de Radio France Maitrise de Radio France September 15 2017 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nocturnes Debussy amp oldid 1218864866, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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